Affordable Behavioral Health offers individual, family, couples, and group counseling sessions, both in-person in West Point, KY, and via secure telehealth platforms serving Kentucky and Indiana.

The sliding scale fee adjusts counseling costs based on your income to make therapy more affordable. You can discuss your financial situation confidentially to determine a fee that fits your budget.

Yes, telehealth counseling sessions are available throughout Kentucky and Indiana, allowing clients to access care remotely regardless of location.

Our practice draws from a range of evidence-based modalities, including EMDR, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Person-Centered Therapy, Narrative Therapy, Motivational Interviewing, Psychodynamic Therapy, and Play Therapy. The right approach depends on your goals, history, and what feels most helpful to you.

Yes, Affordable Behavioral Health offers clinical supervision and licensed supervision services for social workers in Kentucky and Indiana to support their professional development and meet licensure requirements.

The first session typically involves discussing your concerns, goals, and background. The clinician will explain the therapeutic approach and collaboratively develop a treatment plan that respects your unique needs.

Yes. Telehealth sessions are conducted through a secure video platform, and your confidentiality is protected in the same way it would be during an in-person session, in accordance with professional and legal standards for clinical care.

Payment options, including self-pay and sliding scale fees, are available to help make care more accessible. Since coverage and billing details can vary, we recommend reaching out directly to discuss your specific situation before your first appointment.

We work with clients facing depression, anxiety, trauma, PTSD, substance use, relationship issues, DCBS involvement, perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, and a wide range of other life stressors.

Yes, clients may choose to have therapy sessions in-person or via telehealth depending on their preferences, location, and scheduling needs, with flexibility to blend both if desired.

We approach every client with respect for their individual background, culture, and identity, and we adjust how we work together based on what matters most to you. Cultural competency isn't an add-on to our care, it's part of how every session is shaped from the start.

Yes, the practice serves clients across all life stages including children, adolescents, adults, and older adults, with expertise in age-appropriate therapeutic approaches.

You can discuss your financial situation confidentially to explore sliding scale options or self-pay rates designed to make therapy more accessible.

Yes, couples counseling focuses on improving communication, resolving conflicts, rebuilding trust, and strengthening relationships through evidence-based techniques.

EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) is a structured therapy that helps clients process and reduce the distress connected to traumatic memories, using guided eye movements or other forms of bilateral stimulation. It's one of the modalities Terri is trained in as an EMDRIA-certified EMDR therapist.

EMDR therapy helps clients process traumatic memories and reduce distressing symptoms by using structured eye movement techniques alongside trauma-focused interventions.

CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) is a structured, goal-oriented therapy that helps clients identify and change unhelpful thought patterns and behaviors that contribute to emotional distress, typically over a defined course of sessions.

EMDR is often recommended for clients working through specific traumatic memories or PTSD, while CBT tends to work well for anxiety, depression, and patterns of negative thinking. Many clients benefit from a combination of both, and the right fit depends on your specific goals and history, which we talk through together before deciding on a plan.

CBT focuses on identifying and changing specific thought patterns and behaviors in the present, usually over a defined number of sessions. Psychodynamic therapy looks at how past experiences and underlying patterns shape current emotions and behavior, often over a more open-ended process. Both can be effective, and we choose the approach that fits you best.