Boca Raton Psychologist, Providing TelePsychology for South Florida Individuals, Couples and Families...
I am now offering remote consultation and telehealth therapy for new patients as well as my current and former ones. My practice includes helping families, adults, adolescents, and children.
Due to COVID-19, I have adapted my practice to meet your mental health needs. These could include issues such as: ADHD, anxiety, depression, loss & grief, relationship issues, trauma, or workplace stress. For the past twenty years, I have dedicated myself to helping others gain greater awareness and understanding and promote better psychological well-being.
Today more than ever developing strategies and learning skills to manage your mental health is vital for peace of mind. The world has changed, disrupting our daily lives, requiring each of us to adjust, adapt and handle new challenges.
Perhaps your concerns can be resolved in a relatively brief amount of time whereas longstanding problems are likely to take longer. Talk therapy has been proven as a means to help reduce loneliness, shrink worries, fears, or sadness, and enable you to experience greater personal, relationship, and/or family satisfaction.
As an empathic and respectful clinician, it will be my pleasure to speak with you to mutually determine if we are good fit and if I can help you achieve the results you seek. My telehealth therapy uses platforms such as Zoom, Doxy.me. , or we can speak by phone; whichever best suits you.
If you would like to obtain further information, please leave a message on my office phone line, 954-942-3344, (but know, this line cannot accept any texts). Or, you can reach me on my cellphone (954) 309-4403 to schedule an appointment.
Last, we are all going through this together. May therapy enable you to find the hope, confidence, and determination to get through this difficult and challenging time.
Thank you.
Dr. Andrea Corn
150 E Palmetto Park Rd STE 800, Boca Raton, FL 33432
Announcements
Featured on Essential Questions with Rabbi Dan Levin podcast
I, along with Randy Nathan, are featured on an episode of the podcast Essential Questions with Rabbi Dan Levin, speaking on how we can best
Dr. Andrea Corn quoted in HuffPost article on exercises that may help kids in school
Dr. Corn was quoted in HuffPost’s Experts Reveal 3 Exercises That May Help Kids Perform Better In School by Fjolla Arifi. A Finnish study showed
Mindfulness for Personal Wellness
Here is an idea to consider for 2022 – rather than trying to uphold a New Year’s resolution (that may be unrealistic or nearly forgotten),
Benefits of Telehealth
Since working remotely may be a new experience for you, it will be my pleasure to discuss any of your questions on the phone beforehand.
There are benefits for participating in telehealth psychotherapy:
- Studies have found it to be nearly as effective as attending a therapy session in person. [1]
- Telehealth psychotherapy is regarded as an effective alternative for receiving mental health services and psychological care.
- There is flexibility and ease of scheduling as it can occur at a time and day convenient for you.
- Your privacy is maintained as session are conducted at your home or office.
- The goal of telehealth can be the same as meeting face to face. We will be working together to alleviate emotional, behavioral, or mental distress due to a particular situation (current, past, to looking as far back as childhood), to working on any relationship issue, to learning strategies to enhance one’s life satisfaction and well-being.
As I begin to work remotely, I can offer several different options for individual, couple or parent-child psychotherapy from 60 minutes to 45 minutes, or even 30 minutes all at rates reflecting the time we spend together.
[1] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3662387/
My Past Articles
Dr. Andrea Corn quoted in US News & World Report regarding stress in college students
Dr. Corn was honored to be interviewed and quoted in the US News & World Report article, Worry, Depression, Burnout: Survey Finds College Students Stressed
Unmasking Feelings
For the past year, we could not leave our residences without wearing our masks. Whenever we went, we were masked. However, our eyes could still
Post-COVID-19: The Case Against Promoting Specialization in Youth Sports
Before the global pandemic, upwards of 45 million children played organized sports. Yet, within months after COVID-19 reached the shores of the U.S., participation in
Thought For The Day
Now Offering Telehealth Psychotherapy
Before Starting Telepsychology – Your Emotional and Mental Check-in
The Two Kinds of Coronavirus Anxiety by Chris Heath, MD Psychology Today
How to tell where realistic fear ends and unrealistic terror begins. Our anxieties about the COVID epidemic break down into two kinds – one very
Helpful Pictorial Image for Self-Care During Covid-19 from The Association of Child Psychoanalysis
Good pictorial image on Self-care from The Association of  Child  Psychoanalysis.
Pick Up My Book on Amazon
Raising Your Game: Over 100 Accomplished Athletes Help You Guide Your Girls and Boys Through Sports
America's children are joining-and quitting-youth sports in record numbers. If kids can't find the fun in an activity, they may try to find the way out.
If an adult can't find the right tools, they may not know the right words to say or the right actions to take. In Raising Your Game, authors Ethan J. Skolnick and Dr. Andrea Corn present a guide adults can use to ensure the most enjoyable and enriching youth sports experience for a child.
Through a combination of advice from more than 100 elite athletes and time-tested sports psychology concepts, Raising Your Game prompts parents to consider what really matters when it comes to their kids and sports. From LeBron James to Shannon Miller, Brandi Chastain to Jason Taylor, John Smoltz to Mary Joe Fernandez, Sanya Richards-Ross to Torii Hunter, athletes from across the sports spectrum discuss their setbacks and successes-what worked for them and what didn't.
Raising Your Game discusses the types of guidance that can ignite inspiration and foster participation, practice, and progress, and which methods can create frustration and dejection. It shows the difference a supportive parent can make by showing up, showing interest and, at times, showing restraint"