Cynthia Loeper, Psychologist in Baltimore: Individual Therapy with Psychiatric Consultation
Cynthia Loeper is a licensed clinical psychologist in Baltimore who provides individual psychotherapy and works in coordination with psychiatrists for patients who need medication evaluation and management alongside talk therapy. Her practice is small-scale, serving adults navigating depression, anxiety, relationship issues, and life transitions in the greater Baltimore area.
What Loeper's practice offers
Loeper conducts individual therapy sessions using evidence-based approaches and maintains a collaborative model with prescribing physicians. She does not prescribe medication herself (psychologists in Maryland and most states cannot), but she communicates with psychiatrists and primary-care doctors to coordinate care when a patient is taking antidepressants, anti-anxiety medications, or other psychiatric medications. This arrangement suits patients who need both psychotherapy and pharmacological treatment but want their therapist and prescriber to be actively informed about each other's work.
Sessions are held weekly or on a schedule the patient and Loeper agree to. The practice accepts most major insurance plans; copay and coinsurance amounts depend on individual plans and whether Loeper is in-network for your insurer. Out-of-pocket rates for uninsured or out-of-network patients should be confirmed directly, as mental health fees in the Baltimore area typically range from $100 to $200 per session depending on provider credentials and location, but vary widely.
How Loeper compares to other Baltimore-area therapists
Baltimore has a substantial market of individual therapy providers: large group practices (such as those operated by Sheppard Pratt or Behavioral Health System Baltimore), community mental health centers offering sliding-scale fees, and independent practitioners. Loeper's advantage is her solo practice model, which tends to mean longer-term continuity with the same therapist (no rotation of clinicians) and often more flexible scheduling. Community centers may offer lower copays for uninsured or low-income patients but sometimes have longer waits for new-patient appointments. Large groups provide wider provider choice and often faster access but less personalized long-term relationship. Choose Loeper if you prioritize therapeutic continuity and working with a psychologist who actively coordinates with your prescriber; choose a community center if cost is the primary barrier; choose a large group practice if you need to see a provider quickly or want the option to switch clinicians.
Who Loeper's practice suits
Adults seeking weekly or regular psychotherapy work benefit most from a solo practice like Loeper's. Patients currently on psychiatric medication or considering it gain from her explicit coordination with prescribers. Those with insurance that covers out-of-network mental health services, or who can afford self-pay rates, have the most flexibility. Patients expecting crisis intervention, psychiatric hospitalization pathways, or medication management as the sole intervention may be better served by a psychiatrist's office or a hospital-affiliated mental health clinic. Patients seeking couples therapy should clarify whether Loeper offers that specialty before contacting her.
What your first session involves
Initial appointments typically run 50 to 60 minutes and include intake questions: psychiatric and medical history, current symptoms, what prompted you to seek therapy, whether you are taking any medications, and your treatment goals. Loeper will gather information about your social and work situation, family history, and previous therapy or counseling if applicable. She will explain her approach, discuss confidentiality and its limits (including mandatory reporting for safety concerns), and review privacy practices required under HIPAA. At the end, you should understand her assessment of how therapy might help and the expected frequency and duration of treatment. Insurance information and payment details are handled at intake or by her office staff before the first clinical session.
Hours, location, and logistics
Loeper's office is in Baltimore (specific neighborhood and address should be confirmed directly with her office). Sessions are typically Monday through Friday during standard business hours, though some therapists in private practice offer evening or early morning slots; availability varies. Parking depends on the office location and should be discussed when you schedule. Insurance verification is routine; call the office with your insurance card in hand before your first appointment. Wait times for new patients vary; independent practitioners often have shorter waits than large groups but may have months-long schedules during peak demand periods.
Loeper's small practice and commitment to therapist-prescriber communication make her well-suited to adults in Baltimore who want sustained, coordinated mental health care without the logistical burden of large institutional settings.

