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Claim this listingRose Camille Cook , PsyD
Locations
Credentials & Licenses
PsyD
MI · 6352000460
Specialties
About Rose Camille Cook
Rose Camille Cook, PsyD is a Black psychology (phd/psyd) practicing in Southfield, MI. Rose offers in-person visits and is currently accepting new patients.
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Black patients and Psychology (PhD/PsyD)
Black psychologists (PhD/PsyD): therapy, assessment, neuropsychology. Fewer than 4 percent of U.S. psychologists are Black, so concordance matters deeply.
Only about 4 percent of U.S. psychologists are Black (APA, 2022), yet the demand is extraordinary. Black adults with major depression are half as likely as white adults to receive treatment, and Black youth suicide rates have doubled since 2007. Psychologists are doctoral-level providers who specialize in evidence-based therapy (CBT, DBT, EMDR), psychological testing, and neuropsychological evaluation. They do not prescribe medication. If you need meds, they partner with a psychiatrist or PCP.
Common reasons to see a psychologist
- Depression, anxiety, panic disorder
- Complex trauma, childhood trauma, racial trauma
- Relationship and attachment patterns
- ADHD evaluation (formal neuropsych testing)
- Learning disability evaluation
- Grief, burnout, and identity work
When to book
- Months of low mood, loss of interest, or sleep/appetite disruption
- Feeling stuck after prior therapy didn't work
- Need formal ADHD or learning disability testing for accommodations
- Racial trauma that previous therapists didn't understand
Advocacy prompts
- What therapy modality do you use, and why?
- How do you handle racial and cultural context in sessions?
- How long do you expect treatment to take for someone with my presentation?
Frequently asked questions
Is Rose Camille Cook accepting new patients? ▾
Yes, Rose Camille Cook is accepting new patients.
Where is Rose Camille Cook's practice located? ▾
Rose Camille Cook practices at 29500 Southfield Rd, Southfield, MI 482232248. Phone: 734-926-5452.
Does Rose Camille Cook offer telehealth? ▾
Rose Camille Cook sees patients in person at their listed office.
What does a Psychology (PhD/PsyD) treat? ▾
Black psychologists (PhD/PsyD): therapy, assessment, neuropsychology. Fewer than 4 percent of U.S. psychologists are Black, so concordance matters deeply.
Articles about Psychology (PhD/PsyD)
Denzel Washington got his minister's license at 70. The Black church he's stepping into is one of the largest open frontiers in Black men's mental health.
In December 2024, days before his 70th birthday, Denzel Washington got baptized and received his minister's license at Kelly Temple Church of God in Christ in Harlem. His late father was a Pentecostal minister. The Black church is also the institution mental-health researchers have spent a decade studying as the most-trusted entry point for Black adults the medical system rarely...
DeMar DeRozan said he was depressed in a tweet in 2018. Eight years later his book is still doing the cultural work for Black men talking about mental health.
DeMar DeRozan posted on Twitter in February 2018 that he was struggling with depression. The post moved the cultural line on Black men and mental health, and it triggered the NBA's 2018 mental-health-professional staffing requirement. His 2024 memoir Above the Noise (Harmony Books) extends that work. NIMH data shows 37.9 percent of Black adults with mental illness receive treatment vs...
How to find a Black therapist: what the evidence says about race-concordance, cultural adaptation, and what to ask in the first session
Black clients prefer Black therapists at moderate-to-strong rates across 52 studies. Race matching alone barely changes treatment outcomes. What changes outcomes is culturally adapted therapy: a 2016 meta-analysis of nearly 14,000 participants found a medium-sized advantage for adapted versus unadapted versions of the same intervention, with nearly five times greater odds of recovery. Three directories, three first-session questions.
DSM-5-TR added prolonged grief in 2022. Black families grieve differently.
In March 2022, the American Psychiatric Association added prolonged grief disorder to the DSM-5-TR, codifying a diagnosis for bereaved adults whose acute grief persists at least 12 months. The 2021 validation paper by Prigerson and colleagues in World Psychiatry set the threshold around yearning, identity disruption, and functional impairment. For Black families, whose grief practices center communal witnessing, this new...