Hello, I'm Marty Schoen and I'm a psychologist providing in-home psychotherapy and community-based consulting for St. Paul, Minneapolis, and the surrounding Twin Cities metropolitan area. I assist individuals, couples, adolescents, children, parents and families with a wide variety of problems including. I often utilize clinical hypnosis and other mind-body approaches such as mindfulness training to help people with the above issues as well as.
Services
I have been providing home- and community-based counseling and consulting services in the greater metropolitan area exclusively for the past 20 years of my 37 year career; my background includes a variety of training and experience including individual, couples, and family therapy, chemical dependency, group therapy, clinical hypnosis, organizational development/leadership and management assessment and coaching.
I assist clients by first focusing on identifying their strengths and resources and then utilizing them to address obstacles in the way of the client's goals for treatment.
I assist clients by first focusing on identifying their strengths and resources and then utilizing them to address obstacles in the way of the client's goals for treatment.
A: When I first introduce myself as "a psychologist who makes house calls, " many people are surprised because they had never heard of such a service.
We usually think about mental health services as one person or more people talking to a mental health professional such as a psychologist, psychotherapist, or psychiatrist.
However, many people and communities don't have access to these professionals, offices, or clinics.
Therefore, a broader view of mental health care involves a "psycho-social" approach and integrated services such as community centers and other services assisting people with access to food, general health care, affordable housing, child care, jobs and job training, financial assistance, etc. Case management and care coordination address the fact that it is difficult for many people lacking those services and/or having their basic needs met to show up for psychological services and psychotherapy.
We usually think about mental health services as one person or more people talking to a mental health professional such as a psychologist, psychotherapist, or psychiatrist.
However, many people and communities don't have access to these professionals, offices, or clinics.
Therefore, a broader view of mental health care involves a "psycho-social" approach and integrated services such as community centers and other services assisting people with access to food, general health care, affordable housing, child care, jobs and job training, financial assistance, etc. Case management and care coordination address the fact that it is difficult for many people lacking those services and/or having their basic needs met to show up for psychological services and psychotherapy.
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