Christine Rose, LCSW-C in Baltimore: Individual Therapy for Adults in Canton
Christine Rose is a licensed clinical social worker (LCSW-C) offering individual psychotherapy to adults in the Canton neighborhood, with a practice focused on cognitive-behavioral and interpersonal approaches to anxiety, depression, life transitions, and relationship patterns.
What she actually is
Rose holds Maryland's LCSW-C credential, a master's-level license requiring supervised clinical training and examination; this distinguishes her from life coaches, counselors without clinical credentials, or master's-level providers without the C (clinical) designation. She works with adults only, not children or families. Her office is located in Canton, a neighborhood with limited mental health provider density relative to Federal Hill or Harbor East, which can make her accessible to South Baltimore residents who prefer to avoid longer commutes.
Services and pricing
Rose provides individual weekly or biweekly psychotherapy sessions, typically 50 minutes. Session cost is $150 out of pocket; this rate is higher than community mental health centers (where sliding scale or insurance-only models yield costs of $40–120 per session) but lower than some private practitioners in Canton and Federal Hill charging $180–250. She does not bill insurance directly; you pay upfront and submit to your insurer for reimbursement. Verify current fees and session availability by phone or email, as rates and opening times shift seasonally.
How it compares to other Baltimore options
Baltimore's counseling landscape includes community mental health centers (Harbor Health, Kennedy Krieger Institute's Outpatient Mental Health Clinic), private practitioners with varying credentials and rates, and teletherapy providers such as BetterHelp and Talkspace. Community centers accept most insurance plans and offer sliding-scale fees but often maintain waiting lists of 2–4 weeks, especially for specific therapist matches. Rose's private pay model eliminates insurance friction and prior authorization delays, making her suitable if you have out-of-network mental health benefits and prefer direct payment, or if you have a high deductible and want to pay a single vetted rate. Teletherapy is cheaper (often $65–100 per session) and requires no commute, but lacks the face-to-face relationship and local knowledge that a geographically rooted practice offers. A referral-based clinic like Sheppard Pratt's Psychiatric Urgent Care offers faster crisis access but not ongoing individual therapy.
Who it suits and who it does not suit
Rose's practice suits adults with private insurance or out-of-pocket funds who want a geographically stable therapist and can commit to weekly or biweekly sessions for at least 8–12 weeks. Her cognitive-behavioral and interpersonal orientation is evidence-based for anxiety and depression; if you respond well to structured, skills-focused work, this is a fit. It is less suitable if you require psychiatric medication management (Rose does not prescribe; you need a separate psychiatrist), if you are in crisis or having thoughts of self-harm (go to Johns Hopkins Hospital's ER or call 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline), or if you are uninsured and need a zero-cost or very-low-cost option.
What the first visit involves
Initial sessions typically include a clinical intake: discussion of your presenting concern, relevant history, symptoms, and goals. Rose will likely discuss confidentiality limits (Maryland law requires report of abuse, neglect, or imminent danger to self or others), fee structure, and what to expect from therapy. She may also assess whether her orientation and availability match your needs, and if not, offer referrals. Plan 60–75 minutes for the first appointment to allow for this groundwork; subsequent sessions are standard 50 minutes.
Hours, parking, and logistics
Rose's office is in Canton. Parking on or near the block is typically street parking; confirm availability and whether she has reserved spots when you call to schedule. Office hours are standard weekday business hours; evening or weekend availability is limited, so call early to secure a slot matching your schedule. Her practice is small (single provider), which means openings may be infrequent during high-demand seasons; ask about a cancellation list if her next available is beyond your timeline.
Rose's practice fills a gap for South Baltimore adults who want continuity and clinical expertise without the friction of insurance billing or the scale of a large clinic, and her Canton location serves residents who otherwise might commute to more central neighborhoods for care.

