Psychiatric Services
Most people seeking psychiatric care hit the same frustrating wall: their psychiatrist and therapist work in separate offices, rarely communicate, and you end up repeating yourself at every appointment — managing the gaps in your own care. Many also find that psychiatric visits are brief and transactional: a quick check-in, a prescription refill, and little else.
At Doxa, it works differently. Your psychiatrist and therapist work within the same practice and communicate directly about your care. And because Doxa’s psychiatrists are trained in psychotherapy — not just medication management — your psychiatric appointments are actual conversations. They are equipped to understand not just your diagnosis, but you. You don’t have to coordinate between providers, explain yourself twice, or feel like a chart to be processed. One practice. One coordinated plan. Providers who actually talk with you.
Doxa’s psychiatrists — Dr. Jefferson Rogers (MD), Dr. Anna Sabrina DeLeon (MD), and Dr. Theodora Browne (DO) — are board-certified medical doctors who completed medical school, full psychiatric residency training, and national board examinations. This is the highest level of psychiatric training available.
When you’re choosing a psychiatric provider, one question worth asking is: what is their level of training? Board certification means a psychiatrist has completed four years of undergraduate study, four years of medical school, a four-year psychiatric residency, and passed national board examinations administered by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology — approximately 8 years of post-graduate training focused entirely on medicine and psychiatry.
Board certification goes beyond basic licensure. It signals that a physician has demonstrated mastery of their specialty to an independent examining body and commits them to ongoing education to maintain it. For patients managing complex conditions, overlapping diagnoses, or situations where physical health and mental health intersect, working with a board-certified psychiatrist means your care is in the hands of a fully trained physician.
Doxa psychiatrists treat a broad range of conditions in adults, adolescents, and children, including: anxiety, depression, bipolar disorder, ADHD, OCD, trauma and PTSD, social anxiety, substance use disorders, seasonal affective disorder, and emotional dysregulation.
Doxa is an outpatient practice. We are not equipped for mental health crises, acute psychosis, schizophrenia, or severe eating disorders requiring inpatient care.
Ready to make an appointment? Contact us to schedule with Dr. Jefferson Rogers, Dr. Anna Sabrina DeLeon, or Dr. Theodora Browne.
Primary care providers: All of Doxa’s psychiatrists accept consultation referrals from primary care providers and other clinicians. Dr. Jefferson Rogers has particular expertise in geriatric psychiatry. Dr. Anna Sabrina DeLeon accepts referrals for child and adolescent psychiatry. Dr. Theodora Browne focuses on postpartum mental health, perinatal psychiatry, and hormonal transitions including infertility, pregnancy, and menopause. Contact us to discuss the right fit for your patient.
Therapists and counselors: If your client needs coordinated psychiatric care, contact us about our practice model.
Insurance accepted
Dr. Jefferson Rogers: BCBS, Aetna, United Healthcare/Optum, MPCN, Fox-Everett, Ambetter, Medicare Advantage, and Tricare Select (Certified Non-Network Participating Provider).
Dr. Anna Sabrina DeLeon: BCBS, Aetna, Optum, United Healthcare, UMR, and Medicare.
Dr. Theodora Browne: BCBS, Aetna, United Healthcare, Optum, and Medicare.
We do not accept Medicaid or CHIP. Please contact us to verify whether your insurance plan is in-network before scheduling.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a therapist, a psychiatrist, or both?
Many people benefit from both working together. Therapists provide the ongoing talk-based work — understanding patterns, processing emotions, building skills. Psychiatrists are medical doctors who diagnose conditions and prescribe and manage medication when that is part of your care. At Doxa, both are available within the same practice and your providers communicate directly with each other. You don’t have to coordinate between them.
Will my psychiatrist at Doxa actually talk with me — or is it just a medication check?
Doxa’s psychiatrists are trained in psychotherapy as well as medication management. Your appointments are designed to be real conversations about your life, your symptoms, and your goals — not just quick prescription check-ins. They are also connected to your therapist at the same practice, so your care is coordinated from both sides.
My therapy isn’t working well enough. Should I see a psychiatrist?
This is one of the most common reasons people seek a psychiatric evaluation. If you have been in therapy and aren’t seeing the progress you need, a board-certified psychiatrist can evaluate whether there is a biological or medical component that hasn’t been addressed — and whether medication might help. At Doxa, your therapist and psychiatrist can work together from the start.
I’ve been told I need medication for anxiety or depression. Where do I start?
Start with a psychiatric evaluation. A board-certified psychiatrist can assess your full picture — including any medical factors that may be contributing — before recommending medication. At Doxa, if you also need therapy, both can be coordinated in one practice.
What is a board-certified psychiatrist and why does it matter?
Board certification means a psychiatrist has completed medical school, a four-year psychiatric residency, and passed rigorous national examinations administered by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology. It is the highest credential in psychiatric medicine — not just basic licensure. All three of Doxa’s psychiatrists are board-certified.
Do I need a referral to see a Doxa psychiatrist?
No. You can contact Doxa directly to request a psychiatric appointment. If you are already seeing a therapist elsewhere and want coordinated psychiatric care, we can work with your existing provider as well.
Does Doxa accept insurance for psychiatric services?
Yes. Each of Doxa’s psychiatrists accepts major insurance plans including BCBS, Aetna, United Healthcare, and Optum. Medicare is accepted by all three. Please see the insurance section above for each provider’s full list, or contact us to verify your plan before scheduling.
Is there a Christian psychiatrist at Doxa?
Doxa is a faith-informed practice rooted in a Christian worldview — the integration of faith and evidence-based care is core to what Doxa was built to be. For patients who specifically want a Christian psychiatrist — someone who understands faith, takes it seriously, and can integrate it into their treatment — please mention it when you reach out and we will do our best to match you with the right fit. We believe that faith, strong therapy, and healthy lifestyle are central to mental wellness — not just medication management.
What conditions do Doxa’s psychiatrists treat?
Anxiety, depression, bipolar disorder, ADHD, OCD, trauma and PTSD, social anxiety, seasonal affective disorder, substance use disorders, and emotional dysregulation. Doxa is an outpatient practice and is not equipped for mental health crises, acute psychosis, schizophrenia, or severe eating disorders requiring inpatient care.