If you are in crisis, call or text 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline) — 24/7  |  For emergencies call 9-1-1

Psychiatric Care — Evergreen, Colorado & Beyond

Compassionate care for lasting mental wellness

Integrating pharmaceutical and functional medicine to treat the whole person — not just the symptoms. Telehealth appointments are available in Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, and Oregon.

Board-Certified PMHNP Telehealth Appointments New Patients Welcome

Juliet Glass, PMHNP

Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner

Evergreen, CO 80439
Specializing in depression, anxiety, PTSD, addiction management & women's mental health
Accepts most major insurance plans
Telehealth available in AZ, CO, NM, & OR
Book a Free ConsultationNew patients or therapists seeking collaboration — get a personalized 15-minute consultation to discuss your needs and ensure we're the right fit for you. Get in Touch →
15+
Insurance plans accepted
4
States via telehealth
Free
15-min consultation
Juliet Glass, PMHNP-BC
Board-Certified PMHNP
Functional Medicine Focus
Trauma-Informed Care
Women's Mental Health Specialist
Telehealth Appointments
New Patients Welcome

About Juliet

A holistic approach to psychiatric care

Welcome. I became a psychiatric nurse practitioner because I was searching for answers—not just about mental health, but about purpose, resilience, and what it means to truly see and be seen by another human being.

Like many people drawn to this field, my path was personal. I've witnessed the transformative power of quality psychiatric care, and I've also seen what happens when patients fall through the cracks—when they're not heard, when their symptoms are minimized, when they're treated like a diagnosis rather than a person.

After years of nursing and psychiatric training, I realized I needed to practice differently. I needed to build a practice around my core values: deep listening, unhurried appointments, cultural competency, and a commitment to treating the whole person—not just managing symptoms.

My Approach

Psychiatric care is medical care. Depression, anxiety, trauma, and substance use disorders respond to evidence-based treatment—medication, therapy, or both. But treating the brain also means treating the whole person: your history, your culture, your values, your body, your relationships.

I practice integrative psychiatry, combining pharmaceutical interventions with functional medicine principles. This means we don't just ask "what medication will help?" We also ask: "How are you sleeping? What's your nutrition like? What does your stress look like? How have hormones affected your mental health? What does healing look like for you?"

I'm also deeply committed to culturally competent, anti-racist psychiatric care. Mental health disparities are real, and they matter. Black women, women of color, and marginalized communities face unique barriers to care and systemic inequities that affect their mental health. I'm committed to understanding these intersections and providing care that honors your full identity.

Why Women's Mental Health Matters

Women's mental health has been historically overlooked, underdiagnosed, and undertreated. Depression, anxiety, and trauma present differently in women than in men. Yet clinical training often doesn't adequately address these differences.

I specialize in women's mental health because women deserve providers who understand postpartum psychiatric conditions, hormonal changes across the lifespan, gendered trauma, and the unique ways mental illness shows up in women.

What we offer

Services tailored to your needs

From initial evaluations to ongoing medication management and telehealth — comprehensive psychiatric care for adults.

Psychiatric evaluation

A thorough initial assessment to understand your history, symptoms, and goals. We'll build a personalized treatment plan together.

Initial visit: $250

Telehealth sessions

Secure video appointments available across Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, and Oregon — the same quality of care from home.

Multiple states

Medication management

Ongoing collaborative check-ins to monitor your medications, adjust dosages, and ensure your treatment continues to support your wellness.

Follow-up: $150

Anxiety, depression & PTSD

Specialized care for mood disorders and trauma using evidence-based approaches combined with personalized holistic strategies.

Primary specialty

Functional medicine integration

Exploring how lifestyle, nutrition, hormones, and genetics intersect with mental health — treating root causes alongside symptoms.

Holistic approach

Addiction management

Compassionate support for substance use disorders, co-occurring mental health conditions, and recovery—tailored to your unique path forward.

Specialty

Comprehensive women's mental health

Specialized care addressing hormonal changes, life transitions, reproductive health, and mental wellness across all stages of life.

Specialty

Our philosophy

Why we do what we do — and how we do it differently

At Mount Blue Sky, we believe psychiatric care should go beyond symptom management. Our approach is rooted in curiosity, compassion, and a commitment to understanding the whole person behind the diagnosis.

Whole-person care

We look beyond symptoms to understand the biological, psychological, and social factors shaping your mental health.

Collaborative treatment

You're an active partner in your care. Every decision is made together — no rushed checklists, no one-size-fits-all templates.

Pharmaceutical + functional

Combining evidence-based psychiatry with functional medicine ensures we address root causes, not just manage symptoms.

Continuity & trust

We value long-term relationships. Over time, we learn your patterns and goals — adjusting care thoughtfully as your life evolves.

Coverage & fees

Insurance & self-pay options

We accept a wide range of insurance plans and offer self-pay rates. Contact us to verify your benefits before your first visit.

Aetna
Anthem / BCBS
Cigna / Evernorth
United Healthcare
BCBS of NM
BCBS of AZ
Oscar
Horizon BCBS
Independence BCBS
Carelon BH
Optum
Quest Behavioral Health
$250
Initial evaluation
$150
Standard follow-up
Free
15-min consultation
Payment methods accepted
Visa, Mastercard, Amex, Discover & most major cards. We gladly verify insurance benefits prior to your visit.

Telehealth

Psychiatric care wherever you are

HIPAA-compliant video sessions that deliver the same quality of care as in-person visits — from the comfort of your home, office, or anywhere private.

  • Same-quality care as in-person visits
  • HIPAA-compliant secure video platform
  • Flexible scheduling including evenings
  • Accepted by most insurance plans
  • Medication management via telehealth

Currently serving patients in

Arizona
Colorado
New Mexico
Oregon

Patient resources

Helpful tools & information

Resources to support your mental health journey — between appointments and beyond.

Crisis support

Mental health crisis lines

If you or someone you know is in crisis, help is available 24/7. Call or text 988 to reach the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline. For emergencies, call 911.

Call or text 988 →
New patients

What to expect at your first visit

Your initial evaluation typically lasts 60–90 minutes. We'll review your history, current symptoms, and goals to create a personalized care plan.

Schedule now →
Insurance

Verifying your benefits

Before your appointment, contact your insurance carrier to verify your behavioral health benefits, deductible, and copay for outpatient psychiatric services.

See accepted plans →
Telehealth

Preparing for a video visit

Find a quiet, private space with good lighting and a stable internet connection. Log in 5 minutes early using the link sent to your email.

Learn about telehealth →
Self-care

Mental wellness between visits

Sleep hygiene, physical activity, nutrition, and social connection all meaningfully support psychiatric treatment outcomes.

Book a consultation →
Functional medicine

Integrative psychiatry explained

Functional psychiatry explores how hormones, gut health, genetics, and lifestyle factors influence mood and cognition — addressing root causes alongside medication.

About Juliet's approach →

From the practice

Latest thoughts from Juliet

Insights on mental health, integrative psychiatry, and living well.

Women's Health
Jan 2025

Postpartum Depression Isn't Just 'Baby Blues': What Every Woman Should Know

Understanding the difference between baby blues and postpartum depression, why it matters, and how to get help.

Read more →
Mental Health Equity
Dec 2024

Why Black Women's Mental Health Matters: Breaking Barriers to Psychiatric Care

Addressing the unique barriers Black women face in mental healthcare and why representation matters.

Read more →
Women's Mental Health
Nov 2024

Anxiety, Depression, and Trauma: How They Show Up Differently in Women

Why women's mental health symptoms are often overlooked and what you need to know about how to recognize them.

Read more →
Medication Management
Feb 2025

Medication Management for Women: Questions to Ask Your Psychiatrist

Your guide to informed conversations about psychiatric medication, pregnancy, breastfeeding, and shared decision-making.

Read more →
Addiction & Mental Health
Jan 2025

Substance Use and Mental Health: You Don't Have to Choose Recovery

Why integrated treatment works—and why you deserve access to both addiction and mental health care.

Read more →
Telehealth Mental Health
Jan 2025

Telehealth Mental Health: How to Get Quality Psychiatric Care From Home

Why telehealth removes barriers and delivers real, evidence-based psychiatric care.

Read more →

What Patients & Professionals Are Saying

Hear from those who have experienced compassionate, holistic psychiatric care

★★★★★

I highly recommend Dr. Juliet Glass. She is incredibly compassionate and truly listened to my concerns, making me feel heard and understood for the first time. In addition, I've seen significant improvement in my anxiety levels thanks to Dr. Juliet thoughtful approach and attention to detail. Her calm demeanor and expertise put me at ease, allowing me to openly discuss difficult topics including spiritual. She always takes the time to explain my diagnosis and treatment options clearly, which has been invaluable to my recovery process. She is a true professional who genuinely cares about her patient's well-being.

G
Grace Fierluisi
Google Review • a year ago
★★★★★

I was very impressed with Juliet. She took the time to listen to my brother and took action. I wish I started with a competent provider instead of wasting time with lesser clinics. Thank you. You have given my family hope for my brother.

B
Berlanda Deceus
Google Review • a year ago
★★★★★

Juliet is incredible and so nice to talk to.

S
Sarah Dean
Google Review • a year ago
Professional Endorsement

Juliet is a highly knowledgeable and compassionate provider. She really takes the time to evaluate all of the needs that you present with and goes above and beyond to support your success and growth.

A
Amber Will
Clinical Social Work/Therapist, LCSW
Verified Google Reviews

Ready to take the first step?

Reaching out is the hardest part. Together we can take it from there — with compassion, expertise, and a plan built around you.

Free 15-minute consultation — no commitment required

Patient Information

Policies & Practice Information

Please read these policies carefully. By scheduling an appointment, you acknowledge that you have reviewed and agree to the terms described below.

1

Appointments & Cancellations

Scheduling appointments

Appointments are scheduled through our patient portal or by contacting our office directly. Please ensure you have a stable internet connection and a private, quiet location before your scheduled session.

Cancellation policy

If you need to cancel or reschedule, we ask for at least 24 hours' advance notice. Cancellations can be made via the patient portal, by phone, or by email.

Late cancellation & no-show fee

$100
Late cancellation or no-show fee
Not covered by insurance — billed directly to patient

This fee applies to cancellations made less than 24 hours before a scheduled appointment and to no-shows. We understand that emergencies happen — please contact us as soon as possible if you have an urgent situation.

Attendance & discharge policy

  • Missing three (3) appointments — whether cancelled late or no-showed — may result in discharge from the practice at the discretion of your provider.
  • If you are approaching this threshold, your provider will discuss your treatment engagement with you before any discharge decision is made.
  • Patients who are discharged due to attendance concerns will be provided with appropriate referrals to ensure continuity of care.
Barriers to attendance? If you are experiencing challenges attending appointments (transportation, technology, scheduling), please speak with our team. We are here to help find solutions.
2

Billing & Insurance

Accepted insurance

We accept Aetna, Anthem/BCBS, Cigna/Evernorth, UnitedHealthcare, Optum, Oscar, Quest Behavioral Health, and others. Please contact our office to confirm whether your specific plan is accepted. It is your responsibility to understand your benefits, including copays, deductibles, and any prior authorization requirements.

Self-pay patients

Self-pay rates are available for patients without insurance or those choosing not to use their insurance. Please contact us for current fee information.

Billing & payment

  • Payment is due at the time of service.
  • We accept major credit cards, HSA/FSA cards, and other payment methods listed on our patient portal.
  • Outstanding balances not paid within 30 days will be subject to a billing notice.
  • Accounts unpaid after 60 days may be referred to a collections agency.

Superbills & receipts

Upon request, we can provide a superbill (itemized receipt) that you may submit to your insurance company for potential out-of-network reimbursement. Reimbursement is not guaranteed and depends on your plan.

3

Privacy & Confidentiality (HIPAA)

What we protect

All information shared during your care is protected under HIPAA and applicable state laws. We safeguard all Protected Health Information (PHI) — including your diagnosis, treatment notes, medications, and personal contact information. PHI will not be shared with third parties without your written authorization, except as required or permitted by law.

Permitted disclosures

  • Treatment: Sharing information with other treating providers to coordinate your care.
  • Payment: Submitting claims to your insurance carrier.
  • Mandatory reporting: Credible threats of harm to yourself or others, suspected abuse or neglect of a child or vulnerable adult, and court orders.

Your HIPAA rights

  • Access and request copies of your health records
  • Request amendments to your records
  • Request restrictions on certain uses and disclosures
  • Receive an accounting of disclosures
  • File a complaint with the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services

To exercise any of these rights, contact us at (719) 745-2985 or [email protected].

4

Emergency & Crisis Procedures

Important: Our telehealth practice is not equipped to respond to psychiatric emergencies in real time. Please save the numbers below before your first appointment.

If you are in crisis

  • Call or text 988 — Suicide & Crisis Lifeline, available 24/7
  • Call 911 or go to your nearest emergency room
  • Text HOME to 741741 — Crisis Text Line
Do not wait for your next appointment or send a portal message if you are in immediate danger. Emergency services are the appropriate first response.

Between appointments

Our providers are not available for urgent after-hours calls or same-day crisis support. For non-emergency concerns between appointments, please use the patient portal. Messages are typically reviewed within 1–2 business days.

Safety planning

If your provider believes you may benefit from a formal safety plan, they will work with you during your appointment to develop one. We encourage all patients to have a trusted support person and to know their local emergency resources.

5

Telehealth & Technology

Technical requirements

  • A device with a camera and microphone (smartphone, tablet, or computer)
  • A reliable internet or cellular data connection
  • A private, quiet location where you will not be interrupted or overheard
  • Our HIPAA-compliant telehealth platform — details provided at time of scheduling

Your responsibilities

  • Log in 5 minutes before your scheduled appointment time.
  • Driving or operating machinery during sessions is not permitted.
  • Recording sessions is strictly prohibited without the written consent of your provider.
  • Attending from a location where your privacy cannot be ensured is strongly discouraged.

Eligibility & licensure

You must be physically located in a state where your provider holds an active license at the time of each appointment. If you travel or relocate, please notify us in advance.

Currently licensed in: Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, and Oregon.
6

Medication Management

Evaluation required before any medication. No prescription will be issued at first contact, via the portal alone, or without a completed diagnostic assessment.

Why a full evaluation is required

Psychiatric medications require a thorough evaluation before any prescription can be written — to confirm the correct diagnosis, review your medical and psychiatric history, assess for similar-presenting conditions, discuss risks and alternatives, and establish a baseline for tracking treatment response.

ADHD & stimulant medications

Stimulant medications (Adderall, Ritalin, Vyvanse, Concerta) are Schedule II controlled substances with strict federal regulations.

  • A formal ADHD evaluation is required before any stimulant is prescribed.
  • Stimulants will not be prescribed at an initial visit or based solely on a prior prescription from another provider.
  • Patients transferring from another provider must complete a new diagnostic evaluation. If you do not have documentation from a qualified provider or a completed neuropsychological evaluation confirming your ADHD diagnosis, a full reassessment will be required before treatment can continue.
  • Monthly follow-up, PMP checks, and periodic drug screening may be required.
  • Early refills and replacement prescriptions for lost medications are not permitted.

Other medications

  • Benzodiazepines (Xanax, Klonopin, Ativan): Require formal evaluation. Not first-line treatment. Carry significant dependence and withdrawal risks.
  • Sleep medications (Ambien, Lunesta, Belsomra): Sleep and psychiatric history reviewed first. Behavioral interventions discussed.
  • Mood stabilizers & antipsychotics (lithium, Lamictal, Seroquel): Full diagnostic evaluation including lab work required.
  • Antidepressants: Proper evaluation required to distinguish depression from bipolar disorder.

Prescription refills

  • Submit requests at least 7 business days before your medication runs out.
  • Refills are processed at or following your scheduled appointment.
  • Emergency refills for missed appointments or last-minute requests are not provided.
7

Documentation Requests

Applies to FMLA forms, short-term disability paperwork, accommodation letters, prior authorizations, and other clinical forms.

Turnaround time

All documentation requests require a minimum of 7–10 business days to complete from the date received. Requests submitted on weekends or holidays begin processing the next business day.

How to submit

  • Submit all requests through the patient portal.
  • Attach any required forms or employer paperwork at the time of submission.
  • Include any deadlines and the contact information for the requesting party.

Fees & limitations

  • Documentation outside of routine visit notes may be subject to an administrative fee. You will be notified before completion.
  • Documentation can only be completed for conditions formally assessed and treated within our practice.
  • We cannot guarantee specific outcomes. Documentation reflects your clinical status accurately and honestly.
  • Patients must be actively engaged in treatment to request documentation.
8

Patient Rights & Responsibilities

Your rights as a patient

  • Be treated with dignity, respect, and compassion
  • Receive clear information about your diagnosis, treatment options, and medications
  • Participate actively in all decisions about your care
  • Decline any treatment and be informed of consequences
  • Access your health records and request corrections
  • Receive a referral if we are unable to meet your needs
  • File a complaint without fear of retaliation

Your responsibilities

  • Arrive on time and prepared for appointments
  • Provide accurate and complete health information
  • Notify us of changes in contact info, insurance, or location
  • Communicate openly about symptoms and treatment response
  • Follow the care plan and medication instructions
  • Treat all staff with courtesy and respect
  • Adhere to all practice policies

Non-discrimination

We are committed to providing care without discrimination on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, disability, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, or any other protected characteristic.

Grievances & complaints

If you have a concern about your care or our policies, please speak directly with your provider or contact our office. Unresolved concerns may be submitted in writing. We will respond within 10 business days.

Acknowledgment

By scheduling or attending an appointment with Mount Blue Sky Behavioral Health, you acknowledge that you have read, understood, and agree to the policies outlined on this page. These policies are subject to change; updated versions will be posted on our website.

Questions? Our team is happy to help clarify anything before your first appointment.

Phone: (719) 745-2985

Get In Touch

We'd love to hear from you. Whether you have questions about services, need to schedule an appointment, or want to learn more about our approach — reach out anytime.

Contact Information

Main Location

Evergreen, Colorado

Hours of Operation

Monday – Friday: 8:00 AM – 8:00 PM

Saturday & Sunday: Closed

For emergencies, call 988 or 911.

Telehealth Coverage

We provide telehealth services in:

  • ✓ Arizona
  • ✓ Colorado
  • ✓ New Mexico
  • ✓ Oregon

Send us a message

We respond in 24 hours or less.

For Current Patients

If you're an existing patient, please use the secure patient portal for appointment requests, prescription refills, and clinical messages. Messages sent through the portal are reviewed within 1–2 business days during business hours.

For urgent or after-hours concerns: If you're in crisis or need immediate support, please call 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline) or 911.

Mental Health Resources

Crisis support and mental health resources available 24/7. Help is always available, no matter what you're facing. If you're in immediate danger, call 911.

🚨 Immediate Crisis Support

If you or someone you know is in immediate danger, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room.

Crisis Lifeline

988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline

Free, confidential support available 24/7 for anyone struggling with suicidal thoughts, emotional distress, or mental health crisis.

Call or Text: 988
Website: 988lifeline.org
Languages: English, Spanish, and many more
Crisis Text Line

Crisis Text Line

Text-based crisis support for those who feel more comfortable texting than calling. Trained crisis counselors respond to every message.

Text: Text "HOME" to 741741
Available: 24/7/365
Substance Use Support

SAMHSA National Helpline

Free, confidential support for individuals and families facing mental health and substance use disorders. Treatment referrals available.

Website: samhsa.gov
Languages: English and Spanish

📍 State-Specific Crisis Services

Colorado

Colorado Crisis Services

Mobile crisis response, crisis centers, and professional support available 24/7 for all Colorado residents, regardless of insurance coverage.

Text: Text "TALK" to 38255
New Mexico

New Mexico Crisis Services

Crisis intervention, mobile response, and emergency mental health services available 24/7 throughout New Mexico.

Website: nmhealth.org
Arizona

Arizona Crisis Services

24/7 crisis support and professional intervention available for all Arizona residents, regardless of insurance coverage.

Statewide: 1-800-631-1314
Oregon

Oregon Crisis Services

Crisis assessment and intervention services available 24/7 for Oregon residents experiencing mental health crisis.

Website: oregon.gov/dhs

💙 Specialized Support Resources

Veterans

Veterans Crisis Line

Crisis support specifically for military veterans and active-duty service members. Free and confidential.

Call: 988, then press 1
Text: Text 838255
Domestic Violence

National Domestic Violence Hotline

Confidential support and safety planning for those experiencing intimate partner violence. Available 24/7.

Text: Text "START" to 88788
Website: thehotline.org
Mental Health Support

NAMI HelpLine

National Alliance on Mental Illness provides peer support, educational resources, and crisis referral services.

Website: nami.org/help
Substance Use

Alcoholics Anonymous & Narcotics Anonymous

12-step support groups for addiction recovery. Free, peer-led meetings available worldwide.

AA Website: aa.org
NA Website: na.org

📚 Additional Helpful Resources

NAMI: National Alliance on Mental Illness

Educational materials, support groups, and advocacy for mental health awareness and support.

Website: nami.org

ADAA: Anxiety & Depression Association

Evidence-based resources, therapist finder, and support for anxiety and depression.

Website: adaa.org

IOCDF: Obsessive Compulsive Foundation

Resources and support for OCD and related disorders, including therapist directory.

Website: iocdf.org

ISTSS: International Society for the Study of Trauma

Evidence-based resources and trauma-informed therapist directory.

Website: istss.org

Important Reminder: These resources are provided as a guide. Mount Blue Sky is not responsible for the content of external resources. If you're in immediate danger, always call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room. Help is always available.

← Back to Blog

Postpartum Depression Isn't Just 'Baby Blues': What Every Woman Should Know

April 2026 Juliet Glass, PMHNP-BC

Congratulations on your new baby—and if you're struggling right now, know that you're not alone!

The first weeks and months after birth bring joy, but they also bring exhaustion, hormonal shifts, and overwhelming responsibility. Many women experience what's called "baby blues"—a common, temporary mood dip that affects up to 80% of new mothers. But when sadness, anxiety, or intrusive thoughts linger beyond two weeks, or when they intensify rather than improve, you may be experiencing postpartum depression (PPD) or postpartum anxiety—and that's different. That's treatable.

Understanding the Difference

Baby Blues typically appear in the first 1-2 weeks after delivery and include:

  • Tearfulness and mood swings
  • Anxiety about baby care
  • Irritability
  • Sleep disruption (beyond the baby's schedule)
  • Feeling overwhelmed

These symptoms are temporary and subside on their own within 2-3 weeks as hormones stabilize. They don't require psychiatric treatment, though support from partners, family, and healthcare providers helps.

Postpartum Depression (and postpartum anxiety) last beyond two weeks and include:

  • Persistent depressed or anxious mood
  • Loss of interest in the activities you typically enjoy
  • Changes with appetite or sleep (beyond infant care demands)
  • Feelings of worthlessness, guilt, or inadequacy as a mother
  • Difficulty concentrating or making decisions
  • Fatigue that doesn't improve with rest
  • Thoughts of harming yourself or the baby (intrusive thoughts—which are NOT the same as wanting to act on them)
  • Panic attacks or intense, uncontrollable worry

Why This Matters

Postpartum depression is a medical condition, not a personal failing, weakness, or sign of poor motherhood. It's caused by the dramatic shift in hormones after birth, combined with sleep deprivation, life changes, and pre-existing risk factors including personal or family history of depression.

Here's what's critical: PPD is highly treatable.

Research shows that women who receive psychiatric care—including medication management, therapy, or both—recover well and go on to bond solidly with their babies and thrive in motherhood.

But too many women suffer in silence because of stigma, guilt, or the mistaken belief that they should "tough it out." This is especially true for women of color, who face additional barriers: historical medical trauma, disparities in care, and cultural messages that discourage seeking help for mental health.

Warning Signs—Don't Ignore Them

Seek psychiatric evaluation if you experience:

  • Depressed or anxious mood most days for more than two weeks
  • Thoughts about harming yourself or your baby
  • Inability to care for yourself or your baby
  • Severe panic or intrusive thoughts
  • Feeling disconnected from your baby or life
  • Suicidal thoughts

What Treatment Looks Like

Psychiatric Medication: Antidepressants and anti-anxiety medications are safe during pregnancy and breastfeeding (many have decades of safety data). They take 2-4 weeks to work, but they help restore the neurochemistry disrupted by hormonal shifts.

Therapy: Talk therapy with a licensed therapist addresses the emotional, relational, and practical obstacles of new motherhood.

Support: Partner involvement, family support, and community connection matter.

Holistic Care: Sleep, nutrition, movement, and easing stress all support recovery.

A Word About Medication and Breastfeeding

If you're breastfeeding and worried about medication, here's what you need to know: Many psychiatric medications are safe while breastfeeding. Your psychiatrist can help you weigh the risks and benefits. The risk of untreated postpartum depression—to you and your baby—is often greater than the minimal risk from most medications. Your pediatrician and psychiatrist can coordinate to monitor your baby.

You're Not Alone

According to the US Centers for Disease Control, Postpartum depression affects approximately 1 in 8 new mothers in the United States. Among women of color, rates are higher due to added stress and barriers to care. Whatever your personal history or situation, you deserve compassionate, competent psychiatric care.

Next Steps

If you're experiencing postpartum depression or anxiety, contact your OB/GYN, primary care doctor, or a psychiatrist specializing in women's mental health. If you're in Colorado, Oregon, Arizona, or New Mexico and looking for a provider who understands postpartum psychiatric conditions and the special needs of women of color, Mount Blue Sky Behavioral Health is here to help.

You don't have to white-knuckle through this. Treatment works. Recovery is possible. And you deserve to enjoy this season of life.

Ready to get support? Juliet Glass, PMHNP-BC, specializes in postpartum psychiatric care and women's mental health.

Schedule a consultation
← Back to Blog

Why Black Women's Mental Health Matters: Breaking Barriers to Psychiatric Care

Nov 2025 Juliet Glass, PMHNP-BC

If you're a Black woman seeking mental health care, you might have heard something like this:

  • "You're strong. We don't get depressed; we just push through."
  • "Therapy is for white people."
  • "That psychiatrist won't understand what it's like to be me."

These aren't just casual comments—they reflect real barriers, real disparities, and real consequences. Black women face unique obstacles in accessing quality mental health care, and the stakes are high.

The Reality: Disparities in Mental Health Care

Let's be direct: The mental health system has failed Black women.

Black women experience depression, anxiety, PTSD, and substance use disorders at rates comparable to white women—sometimes higher when accounting for social stress, trauma, and discrimination. Yet we are significantly less likely to receive psychiatric care, less likely to be prescribed medication, and more likely to go undiagnosed.

Here's why:

Historical Medical Racism

Black Americans have every reason to be wary of the medical system. From the Tuskegee Syphilis Study to forced sterilizations to maternal mortality disparities today, the history is real and the wounds are deep. That wariness isn't paranoia—it's a rational response to documented harm.

Implicit Bias in Diagnosis

Studies show that Black women's mental health symptoms are often minimized, misattributed to personality or attitude, or dismissed as "not serious enough" for psychiatric care. Our pain is read as aggression. Our anxiety is read as anger. Our depression is read as laziness.

Lack of Representation

The psychiatry field is predominantly white. In 2024, only about 3-4% of psychiatrists are Black. This means many Black women seeking care have never seen a Black psychiatrist—and many white psychiatrists lack cultural competency to understand the intersection of race, gender, trauma, and mental health.

Insurance and Access Barriers

Black communities are overrepresented in uninsured and underinsured populations. Even with insurance, finding in-network Black psychiatrists in most areas is nearly impossible. Transportation, childcare, work inflexibility—the practical barriers compound.

Mistrust

When previous encounters with healthcare providers have been dismissive or harmful, seeking mental health care requires overcoming legitimate mistrust. You shouldn't have to educate your psychiatrist about racism or your lived experience.

The Cost of Silence

When Black women don't receive psychiatric care, the consequences ripple outward:

  • Untreated depression worsens physical health and increases risk of serious medical conditions
  • Untreated anxiety and PTSD affect work, relationships, parenting, and quality of life
  • Substance use often becomes a coping mechanism when professional help isn't accessible
  • The emotional burden falls on family, friends, and community—often women carrying everyone else's weight
  • Maternal mental health disparities directly affect infant and child outcomes

You can't pour from an empty cup—and you shouldn't have to try.

What Cultural Competency Actually Means

When we talk about finding a "culturally competent" psychiatrist, what does that mean?

It means a provider who:

  • Understands systemic racism and how discrimination, historical trauma, and ongoing stress affect mental health
  • Listens without defensiveness when you name experiences of racism or bias
  • Doesn't pathologize normal responses to abnormal (racist) circumstances
  • Recognizes the strength and resilience that comes from surviving in systems not built for you
  • Integrates your cultural identity into treatment rather than treating it as separate from mental health
  • Shares or genuinely respects your lived experience and doesn't require you to educate them
  • Acknowledges medication, therapy, and community as equally important parts of healing

Ideally, this includes providers who share your identity—Black women psychiatrists who've navigated similar systems and understand, without explanation, what it means to be you.

Why Representation Matters

Research is clear: Patient outcomes improve when there's racial concordance between patient and provider. This isn't because white psychiatrists can't help Black patients—it's that trust deepens, communication flows more easily, and less time is spent explaining context that should be obvious.

When you see a psychiatrist who looks like you, who gets it, who doesn't need you to justify your pain or educate them about your community—that's not just nice. That's healing.

Finding Your Psychiatrist

The mental health field needs more Black psychiatrists, therapists, and culturally competent providers. Until representation improves, what can you do?

Look for providers who:

  • Explicitly state commitment to cultural competency and anti-racism
  • Have lived experience in communities they serve
  • Offer telehealth (expanding your geographic options)
  • Specialize in treating women and/or communities of color
  • Come recommended by trusted community members

Ask questions:

  • "How do you approach treating Black patients?"
  • "What's your experience with race-based trauma and discrimination?"
  • "How do you handle it if I name racism or bias in our work together?"
  • "What's your approach to medication, therapy, and community support?"

Trust your gut: If a provider makes you feel dismissed, misunderstood, or like you have to explain yourself—keep looking. You deserve a psychiatrist who gets it.

You Deserve This

Your mental health matters. Your healing matters. Your voice matters.

Depression, anxiety, trauma, and substance use are medical conditions that respond to treatment. You don't have to suffer in silence, push through, or manage alone. And you don't have to settle for a provider who doesn't see you, understand you, or respect the fullness of who you are.

If you're a Black woman in Colorado, Oregon, Arizona, or New Mexico seeking psychiatric care from someone who understands your experience, we're here to help.

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Anxiety, Depression, and Trauma: How They Show Up Differently in Women

Dec 2025 Juliet Glass, PMHNP-BC

You know that feeling when you're at your doctor's appointment and you describe your symptoms—the chest tightness, the constant worry, the exhaustion—and the response is "that's just stress" or "you're being dramatic"?

You're not being dramatic. And your symptoms aren't being taken seriously because they look different in women than they do in men—and the mental health field has historically been trained to look for depression and anxiety as they appear in men.

Here's what you need to know about how mental illness shows up differently in women—and why it matters.

Depression in Women: More Than Sadness

When most people think of depression, they imagine someone who's sad, withdrawn, and unmotivated. That's one picture. But in women, depression often wears different masks.

Masked Depression (also called "smiling depression")

Many women with depression continue to function—showing up to work, caring for kids, managing household, volunteering. From the outside, everything looks fine. Inside, there's numbness, hopelessness, and the crushing effort of performing normalcy. Family members, friends, and even healthcare providers miss it because depressed women are often socialized to keep going, manage others' needs, and not burden anyone with their pain.

Depression as Irritability

Women often experience depression as irritability, anger, or impatience rather than sadness. You might snap at your partner, feel rage at small frustrations, or have a short fuse with your kids. This gets misread as "being moody" or "being difficult"—not as a symptom of clinical depression.

Physical Symptoms

Women report more physical symptoms with depression: chronic pain, headaches, digestive issues, muscle tension. These often get treated separately—pain management, GI workups—without anyone connecting them to underlying depression.

Hormonal Connections

Women's depression often fluctuates with menstrual cycles, pregnancy, postpartum period, and menopause. A woman might experience worsening depression in the luteal phase of her cycle, postpartum, or during perimenopause. These patterns are usually not discussed, leaving women confused about why their mood crashes on a schedule.

The "Good Mother/Good Woman" Trap

Society expects women to be nurturing, available, self-sacrificing. Depression is seen as selfish or weak. So women hide it, push through it, blame themselves for it. "I should be grateful." "Other people have it worse." "I'm not allowed to be this sad." The shame compounds the illness.

What gets missed: Doctors see a woman managing fine on the surface and don't dig deeper. Women internalize the message that depression should be hidden. By the time depression is diagnosed in women, it's often more severe.

Anxiety in Women: Vigilance and Worry

Anxiety looks different in women too.

Generalized Anxiety

Women experience more rumination and worry than men—constantly cycling through "what-ifs," potential disasters, and things that could go wrong. This can feel like you can't turn off your brain. It's not neurotic; it's anxiety.

Social Anxiety and Perfectionism

Women are more likely to internalize anxiety as a need to be perfect, people-please, or manage others' emotions. You might avoid situations where you could be judged, over-prepare for presentations, or take on others' emotional labor to prevent conflict. This is anxiety wearing the costume of conscientiousness.

Body Vigilance

Many women with anxiety hyper-focus on bodily sensations—heart rate, digestion, pain, breathing. This can lead to health anxiety ("What if this headache is a tumor?") and frequent doctor visits. Sometimes this is labeled as "hypochondria" rather than recognized as an anxiety symptom.

Hormonal Patterns

Anxiety often worsens during certain phases of the menstrual cycle, during pregnancy, or around perimenopause. Women with a history of anxiety may experience postpartum anxiety—which is just as serious as postpartum depression but often overlooked.

Caregiver Anxiety

Women are more likely to experience anxiety focused on caring for others—worrying about kids, aging parents, partners. This can be mistaken for normal motherhood stress rather than recognized as clinical anxiety requiring treatment.

What gets missed: Anxiety in women is often normalized as "just how women are"—naturally more cautious, more worried, more attentive. Healthcare providers don't always screen for it. Women don't always recognize it as anxiety rather than reality-based concern.

Trauma in Women: Complex PTSD and Hidden Scars

Women experience trauma differently than men and carry it differently.

Relational Trauma

Women are more likely to experience trauma in relationships—intimate partner violence, sexual assault, childhood abuse. This creates a particular kind of injury: betrayal trauma. You've been harmed by someone you trusted or depend on. This affects how you relate, trust, and feel safe.

Complex PTSD (C-PTSD)

When trauma happens repeatedly or over a long period—childhood abuse, ongoing domestic violence, repeated assault—women develop complex PTSD: difficulty regulating emotions, negative self-perception, relationship problems, dissociation, and changes in how you perceive threats.

Dissociation and Disconnection

Women with trauma history often experience dissociation—feeling numb, disconnected from your body, watching yourself from outside. This is a brilliant survival mechanism that feels like something is wrong with you.

Shame and Self-Blame

Gendered trauma often comes with shame. "What was I wearing?" "Why didn't I say no?" "Why did I stay?" Women internalize responsibility for the trauma inflicted on them. This shame is often worse than the trauma itself and keeps women from seeking help.

Trauma Responses Mistaken for Other Things

A woman with trauma history might be labeled as "dramatic," "emotionally unstable," or "difficult" when she's actually experiencing hypervigilance, emotional dysregulation, or flashbacks. Hyperarousal (feeling on edge, jumpy, reactive) gets mistaken for anxiety. Emotional numbness gets mistaken for coldness.

What gets missed: Trauma in women is often minimized ("that was a long time ago"), normalized ("that happens to a lot of women"), or reframed ("you're too sensitive"). The connection between past trauma and current mental health isn't made.

Why This Matters: The Misdiagnosis Problem

When depression, anxiety, and trauma show up differently in women and healthcare providers aren't trained to recognize these presentations, women get misdiagnosed, undertreated, or not treated at all.

The consequences:

  • Suffering continues longer than necessary
  • Women blame themselves for "not being sick enough" or "not being depressed the right way"
  • Conditions worsen over time
  • Relationships, work, and health suffer

What You Can Do

If you recognize yourself in these descriptions:

1. Trust your experience. If you're struggling, you deserve care—regardless of how you look on the surface.

2. Be specific with your provider. Don't just say "I'm sad" or "I'm worried." Describe the patterns: "My mood crashes every month," "I'm angry at everything," "I can't stop thinking about worst-case scenarios," "I feel numb even during good moments."

3. Mention hormonal patterns. Tell your psychiatrist or doctor how your mental health changes with your cycle, pregnancy, postpartum, or menopause.

4. Ask directly: "Could this be depression/anxiety/trauma?" Make your provider name it.

5. Find a provider who specializes in women's mental health. This makes a huge difference. A psychiatrist trained in how mental illness shows up in women will recognize what others miss.

You're Not Imagining It

Depression, anxiety, and trauma in women often look different than textbook presentations. That doesn't mean they're less real, less serious, or less treatable. It means you need a provider who understands women's mental health.

Your symptoms are valid. Your experience is real. And you deserve a psychiatrist who sees and treats you.

If you're experiencing depression, anxiety, or trauma and need a provider who specializes in women's mental health, Mount Blue Sky is here to help.

Schedule a consultation
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Feb 2026 Juliet Glass, PMHNP-BC

Medication Management for Women: Questions to Ask Your Psychiatrist

Your guide to informed conversations about psychiatric medication, pregnancy, breastfeeding, and shared decision-making.

If you're a woman considering psychiatric medication—whether for depression, anxiety, PTSD, bipolar disorder, or postpartum depression—you probably have questions. Questions about safety. Questions about side effects. Questions about whether medication is the right choice for you.

These are the right questions to ask. And you deserve clear, evidence-based answers.

The problem is that many women don't get them. Some psychiatrists don't explain options. Some patients are too shy to ask. Some women have been given outdated information. And many women don't know what reasonable questions to bring to their appointment.

It's Not "Medication vs. Nothing"

Here's the first and most important thing: when you're deciding whether to take psychiatric medication, you're not choosing between "medication" and "nothing." You're choosing between "treatment with medication" and "living with untreated illness."

This matters because untreated depression, anxiety, and trauma have real consequences. For pregnant women, untreated depression increases the risk of preterm birth, low birth weight, complications during labor, and increased risk of suicide (which is one of the leading causes of postpartum death).

When you're weighing whether to take medication, you're weighing the small risks of the medication against the very real risks of untreated illness. That's a different calculation than many women realize.

Which Medications Are Considered Safest?

When it comes to psychiatric medications in pregnancy and breastfeeding, decades of research has identified some medications as safer choices than others.

The safest first-line antidepressants for pregnancy and breastfeeding are SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors). The three with the most evidence are:

  • Sertraline (Zoloft) — considered the leading option for breastfeeding
  • Escitalopram (Lexapro) — safe in pregnancy and breastfeeding
  • Fluoxetine (Prozac) — nearly 37 years of safety data

Why? Because researchers have tracked thousands of pregnancies in women taking these medications. We have decades of data demonstrating they don't cause the birth defects some women worry about.

Why Do Women and Men Respond Differently to Medication?

Here's something many doctors don't discuss with women patients: men and women don't metabolize psychiatric medications the same way.

Women have different body composition (more body fat, less water), different enzyme systems, and different hormonal impacts in how medications are broken down. The result? Women often experience more side effects than men on the same dose, may need different doses than men, and may have fluctuations in medication effectiveness throughout the menstrual cycle.

This means a dose that works perfectly for a male friend might be too high for you—or not high enough.

The Seven Critical Questions to Ask Your Psychiatrist

Before you leave your psychiatrist's office, make sure you have answers to these questions:

  1. Is this medication safe if I become pregnant or if I'm already pregnant? Your psychiatrist should be able to explain the relative risks.
  2. If I breastfeed, how much of this medication will the baby be exposed to? The technical term is "relative infant dose" (RID). Sertraline, escitalopram, and fluoxetine have very low RIDs.
  3. Does this medication interact with my birth control? Some medications reduce how well hormonal contraceptives work.
  4. Should the dose change across my menstrual cycle or during pregnancy? Many women need dose adjustments in the second half of their cycle or in late pregnancy.
  5. What are the gender-specific side effects I should watch for? Ask about weight gain, sexual side effects, hormonal changes, and metabolic effects.
  6. Will you coordinate care with my OB/GYN and pediatrician? The best outcomes happen when providers are communicating.
  7. What are the risks of NOT treating my condition right now? This anchors the whole conversation. Untreated depression, anxiety, and trauma have real costs.

What Shared Decision-Making Looks Like

"Shared decision-making" is a fancy term for something simple: you and your psychiatrist making the decision together, with both of you bringing expertise and knowledge to the table.

Your psychiatrist brings medical knowledge. You bring knowledge of your body, your values, your life circumstances, and what matters to you.

Good shared decision-making sounds like: "Here are the medication options. Here's what we know about each one," "Here are the pros and cons for your specific situation," and "What matters most to you in making this decision?"

Your Next Step

If you're considering psychiatric medication, or if you're already taking one and want to make sure you understand it fully, set up a conversation with your provider using these seven questions.

If you don't feel heard, if your questions aren't being answered, or if you sense your psychiatrist isn't taking your concerns seriously—trust that instinct. You can ask for a second opinion or find a different provider.

At Mount Blue Sky Behavioral Health, we believe informed women make better decisions. We're committed to explaining your options clearly, discussing risks and benefits for YOUR specific situation, and partnering with your other medical providers to give you the best possible care.

If you're considering medication or want to ensure you understand your current treatment, Mount Blue Sky is here to help you navigate these important decisions.

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Jan 2026. Juliet Glass, PMHNP-BC

Substance Use and Mental Health: You Don't Have to Choose Recovery

Why integrated treatment works—and why you deserve access to both addiction and mental health care.

If you're battling both addiction and mental health conditions like depression or anxiety, you've probably heard conflicting messages.

From some people: "Get clean first, then we'll address the depression." From others: "The depression is causing the addiction—focus on that."

Maybe you've been turned away by a rehab program because you also have depression. Or denied antidepressants by an addiction counselor who worried medication would "interfere with recovery."

Here's what the research says: You need treatment for both. At the same time. Together. Not one instead of the other.

The Real Picture: How Addiction and Mental Health Intertwine

Substance use and mental health conditions are deeply connected—especially for women. If you're pregnant, postpartum, or parenting, the stakes are even higher. Women with opioid use disorder have rates of depression and anxiety nearly double those of pregnant women without addiction.

Here's why they're so tangled:

  • Mental health can trigger addiction. Untreated depression, anxiety, or trauma can feel unbearable. Substances become a way to cope, to numb, to sleep. For many women, the addiction started as self-medication.
  • Addiction can worsen mental health. Substance use disrupts sleep, changes brain chemistry, damages relationships, and creates shame. All of this feeds depression and anxiety.
  • They share biological roots. Both addiction and depression involve the same brain systems—dopamine, serotonin, stress hormones. Treating one without treating the other leaves you vulnerable.

Why "Integrated Treatment" Matters

The term "integrated treatment" means one team—or coordinating providers—treating your addiction AND your mental health conditions at the same time, with the same intensity.

Research is crystal clear: integrated treatment leads to better outcomes. Women with both addiction and mental health conditions who receive coordinated care have higher rates of recovery and sustained sobriety, better treatment adherence, lower relapse rates, fewer hospitalizations, and improved parenting and quality of life.

Medication-Assisted Treatment Plus Mental Health Care

If you have an opioid use disorder, medication-assisted treatment (MAT) is gold-standard care. This means medications like methadone, buprenorphine, or naltrexone—which reduce cravings and prevent withdrawal—combined with counseling and behavioral support.

But here's what gets missed: many women on MAT also need psychiatric medication and therapy for depression, anxiety, PTSD, or bipolar disorder. The research is strong: women on MAT for opioid addiction who also have depression need antidepressants. The antidepressant doesn't interfere with the MAT—it complements it.

You're not "replacing one addiction with another" by taking psychiatric medication. You're treating a medical condition.

The Postpartum Window: A Critical Time

The postpartum period is especially tricky for women with addiction and mental health conditions.

During pregnancy, many women reduce or stop substance use. Then comes postpartum: sleep deprivation, hormonal shifts, stress of caring for a newborn, loss of structure, and often a loss of access to treatment.

The postpartum relapse rate for women with opioid use disorder is much higher than during pregnancy. Triggers include demands of newborn care, loss of insurance or treatment access, sleep deprivation, untreated postpartum depression or anxiety, and fear of child protective services.

This is exactly why postpartum women with addiction need EXTENDED, COORDINATED care—not a sudden drop-off when the baby is born.

What Happens Without Treatment (For Both)

For the mother: Overdose death (substance use is now a leading cause of maternal death in the first year postpartum), suicide, chronic health problems, legal consequences, and relapse cycles.

For the baby: Preterm birth and low birth weight, neonatal abstinence syndrome, developmental delays, cognitive and behavioral problems, disrupted bonding, and trauma from instability.

The goal of integrated treatment is to prevent this. It's not punishment. It's not judgment. It's keeping both mother and baby safe.

Finding Integrated Care

Truly integrated programs are hard to find. If you can't find a fully integrated program, here's what you can do:

  • Find providers who will communicate. Ask them to share your treatment goals. They should be coordinating, not competing.
  • Be your own coordinator. You can share information between providers and bring notes from one appointment to another.
  • Advocate for yourself. If a provider says "choose between treatment for addiction or treatment for depression," recognize that's not evidence-based care. You deserve both.

You Don't Have to Choose

Your depression isn't the enemy of your recovery. Your anxiety isn't a distraction from getting sober. Your trauma isn't a barrier to healing.

These are medical conditions that co-exist. And they need co-treatment.

If you're struggling with both addiction and mental health conditions, you deserve providers who believe in integrated care, medication management, therapy and counseling, perinatal care if you're pregnant or postpartum, and providers who communicate with each other.

If you're struggling with both substance use and mental health conditions, Mount Blue Sky treats the whole picture. We integrate addiction psychiatry, perinatal psychiatry, and trauma treatment.

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March 2026. Juliet Glass, PMHNP-BC

Telehealth Mental Health: How to Get Quality Psychiatric Care From Home

Why telehealth removes barriers and delivers real, evidence-based psychiatric care.

You have a newborn who won't nap unless you're holding them. You work full-time. Childcare is a nightmare. Your local psychiatrist has a three-month wait list. You don't have reliable transportation. You live in a rural area with almost no mental health providers.

So when your therapist suggests telehealth psychiatry, your first thought might be: "Will I get real care? Or is this just a band-aid?"

Here's what the research shows: Telehealth psychiatric care works. It's not a lesser option—it's an option that removes barriers and, for many people, leads to better outcomes than trying to navigate in-person appointments.

What Telehealth Actually Is (And Isn't)

Telehealth psychiatry means a video visit with a psychiatrist using a secure platform on your device (computer, tablet, or phone). It looks like a regular video call, but the security and privacy protections are much stronger—encrypted, HIPAA-compliant, and designed specifically for healthcare.

It is NOT: A text-based app, an AI chatbot, or therapy through a non-clinical app. It IS: A real psychiatrist doing real psychiatric evaluation and medication management. Secure and confidential. Comparable in effectiveness to in-person care for most psychiatric conditions.

Why Telehealth Removes Critical Barriers

For pregnant women, postpartum mothers, women with complex trauma, and women of color seeking mental health care, barriers are real.

  • Transportation: If you don't have reliable transportation, telehealth eliminates this barrier.
  • Childcare: You don't have to find and pay for childcare. You can take the visit at home.
  • Geographic access: If you live in a rural area, telehealth opens access to providers hundreds of miles away.
  • Wait times: Many in-person psychiatrists have long wait lists. Telehealth practices can often schedule within weeks.
  • Work: You don't have to take time off work and travel. A lunch-break visit takes 30 minutes, not three hours.
  • Disability and chronic illness: If you have mobility issues or chronic pain, telehealth removes this barrier.

Research confirms: women report high levels of satisfaction with telehealth mental health care, and telehealth removes barriers that would otherwise prevent them from getting care at all.

Does Telehealth Work? What the Research Says

Over the last few years, we've accumulated solid evidence that telehealth psychiatric care is effective for depression and anxiety, perinatal mental health, substance use disorders, and trauma and PTSD.

The research on perinatal mental health is particularly strong. Studies found that women receiving telehealth mental health intervention during pregnancy and postpartum had significant reductions in depression and anxiety symptoms. Telehealth group interventions for perinatal depression were cost-effective and reached women who wouldn't access in-person care.

In fact, telehealth has advantages: you're in your own environment (which some people find less intimidating), less travel stress, flexibility in scheduling, often lower cost than in-person, and written summaries can be sent to other providers easily.

Privacy and Security: How Telehealth Actually Protects You

Secure encryption: Telehealth platforms designed for healthcare use military-grade encryption. Your session is scrambled so that even if someone hacked the internet, they couldn't see or hear what's happening.

HIPAA compliance: Healthcare telehealth platforms are required to comply with HIPAA, the federal law protecting medical privacy. This means the platform can't sell your data, your session is protected, and your health information can't be shared without consent.

You control your environment: You choose where to sit, what's in the background, and who's present. You can set boundaries.

No corporate data harvesting: Unlike FaceTime or Zoom, clinical telehealth platforms can't use your data for marketing. They're designed for healthcare privacy, not profit.

What Good Telehealth Psychiatry Looks Like

The psychiatrist does a real intake: Asks about medical history, psychiatric history, medications, family history, and discusses your symptoms in detail. First visit should be 45–60 minutes, not 15.

The platform is secure: Explicitly states it's HIPAA-compliant, uses end-to-end encryption, and requires identity verification.

The psychiatrist discusses medication thoughtfully: Explains why they're recommending a particular medication, discusses side effects and interactions, and is willing to coordinate with your other providers.

Follow-up is structured: Scheduled follow-up appointments usually every 4–8 weeks, ability to reach out between appointments if urgent, notes sent to your other providers (if you consent), and a plan for emergency psychiatric care.

For Pregnant and Postpartum Women: Special Considerations

If you're pregnant or postpartum and considering telehealth psychiatry, your psychiatrist should ask about your pregnancy/postpartum status, discuss medication safety in pregnancy and breastfeeding, be willing to communicate with your OB/GYN, and have a plan for coordination if you need it.

Telehealth is particularly good for postpartum women because you don't have to figure out childcare, you can take the appointment during a nap or when your partner is home, and you're already home (no travel stress when sleep-deprived).

What to Do Before Your First Telehealth Appointment

  • Test your technology: Log in early. Check your camera, microphone, and internet speed.
  • Find privacy: Choose a quiet, private space. Even a bedroom with the door closed is fine.
  • Gather your information: Have your medical history handy—past psychiatric diagnoses, medications, family history.
  • Write down what you want to discuss: Symptoms, concerns, goals. This helps you stay focused.
  • Know your insurance: Ask whether the telehealth provider is in-network and if your insurance covers telehealth.
  • Clarify confidentiality: Ask the provider about privacy, who can be present, and what information will be shared.

The Bottom Line

Telehealth psychiatric care is real, effective, evidence-based mental health treatment. It's not a compromise. It's an option that makes care accessible to women who face real barriers—transportation, geography, childcare, work schedules, disability, trauma-related safety concerns.

For pregnant women, postpartum mothers, women in rural areas, women of color, and women with complex needs, telehealth can be transformational. It removes barriers and gets you connected to a psychiatrist who understands your situation.

If you've been stuck on a wait list, couldn't afford in-person care, or live somewhere with few psychiatrists, telehealth might be exactly what you need.

Mount Blue Sky offers telehealth psychiatry specifically designed for women. We understand the barriers pregnant women and postpartum mothers face, and we coordinate with your OB/GYN and other providers.

Schedule a consultation

About Juliet Glass, PMHNP-BC

Comprehensive psychiatric care grounded in compassion, evidence-based treatment, and deep respect for the women and communities we serve.

My Journey

I became a psychiatric nurse practitioner because I was searching for answers—not just about mental health, but about purpose, resilience, and what it means to truly see and be seen by another human being.

Like many people drawn to this field, my path was personal. I've witnessed the transformative power of quality psychiatric care, and I've also seen what happens when patients fall through the cracks—when they're not heard, when their symptoms are minimized, when they're treated like a diagnosis rather than a person.

After years of nursing and psychiatric training, I realized I needed to practice differently. I needed to build a practice around my values: deep listening, unhurried appointments, cultural competency, and a commitment to treating the whole person—not just managing symptoms.

"I don't believe in the illusion of the 'all-knowing' provider and the patient left in the dark. You know you better than anyone. My role is to listen, learn, and help you heal."

My Approach

Psychiatric care is medical care. Depression, anxiety, trauma, and substance use disorders respond to evidence-based treatment—medication, therapy, or both. But treating the brain also means treating the whole person: your history, your culture, your values, your body, your relationships.

I practice integrative psychiatry, combining pharmaceutical interventions with functional medicine principles. This means we don't just ask "what medication will help?" We also ask: "How are you sleeping? What's your nutrition like? What does your stress look like? How have hormones affected your mental health? What does healing look like for you?"

I'm also deeply committed to culturally competent, anti-racist psychiatric care. Mental health disparities are real, and they matter. Black women, women of color, and marginalized communities face unique barriers to care and systemic inequities that affect their mental health. I'm committed to understanding these intersections and providing care that honors your full identity.

Why Women's Mental Health

Women's mental health has been historically overlooked, underdiagnosed, and undertreated. Depression in women looks different. Anxiety manifests differently. Trauma leaves different scars. Yet the mental health field was largely trained to recognize psychiatric illness as it appears in men.

I specialize in women's mental health because women deserve providers who understand:

  • Postpartum psychiatric conditions: Postpartum depression and anxiety are medical emergencies that require specialized care.
  • Hormonal changes across the lifespan: Menstrual cycles, pregnancy, postpartum, and menopause profoundly affect mental health.
  • Gendered trauma: Sexual assault, intimate partner violence, and relational trauma require trauma-informed, gender-conscious care.
  • Addiction in women: Women's substance use disorders often have different presentations and root causes than men's.
  • The "masked" presentation of mental illness in women: Women are socialized to hide suffering, manage others' needs, and perform normalcy—even when struggling deeply inside.

My Commitment to You

  • Unhurried, thorough evaluations: Your initial appointment won't be rushed. I take time to understand your history, your goals, and what brings you here.
  • Collaborative treatment: You're an active partner in your care. We'll discuss medication options, side effects, and alternatives. You'll never feel like a passive recipient of treatment.
  • Timeliness and responsiveness: You deserve a provider who returns messages, addresses concerns, and adjusts treatment when things aren't working.
  • Cultural competency and anti-racism: I commit to understanding your lived experience, listening without defensiveness when you name experiences of discrimination, and treating your cultural identity as central to your mental health—not separate from it.
  • Honesty about limitations: If I can't meet your needs, I'll tell you and help you find someone who can. Mental health care is about fit, and sometimes a different provider is the right answer.

Ready to Start?

If you're looking for a psychiatrist who will truly see you, listen to you, and treat you with the care and respect you deserve—let's talk.

Schedule a Free Consultation

Frequently Asked Questions

Find answers to common questions about our practice, services, and how to work with us. Can't find what you're looking for? Contact us.

What is Mount Blue Sky Behavioral Health? +

Mount Blue Sky Behavioral Health is a specialized psychiatric practice focused on comprehensive, evidence-based care for women. We provide psychiatric evaluation, medication management, and integrative treatment via secure telehealth and limited in-person sessions in Evergreen, Colorado. We specialize in women's mental health, postpartum psychiatric conditions, trauma, addiction, and depression and anxiety across the lifespan.

What services do you provide? +

Psychiatric Evaluation: A thorough initial assessment (60-90 minutes) to understand your history, symptoms, goals, and medical background.

Medication Management: Collaborative medication selection, dosing, monitoring, and adjustment. No prescription will be issued without a completed diagnostic evaluation.

Integrative Psychiatry: Treatment that combines pharmaceutical interventions with functional medicine principles—examining sleep, nutrition, hormones, gut health, stress, and lifestyle factors.

Women's Mental Health Specialization: Specialized care for postpartum depression and anxiety, hormonal shifts, trauma, and mental health across women's lifespan.

Targeted Therapy: Brief, focused counseling as part of psychiatric treatment (note: we are not a therapy practice, but integrate supportive counseling into medication management visits).

What does Mount Blue Sky NOT offer? +

We do not provide:

  • Stimulant prescriptions for ADHD without a completed neuropsychological evaluation or documented diagnosis from a qualified provider
  • Medical marijuana evaluations or documentation
  • Standalone psychotherapy (we partner with excellent therapists and provide referrals)
  • Crisis intervention or emergency services (please call 988 or 911)
  • Services requiring in-person visits outside our Evergreen, Colorado location, except via telehealth
Do you prescribe stimulant medications for ADHD? +

Only with proper documentation. We require either:

  • A completed neuropsychological evaluation confirming ADHD diagnosis, OR
  • Documentation of ADHD diagnosis from a qualified provider

If you don't have documentation, we'll conduct a thorough evaluation to distinguish ADHD from other conditions (anxiety, depression, trauma) that can present similarly. We can provide referrals to psychologists who conduct neuropsychological evaluations.

Stimulants will not be prescribed at an initial visit or based solely on a prior prescription from another provider. If you're transferring from another psychiatrist, a new evaluation is required.

Do you prescribe benzodiazepines? +

Very rarely. While benzodiazepines have a place in acute anxiety management, growing research shows concerning links between long-term benzodiazepine use and cognitive decline, memory problems, and dependence.

If you're already taking a benzodiazepine, we'll work collaboratively to find safer alternatives that address your anxiety without these risks. We prioritize antidepressants, other anti-anxiety medications, and evidence-based approaches like therapy and lifestyle modification.

How do you handle hours and appointment scheduling? +

Office Hours: Monday–Friday, 9:00 AM–5:00 PM (appointments and patient portal inquiries)

Telehealth Appointments: Available throughout service areas (Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, Oregon)

In-Person: Limited availability in Evergreen, Colorado

Appointments are scheduled through our patient portal. We ask for at least 24 hours' notice for cancellations. Late cancellations and no-shows may incur a $100 fee.

What insurances do you accept? +

We accept most major insurance plans including:

  • Aetna
  • Anthem / BCBS
  • Cigna / Evernorth
  • UnitedHealthcare
  • Medicare
  • Medicaid (varies by state)
  • TRICARE / TriWest
  • Colorado Access
  • Rocky Mountain Health Plans

We also offer self-pay options: $300 initial evaluation, $150 follow-up visits.

Please verify your coverage before your first appointment by contacting your insurance or our billing team.

Do you offer free consultations? +

Yes! We offer a free 15-minute consultation for new patients or therapists seeking collaboration. This is an opportunity to ask questions, discuss your needs, and determine if we're a good fit for you.

To schedule, use our contact form or call (719) 745-2985.

Do you complete disability paperwork and accommodation letters? +

Yes, for current patients only (those under our care consistently for at least 3 months).

Disability Requests: We're conservative with long-term disability recommendations. When treatment is effective, most patients can participate in daily activities and work. Sometimes short-term leave is necessary during initial stabilization, but we evaluate each case individually.

Accommodation Requests: We're happy to support reasonable accommodations (flexible scheduling, remote work options, etc.) that enhance your treatment and stability.

Documentation requests require 7-10 business days minimum. Submit through the patient portal.

What if I'm in crisis or having a mental health emergency? +

We are not an emergency services provider. If you're in crisis or experiencing suicidal thoughts:

  • Call 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline) – available 24/7
  • Text 988 or "HOME" to 741741 (Crisis Text Line)
  • Call 911 or go to your nearest emergency room

For non-emergency concerns between appointments, use your patient portal. Messages are reviewed within 1–2 business days during business hours.

How does telehealth work and what do I need? +

Requirements:

  • A device with camera and microphone (computer, tablet, or smartphone)
  • A private, quiet location where you won't be interrupted or overheard
  • Reliable internet or cellular connection
  • A link to our secure HIPAA-compliant telehealth platform (sent at time of scheduling)

Best practices:

  • Log in 5 minutes early
  • Choose a space with good lighting
  • Don't drive or operate machinery during sessions
  • Recording sessions without written consent is prohibited

You must be physically located in a state where we're licensed (Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, Oregon) during each appointment.

Collaborate With Us

We partner with therapists, counselors, primary care providers, and other healthcare professionals to provide comprehensive, coordinated care for our shared patients. Let's work together.

Why Partner With Mount Blue Sky?

Integrated psychiatric and therapeutic care delivers better outcomes. When psychiatry and therapy are coordinated, communication is strong, and treatment is aligned, patients heal faster and more sustainably.

We actively collaborate with other providers, maintain open communication, and see our role as part of a larger care team—never in siloed treatment.

🤝 For Therapists & Counselors

If you have a patient who might benefit from psychiatric evaluation or medication management, let's talk. We handle the "medical" side of mental health so you can focus on the therapeutic relationship and emotional healing.

What we offer:

  • Prompt consultation and patient intake
  • Regular communication about shared patients
  • Collaborative treatment planning
  • Coordination of medication and therapy timing
  • Openness to your clinical insights and observations

🏥 For Primary Care Providers

We understand many patients come to you with unaddressed mental health concerns. If psychiatric expertise or medication management would enhance their care, we're here as a specialist partner.

What we handle:

  • Comprehensive psychiatric evaluation
  • Medication management and optimization
  • Consultation on complex cases
  • Regular updates on patient progress
  • Support for medication safety monitoring

💼 For Wellness & Coaching Professionals

Life coaches, wellness practitioners, and other professionals working with clients who have mental health components—let's partner. When medical concerns are addressed by a psychiatrist, your work can be even more effective.

Collaboration includes:

  • Recognition of psychiatric vs. behavioral/situational concerns
  • Appropriate referrals when medication might help
  • Shared goals around client wellness and growth
  • Respect for each profession's expertise

👨‍⚕️ For Other Healthcare Professionals

Psychiatry intersects with many specialties: OB/GYN, primary care, women's health, functional medicine, and more. Whether you're seeking psychiatric input or referring a patient, we're open to collaboration.

Our commitment:

  • Timely responses to referrals
  • Clear communication about clinical decisions
  • Respect for your professional expertise
  • Coordinated care that benefits the patient

How to Refer or Collaborate

Patient Referrals: Use our simple online referral form to send a patient. Providers can submit directly, or patients can complete the intake themselves.

Therapist Collaboration: Email us to introduce yourself. We'd love to know about your clinical approach, patient populations, and areas where psychiatric support might be valuable.

Consultation Requests: Have a complex case? Need psychiatric input without a full referral? Reach out—we're happy to discuss.

Standing Relationships: If you refer regularly, let's establish clear communication protocols, shared expectations, and regular case reviews to ensure excellent patient care.

Let's Connect

Whether you're a therapist seeking a psychiatric partner, a provider wanting to refer a patient, or a professional interested in collaboration—we'd love to talk.

Contact Us