Oregon Therapists Who Accept Moda
22 providers found
Moda Health is a leading Oregon health insurer covering mental health services including therapy, telehealth, and psychiatric care. Many Oregon providers in our directory accept Moda plans.
Jacky Gomez
LCSW · Portland, OR
You may seem OK on the outside, but on the inside, your mind rarely slows down. There is constant mental noise: second-guessing yourself and others, constant “what ifs?”, fear of…
Accepting Always PLLC
Lpc · Portland, OR
Hello! All Clients are Ideal Clients. Our pursuit is to provide a safe and caring space where clients can explore and foster self-actualization and healthier relationships. We are…
Shane Knox
LMFT · Eugene, OR
My 14 years as a therapist has taught me that no matter how stuck you feel, it's never too late to change. Time and again, I’ve seen how hardship can lead to growth and…
Maxwell Sears
LPC · Eugene, OR
Open to New Clients: I have experience working with individuals on a variety of issues. My specialties include work with anxiety, addiction, OCD, and trauma. My process with…
Emelia Thygesen
LCMHC · virtual, OR
Are you taking care of everyone else but yourself. Do you find that you have to keep busy all the time, or else it feels like you’re wasting time. Are the emotions so much…
David Culver
LPC · Salem, OR
My name is David Culver, I am a Licensed Professional Counselor in Oregon and Arizona, and a Licensed Professional Clinical Counselor in California. I have been practicing for six…
Amber Rose Dullea
LCSW · Clackamas, OR
Amber Rose Dullea is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker in Oregon and graduated from University of Southern California in 2022 with a Masters of Social Work in Adult Mental Health…
Ruth Ralph
LPC · Springfield, OR
Hello it is nice to meet you. I am a Licensed Professional Counselor with almost 12 years' experience supporting people with depression, anxiety, life transitions, childhood…
Resources & Guides
Articles and guides from the Oregon Providers team.
What to Look for in a Chronic Pain-Affirming Therapist
Finding a good therapist is hard. Finding a good therapist when you live with chronic pain is harder. The standard mental health system wasn't designed with chronic pain in mind, and many clinicians — even well-meaning ones — bring assumptions to this work that can do more harm than good. If you've ever been told that your pain is primarily psychological, that you just need to reduce
5 Questions to Ask Before Choosing a Therapist in Oregon
Finding the Right Fit Research consistently shows that the therapeutic relationship — the trust, respect, and connection between you and your therapist — is the single strongest predictor of successful therapy outcomes. Stronger than any specific technique. Stronger than your therapist's degrees. The APA calls it the "common factor" that accounts for more outcome variance than any oth