At Hagan Health, we believe that understanding ADHD is far more important than simply medicating it. When patients understand the condition, they are better equipped to make informed decisions about treatment. If medication is appropriate, they will know what to expect — and just as importantly, what not to expect — from it.
With over 20 years of experience helping individuals and families navigate ADHD, we’ve seen how often this diagnosis is overlooked. In fact, statistics show that 52% of mental health providers don’t routinely screen for ADHD, even though it may coexist with anxiety, depression, OCD, substance use disorders, eating disorders, personality disorders, and other psychiatric conditions. This is why our process begins with a comprehensive evaluation, including psychiatric testing, looking at the full picture, and carefully reviewing overlapping symptoms
While we do offer medication management when needed, medication may not be necessary for everyone. Regardless of whether you choose to use medication, we offer ADHD coaching, using a carefully designed video series — up to 20 videos in total — at no additional cost. These videos are sent to you in segments and are designed to help you build a clear and detailed understanding of your own ADHD brain, how it works, and how to prosper.
In addition to clinical evaluation and education, our team of experienced therapists works closely with patients to provide support, practical tools, and individualized guidance. Therapy sessions focus on how ADHD impacts day-to-day functioning — including organization, time management, emotional regulation, and relationships. We also help patients process what the diagnosis means for them personally and explore how to move forward with clarity and confidence.
Women often face mental health challenges throughout their lives that are closely tied to hormonal changes. Premenstrual syndrome (PMS), premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD), pregnancy, perimenopause, menopause, and post-menopause can all bring added emotional strain. At Hagan Health, our nurse practitioners have specialized expertise in these areas, and our skilled psychotherapists provide compassionate, personalized support. We are also glad to work alongside your other healthcare providers, recognizing that physical health and emotional well-being are deeply connected.
We live in a culture that often pushes us to constantly achieve more, which can create overwhelming levels of stress. And stress, left unchecked, often leads to anxiety. Some individuals experience Generalized Anxiety Disorder, characterized by persistent, excessive worry, while others may struggle with trauma-related anxiety, including Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Many people face periods of life where anxiety and depression coexist, making it difficult to function day-to-day — even if they’re trying to “push through” life’s challenges.
At Hagan Health, we specialize in the treatment of anxiety disorders, offering a comprehensive approach that includes medication management and often evidence-based psychotherapy. Our therapists use proven methods such as Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Solution-Focused Therapy, and mindfulness techniques to help reduce anxiety symptoms and equip clients with practical tools for managing stress in everyday life.
For those affected by trauma, many of our therapists also specialize in trauma-informed care. We offer advanced approaches such as EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing), Neuro-Emotional Technique (NET), Narrative Therapy, and Internal Family Systems (IFS) to help clients process trauma and reduce the power the past holds over the present.
In addition to treating bipolar disorder, cyclothymic disorder, and depressive disorders with medication and psychotherapy, we offer advanced treatment options for Major Depression — especially for patients who have not responded well to traditional approaches. These options include Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) and Spravato, both of which are FDA-approved and considered highly effective for treatment-resistant depression. Research has shown that these innovative, “high-tech” therapies can significantly improve and sometimes resolve depression, often outperforming medication, psychotherapy, or a combination of the two.
Our therapy team is highly trained in evidence-based modalities, including Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT), Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), mindfulness-based approaches, and Solution-Focused Therapy. These methods are designed to help individuals manage mood fluctuations, identify and change unhelpful thought patterns, develop healthier coping strategies, and build confidence in their ability to heal and move forward.
OCD can be tough to manage, but treatments are available. OCD traditionally has been treated primarily with exposure psychotherapy, and while it is also treated with medication such as fluvoxamine, OCD does not respond well to medication management. Research has proven a higher level of improvement using Deep TMS. Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS), a safe and effective option that provides additional support in your diagnosis. Almost 68% of OCD patients were able to reduce symptoms by more than 30%, and 87% of those who responded saw sustained improvement for at least a year.
BrainsWay Deep TMS is a noninvasive, FDA-cleared, outpatient brain stimulation procedure with proven clinical results to help patients to quit smoking. Known as the addiction coil, the H4 coil was specifically designed for targeting the deep areas of the brain involved in addictions.
A large study in 14 centers examined adults who had been long-term heavy smokers, all having failed prior quit attempts using medication, therapy, or other methods. Of those that completed Deep TMS treatment, 28% achieved four consecutive weeks without smoking, most of them not smoking for at least three months after treatment. Among all participants in the study, the average number of cigarettes smoked per week over the course of treatment was reduced by 75%.
TMS has none of the side effects commonly found in medication to treat smoking cessation. TMS is well-tolerated with years of safety data supporting Deep TMS. Patients may initially experience minor headaches or pain at the site of treatment which typically subside after the first few sessions. There is no preparation, no anesthesia, and patients are able to resume daily activities immediately after each treatment session. Treatments are done in our office. Each treatment session lasts 25-30 minutes. They are done daily on weekdays for 3 weeks followed by a weekly session for another 3 weeks.
BrainsWay Deep TMS offers a fresh approach that may help to quit smoking using cutting-edge neuroscience. Clinically proven and well-tolerated, Deep TMS is the first non-invasive technology that is FDA-cleared to treat smoking addiction.
Deep TMS has recently be approved by the FDA for treatment of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). OCD traditionally has been treated primarily with exposure psychotherapy, and while it is also treated with medication such as fluvoxamine, OCD does not respond well to medication management. Medication improves symtpoms greater than 30% in only 50% of patients, and half of OCD patients stop taking their medication due to side effects. And while exposure therapy might improve OCD, as many as 80% of patients continue to have symptoms after psychotherapy, according to some studies.
BrainsWay Deep TMS is a noninvasive, FDA-cleared, outpatient brain stimulation procedure with proven clinical results for improving the symptoms of OCD. The technology stimulates the brain using its patented H-coil, known as the H7 coil, resulting in a deep and broad penetration of the magnetic field into areas of the brain that are affected in OCD. Deep TMS is safe and well-tolerated, has a very low rate of side effects, and does not require anesthesia.
Research has proven a higher level of improvement using Deep TMS. Almost 68% of OCD patients were able to reduce symptoms by more than 30%, and 87% of those who responded saw sustained improvement for at least a year.
Major depression was the diagnosis first approved for treatment with TMS, and it is still the most commonly treated condition. Most patients are treated with TMS after failures of medications and psychotherapy, as insurance companies will pay for TMS treatment only after medication failures. However, TMS treats depression much better than medication, and some would argue that TMS should be the first treatment instead of the last.
When patients have not improved with medication, they are considered to be “treatment-resistant”. And in treatment-resistant depression, TMS treatment results in significant improvement, defined as more than a 50% reduction in symptoms, in more than 80% of patients. And more than 60% of patients achieve remission. That is a very high and a very impressive number of people who are happy for the first time in many years after TMS treatment.
TMS treatments for depression are done in a series of 36 treatments. Patients have a 20-minute treatment 5 days a week for six weeks followed by 6 more treatments in a tapering schedule over three more weeks. No preparation is needed, and there is no recovery time. After each treatment, patients are able to leave and go about their day. Except for a rare seizure, which occurs in 1 of 1000 patients, TMS has only minor side effects of mild headache or scalp soreness in the first few days.
It is said that after successful TMS treatment, that there is a 50% chance of relapse of depression within the first year. However, at Hagan Health we consider that statistic to be too high, and our relapse rate is lower. While treatments are done by certified and experienced treaters, Dr. Hagan is closely involved in determining the location and strengths of settings to provide the most accurate treatment. In addition, Dr. Hagan meets with patients every week or two before and during treatment, and periodically after treatment, in order to insure the best possible results. Depression varies from patient to patient, and it is important to get the know the patient and the thoughts, feelings, and circumstances that might lead to relapse. Using cognitive therapy techniques, patients are taught to be aware of triggers and to be prepared with the cognitive tools used to reduce the chances of relapsing.
TMS for Anxious Depression
Recently TMS has been cleared by the FDA for treatment of Anxious Depression. This condition is one in which anxious distress is a major part of the clinical picture while depression remains the predominant diagnosis. Anxiety which is treated along with depression is also significantly improved, while TMS is not currently considered appropriate for the treatment of anxiety without depression.
So the lesson Al taught me was about my lack of happiness related to feelings of inadequacy. Even though I had become a brain surgeon, I did not have a healthy self-regard. Al explained to me that my father, in his drive to succeed and to push me to succeed, would never let me savor a victory, that whenever I achieved something important, he would ask, . “How could you have done it better?” Or “what is next?”. He was setting the bar at perfection, such that nothing less than perfection was going to be good enough. Al said, “Nobody is perfect”, and that I would be much happier deciding what degree of imperfection I was going to settle for. When one sets the bar at perfection, then every effort falls short of perfection and is therefore a relative failure, it becomes yet more evidence of one’s belief that he is fundamentally flawed and inadequate. He said that we are all always doing our best, and that is not fair for my father or for me myself to tell myself that I am not good enough. It was the single most important piece of wisdom that I would learn for the next several decades, and I have told this story many times to those who, like me, grew up to have similar issues.
After seeing Al for a year, another year or two went by. One day at church I was listening to a talk from a psychotherapist who had grown up in a family in which his mother was an alcoholic and his father was a workaholic. His story sounded so much like mine that I decided to see him professionally to “learn more about this garbage in my head”. I saw Paul for two years.
A few years later, life had become quite stressful. I was married with three small children, practicing neurosurgery full time and doing some farming on the side. It was at this time that I started seeing my third therapist, the one that I would see for most of the next 10 years. Keith was a psychiatrist, an MD like me, who did only psychotherapy. A few months after starting my therapy with Keith, I realized that I liked what he did better than what I did. The process of therapy is that of developing an increasing awareness of how one got to be the way he or she is, starting with childhood issues. Specifically, this type of therapy is called “psychodynamic psychotherapy”.
Three years into my experience with Keith, I made the final decision that I would rather be a psychiatrist, because I came to love the process of developing insight into one’s own psychology. As I closed my neurosurgery practice and completed a residency in psychiatry, I was so grateful the entire time for the opportunity to turn myself into a psychiatrist. “Who gets to do that?!” Years later a patient was looking at the books on my bookshelf and asked, “So you were a neurosurgeon; did you like it?” I had been asked many times why I decided to give up neurosurgery to become a psychiatrist, but no one had ever asked if I liked neurosurgery. The answer had to be that no, I did not. I did not like who I was. But I have loved psychiatry from the very beginning, and I really appreciate the contribution it has had in my own personal development.
But because of my heavy early experience in psychotherapy, I also became proficient and experienced in both psychodynamic psychotherapy and in cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). And I attended the Cincinnati Psychoanalytic Institute for a year to take my psychotherapy skills to a higher level.
During the 17 years that I have been practicing psychiatry, I have continued to grow. The most gratifying experiences I have had have been when I have settled into a psychotherapy relationship with a patient, while there have been many, others with whom I have combined psychiatry with psychodynamic therapy, practicing psychodynamic psychiatry.
During these same years, I have also been on several mission trips, which have given me perspectives that I would never have learned otherwise. The concepts of loving your neighbor, giving of your time and resources, being kind and gentle and gracious, have come to define me.
I have always been at the head of my own practice, managing my own business. I have experience with other businesses as well, such as being a successful alpaca breeder for 10 years. “They do not teach business in medical school.” In a growing psychiatry practice, running the business is something you learn from necessity.