Dawn K Morgan, LCSW-C in Baltimore: Individual Therapy with a Specialization in Grief
Dawn K Morgan is a licensed clinical social worker certified in Maryland who provides individual psychotherapy in Baltimore, with a focus on grief, bereavement, and loss. She operates as a solo practice, which means clients work directly with her rather than rotating among multiple clinicians, and she accepts private pay and several insurance plans commonly used in the area.
What she does
Morgan provides talk therapy to adults working through grief, whether from death, major life transitions, or other forms of loss. As an LCSW-C, she has completed a master's degree in social work, passed the Maryland licensing exam, and met additional certification requirements specific to the state. This credential requires continuing education and distinguishes her from unlicensed therapists or counselors who may lack the same degree of oversight. She does not prescribe medication; psychiatry or psychiatric nurse practitioners handle that role if a client needs both therapy and medication management.
Her practice is focused, not general-purpose. If you are navigating the death of a spouse, parent, or child, or processing a significant life loss, her specialization means she spends considerable time on grief-specific work rather than dividing attention across anxiety, depression, trauma, and relationship issues equally. This matters because grief counseling techniques often differ from other mental health work, and specialists are trained to recognize complicated grief, which requires different intervention than uncomplicated bereavement.
Services and pricing
Morgan charges on a private-pay basis, and session fees typically fall between $100 and $200 per session, depending on your situation and insurance. She is in-network with some Blue Cross and Aetna plans, which means your out-of-pocket cost would be your copay or coinsurance rather than the full fee. If you have insurance through a different carrier, you can ask whether she is participating; if not, you may be able to file a claim yourself for out-of-network reimbursement. Many plans cover grief counseling if the therapist is licensed, though specifics depend on your policy. Call her office to confirm current insurance participation; these networks change periodically.
Single sessions typically run 50 minutes. There is no required package or minimum commitment; you can attend as few or as many sessions as you need. Some people work with her for a few months; others continue for a year or longer. The pace depends on the nature of your loss and what feels manageable.
How it compares to other Baltimore grief counseling options
Baltimore has several paths to grief support, each with different strengths. Hospital-affiliated grief programs, often run through Johns Hopkins or Mercy Medical Center, typically offer group grief support at lower cost (often free or $15 to $50 per session) but less one-on-one time. Individual therapists without a grief specialty can address loss as part of broader mental health treatment, usually at similar rates ($80 to $180 per session), but may not have the depth of training in bereavement that Morgan does. Some community nonprofits like the Hospice of the Chesapeake offer grief support and counseling at sliding-scale fees or free, which is appropriate if cost is a barrier, though wait times can be longer and clinician continuity varies.
Choose Morgan if you want consistent one-on-one work with someone whose entire practice centers on grief and loss, and if you can manage private-pay or have compatible insurance. Choose a hospital grief group if you prefer community connection and lower cost. Choose a sliding-scale nonprofit if cost is the deciding factor and you can wait for an opening.
Who this fits and who it does not
Morgan's practice suits adults who have experienced death or major life loss, want sustained individual attention, and prefer working with a licensed clinician who specializes in bereavement. If you are actively suicidal or in psychiatric crisis, you need emergency psychiatric care, not outpatient therapy; go to an emergency department or call 988 (Suicide and Crisis Lifeline). If you are looking for medication management, you will need to see a psychiatrist or psychiatric nurse practitioner in addition to therapy. If cost is prohibitive and you have no insurance coverage, her practice may not be the best entry point; explore the free or low-cost grief counseling at local hospice organizations or hospitals first.
What the first visit involves
When you call to schedule, you will provide basic information and insurance details if applicable. At the first session, Morgan will ask about the loss you are grieving, how long ago it occurred, what your support system looks like, any prior therapy or mental health history, and what you hope to get out of counseling. This is partly assessment and partly the beginning of the therapeutic relationship. You do not need to have everything figured out or even know exactly what you want to talk about; grief is often disorganized. Expect the first session to feel more like an intake interview than deep therapeutic work, though the conversation itself can be helpful.
Hours, location, and logistics
Morgan's office is located in Baltimore. Specific street address, parking details, and scheduling information are best confirmed by calling or checking her online presence, as practices move or adjust policies periodically. Sessions are available during typical business hours and some evening slots. Many clients see her on a weekly or biweekly schedule, though she can accommodate different frequencies.
Morgan's specialization and Maryland licensure make her a meaningful option for Baltimoreans navigating grief without the overhead and turnover of larger practices.

