Providing children with complex developmental and behavioral disabilities the highest quality diagnosis, treatment, and education, to help them achieve their full potential.
Fort Worth (TX) - - Phone: (817) 336-8611Our Behavioral Health Center ensures that kids with emotional and mental challenges receive the resources, tools and programs they need—and the care they deserve.
Fort Worth (TX) - - Phone: (682) 885-3917Our Behavioral Health Center ensures that kids with emotional and mental challenges receive the resources, tools and programs they need—and the care they deserve.
Fort Worth (TX) - - Phone: (325) 655-4675Our Behavioral Health Center ensures that kids with emotional and mental challenges receive the resources, tools and programs they need—and the care they deserve.
Fort Worth (TX) - - Phone: (325) 655-4675Our Behavioral Health Center ensures that kids with emotional and mental challenges receive the resources, tools and programs they need—and the care they deserve.
Fort Worth (TX) - - Phone: (325) 655-4675Dr. Katrina Willie-Musoma provides children with complex developmental and behavioral disabilities the highest quality diagnosis, treatment, and education, to help them achieve their full potential.
Fort Worth (TX) - - Phone: (682) 303-9200Dr. Steve Chennankara evaluates your child's psychological, medical, social, and developmental history in order to help you with your current concern and figure out the best solution that fits with...
Fort Worth (TX) - - Phone: (682) 885-1050
Fort Worth has child and adolescent psychiatry physicians available for consultation. They can be found through local medical and psychiatric societies, local mental health associations, local hospitals or medical centers, or via pediatricians, family physicians, and school counselors. These are physicians in Fort Worth who specialize in the diagnosis and the treatment of disorders of thinking, feeling and/or behavior affecting children, adolescents, and their families, according to the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. Training for this practice is grueling, involving 4 years of medical school, at least 3 years of approved residency training in medicine, neurology, and general psychiatry with adults, and 2 years of additional specialized training in psychiatric work with children, adolescents, and their families in an accredited residency in child and adolescent psychiatry. They usually perform a comprehensive diagnostic examination first, after which a treatment plan is designed, in consultation with the child's family. He or she is expected to act in the best interests of the child or the teenager. An integrated approach may be followed by involving the individual, the family, and the school system.