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Claim this listingKeyonna Mcculloch , PhD
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About Keyonna Mcculloch
Keyonna Mcculloch, PhD is a Black therapy (lpc/lpcc) practicing in EUGENE, OR. Keyonna offers in-person visits and is currently accepting new patients.
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Black patients and Therapy (LPC/LPCC)
Black LPCs/LPCCs: licensed professional counselors for anxiety, depression, life transitions, and trauma. Often the most affordable entry to quality therapy.
Licensed Professional Counselors (LPCs, also LPCCs in some states) are master's-level mental-health clinicians. They provide individual and group therapy for depression, anxiety, grief, identity work, and many trauma modalities. For Black clients, LPCs often offer shorter wait times and broader insurance acceptance than psychologists or psychiatrists. A 2023 NAMI report found counselor wait times were 60 percent shorter on average.
Common reasons to see an LPC
- Depression and anxiety
- Life transitions: career change, moves, relationships
- Grief and loss
- Self-esteem, identity, and boundary work
- Workplace stress, imposter syndrome
- ADHD coaching and strategies
Advocacy prompts
- What modalities are you trained in: CBT, ACT, IFS?
- How do you integrate cultural context, race, and identity?
- How often do you check in on progress and revise the plan?
Frequently asked questions
Is Keyonna Mcculloch accepting new patients? ▾
Yes, Keyonna Mcculloch is accepting new patients.
Where is Keyonna Mcculloch's practice located? ▾
Keyonna Mcculloch practices at 2440 WILLAMETTE ST STE 201, EUGENE, OR 97405. Phone: 541-321-2278.
Does Keyonna Mcculloch offer telehealth? ▾
Keyonna Mcculloch sees patients in person at their listed office.
What does a Therapy (LPC/LPCC) treat? ▾
Black LPCs/LPCCs: licensed professional counselors for anxiety, depression, life transitions, and trauma. Often the most affordable entry to quality therapy.
Articles about Therapy (LPC/LPCC)
Depression in Black men: what gets missed, and how to ask for help
Why the Black church is the studied lever for closing the Black-mental-health-treatment gap
Hankerson 2012 reviewed 1,451 studies on church-based health programs for African Americans. Only eight addressed mental disorders. The framework-and-evidence-gap explainer.
78 studies, 13,998 participants: culturally adapted therapy produced a medium effect-size advantage over unadapted versions for racially and ethnically minoritized clients