About
Thoughtful outpatient psychiatric care with structure and continuity
210 Mental Health is an outpatient psychiatric practice for ages 12 and up. Care is collaborative, psychotherapy-informed, and grounded in a biopsychosocial approach.
About the clinician
I’m Sean Huckleberry, a Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurse Practitioner and Licensed Professional Counselor. I provide outpatient psychiatric care for adults in Texas.
My work integrates psychotherapy and medication management when appropriate. Treatment may include diagnostic evaluation, structured follow-up, and psychotherapy-informed care depending on the needs of the patient.
My approach is relational and biopsychosocial. Mental health symptoms are shaped not only by biology, but also by relationships, developmental history, stress, identity, and the broader context of a person’s life. Care should reflect that complexity without losing structure or clarity.
I aim to provide care that is steady, thoughtful, and collaborative. Patients are taken seriously, understood in context, and supported in making meaningful change over time.
I work in collaboration with psychiatrist Dr. Jeffrey Benzick when appropriate as part of maintaining safe, high-quality psychiatric care.
Credentials
- Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurse Practitioner, Board Certified
- Advanced Practice Registered Nurse, Texas #1008202
- Licensed Professional Counselor - Supervisor, Texas #72125
Education
- Master of Science in Nursing, The University of Texas at Austin (2020)
- Master of Arts, Community Counseling, The University of Texas at San Antonio (2013)
- Bachelor of Science, Kinesiology, The University of Texas at Austin (2008)
How the practice works
This practice is designed for outpatient care that is thoughtful, contained, and manageable over time. The focus is not on speed or volume. The focus is on careful assessment, follow-through, and treatment that makes sense in the broader context of a person’s life.
Visits are used to understand patterns, revisit what is working and what is not, and make decisions with enough context. That may include evaluation, medication management, and psychotherapy-informed follow-up. The approach is relational and person-centered, with integration of EMDR and cognitive-behavioral techniques when appropriate.
Medication is not treated as separate from the rest of care. Attention is also given to the therapeutic relationship, patterns over time, and how past and current experiences shape symptoms and functioning.
The structure of the practice is intentional. Clear pathways for scheduling, communication, refills, paperwork, and billing help reduce confusion and protect clinical focus.
What this practice is
- Outpatient psychiatric care for adults ages 18–65
- Collaborative and relational
- Psychotherapy-informed
- Structured and continuity-focused
What this practice is not
- Not a crisis or emergency service
- Not designed for rushed, high-volume care
- Not a substitute for inpatient or urgent care settings
Practical expectations
The structure of the practice is part of the care model.
Communication
- Messaging is for brief, non-urgent communication
- Non-urgent responses are typically 1–2 business days
- Some concerns are better handled in a visit than by message
Continuity of care
- Follow-up visits are used to guide treatment over time
- Refills, paperwork, and billing follow clear processes
- Urgent or unsafe situations should use emergency resources
Location and telehealth
Telehealth is available when appropriate, but patients must be physically located in Texas at the time of the visit.
Getting started
New patients begin with a phone call, followed by a brief screening and review of fit before scheduling is arranged.
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