Schneyer Lee Psychologist in Baltimore: Individual Therapy and ADHD Focus
Schneyer Lee is an individual psychotherapist serving Baltimore residents through office-based practice, with particular emphasis on adult ADHD assessment and ongoing therapy. The practice operates on an appointment model, not walk-in, and accepts private pay and several insurance plans.
What Schneyer Lee actually is
A solo practice psychology office, not a clinic or group. Schneyer Lee holds the title of psychologist and provides outpatient mental health treatment to adults. The practice does not prescribe medications (that requires a physician or psychiatric nurse practitioner), nor does it offer inpatient or crisis services. If you need emergency psychiatric care, contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 988, or go to an emergency room.
Services and pricing
Individual therapy is the core service. Sessions run 50 minutes and are scheduled weekly or at intervals determined by clinical need. Most therapy in Baltimore private practices costs between $120 and $200 per session when paid out-of-pocket; Schneyer Lee's specific rate should be confirmed directly.
ADHD is a focal clinical area. This typically means Schneyer Lee takes a detailed developmental history, administers standardized rating scales, and often coordinates screening results with a physician for medication evaluation. The assessment process differs from standard talk therapy in structure and timeline. Initial ADHD evaluations often span two to three sessions.
Insurance coverage varies by plan. Some Baltimore Blue plans, Cigna plans, and other commercial carriers cover therapy at a copay (often $20 to $50 per session) or at a coinsurance rate (for example, 20% of the negotiated fee after deductible). Medicare and Medicaid coverage of out-of-network psychologists is limited unless the therapist holds credentialing you should verify in advance.
Out-of-pocket rates, copay amounts, and insurance verification should be confirmed with the office directly.
How Schneyer Lee compares to other Baltimore psychologists
Baltimore has two main channels for finding an individual therapist: private practices like Schneyer Lee, and larger health systems (Johns Hopkins, University of Maryland Medical System, Medstar). Private practices often have shorter wait times (weeks, not months) and allow longer-term relationships with a single provider. Health system clinics typically cost less per session if you carry their insurance but may involve shorter appointment blocks and more provider rotation. Insurance networks list in-network therapists; directories like Psychology Today filter by specialty, insurance, and location.
For ADHD evaluation specifically, the choices are similar: private psychologists or psychiatrists, primary-care physicians doing initial screening, or health system specialty clinics. ADHD assessment by a psychologist costs more out-of-pocket than a brief physician evaluation (often $300 to $600 total for the former, $100 to $200 for the latter), but the psychologist's report is more detailed and carries weight in employment, educational accommodations, and insurance claims. Some Baltimore residents pursue ADHD evaluation through their primary care doctor first to see whether medication helps, then add therapy afterward; others start with comprehensive psychological evaluation.
Who Schneyer Lee suits and who it does not
Schneyer Lee is appropriate for adults seeking ongoing individual therapy, especially those with ADHD concerns or those already diagnosed who want integrated therapy and monitoring. It is a good fit if you have insurance that covers out-of-network therapy, can afford copays or private-pay rates, and prefer continuity with one provider.
It is not the right choice if you need immediate crisis intervention, medication management as the primary treatment, couples or family therapy, or if you are uninsured and cannot afford out-of-pocket rates. Likewise, if you require a therapist in a health system your insurance covers with minimal cost, Schneyer Lee's private-pay model may not suit your budget.
What the first visit involves
New patients typically complete intake forms covering psychiatric history, current symptoms, medications, and what brought them in. The first appointment (50 minutes) usually covers history, description of current concerns, and a brief outline of how therapy would work. If ADHD evaluation is part of the plan, Schneyer Lee will take a more detailed developmental history (early school performance, childhood behavior, attention patterns, impulsivity examples) and may recommend you complete questionnaires before or after the first session. A second or third session may include additional rating scales. The psychologist will then write a report (within one to two weeks typically) and discuss findings and next steps, such as referral to a physician for medication evaluation.
Hours, parking, and logistics
Office location, hours, and parking arrangements should be confirmed by contacting Schneyer Lee directly. Baltimore psychologists' offices are scattered across the city and surrounding counties; many are in medical office buildings with dedicated parking. Session scheduling is by appointment only and often booked weeks in advance for new patients with ADHD evaluation.
Schneyer Lee provides the kind of focused, continuous mental health care that works well for adults managing complex issues over months or years. The ADHD specialty and private-practice model distinguish it from health system clinics and make it a relevant option for Baltimore residents who prioritize depth of evaluation and ongoing provider relationship.

