Sharer Psych
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Telehealth & PSYPACT

Telehealth Therapy and Assessment

Real clinical work, wherever you are.

I'm telehealth-first by choice — not by circumstance. PSYPACT authorization means I can practice across most of the country without you needing to live near Baltimore.

Why telehealth?

I'll self-disclose a little here. I used to have an office in the heart of Baltimore City and I loved that office dearly. Still miss it. I became a father in February of 2020 and figured I'd take some time away to be home and then return to work in the office — and the pandemic obviously had other plans.

In 2022 I made the decision to go all-in as a telehealth-first practitioner and haven't looked back. Telehealth has allowed my clients to access care on their terms. I'm able to utilize extra digital tools to supplement our sessions. As a member of PSYPACT, I can now see clients in 43 states and at any given time I have clients in at least 10 different states.

Now you don't have to give up your therapist when you move. If you go on vacation, we can still have a session. If you need to take the session from your kitchen, or your office, or the parking lot of your kid's daycare — you can. Telehealth has completely shifted from a necessity to a preference and I have built my practice around it.

What sessions actually look like

Sessions run on a HIPAA-compliant platform. Most clients use a laptop or desktop; a phone works if that's what you have.

You need a reasonably stable internet connection and a private space. That's most of the technical setup.

Some clients do sessions from a home office. Some from a guest bedroom. A few have a regular spot in a quiet part of their building. One person had a designated “therapy park spot.” The setup is yours to figure out. The work is still the work.

What PSYPACT means

PSYPACT is the Psychology Interjurisdictional Compact — a formal agreement among participating states that allows licensed psychologists to practice telehealth across state lines without obtaining a separate license in each state.

It was designed specifically for psychologists providing remote services to clients in multiple states. It's legally distinct from regular licensure — you have to apply, qualify, and maintain it separately.

My PSYPACT authorization number is PSYPACT #11731. I'm also independently licensed in Maryland (MD #05464) and New York (NY #026771).

What this means for you: if you live in a participating state, you can work with me without either of us needing to jump through geographic hoops.

States where I can see clients

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PSYPACT participating (43)
Not currently participating
View the official PSYPACT participation map →

Who telehealth serves well

Busy professionals

Removing the commute changes the math. A 50-minute session from your desk is a different proposition than blocking three hours of your day.

People with ADHD

Every extra step between "I should do this" and "I did this" is a place things fall apart. Telehealth removes steps.

Geographic outliers

People in areas without access to doctoral-level psychological services, or who simply prefer a provider whose approach fits — regardless of zip code.

People maintaining continuity

You moved, changed jobs, or just don't want to restart with someone new. You can keep working with me wherever you land.

Parents who see themselves in their child

A child's ADHD or autism diagnosis often surfaces patterns the parent recognizes in themselves. Telehealth makes it easier to prioritize your own evaluation or therapy alongside managing everything else.

Couples

You can do couples therapy on the same couch or in different states. Three-way calls via telehealth make it much easier to find overlapping availability for all parties.

Ready to get started?

A free 15-minute consultation is enough to tell if this is a fit. No pressure, no commitment.

Schedule Free Consultation