ADHD treatment isn't a one-time appointment. It's an ongoing relationship — first an evaluation, then a medication trial, then adjustments, then regular check-ins to make sure things are still working. That process requires consistency, and consistency requires that follow-up actually be manageable to attend. For a lot of adults in Seymour, driving to a psychiatrist's office every four to six weeks is just... a lot. Work schedules don't flex. Childcare isn't always available. And ADHD itself can make scheduling and keeping appointments a challenge — there's a certain irony to missing a psychiatry appointment because of the very ADHD you're trying to treat. Telehealth solves most of that. Sindhia Shyras, APRN is a board-certified Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner with nine years of psychiatric experience. She manages ADHD by telehealth for patients across Connecticut — including Seymour — and sees patients in-person at 1 Liberty Sq, Ste 301, New Britain, CT 06051 when that's preferred.
The first appointment is always the longest — about an hour, because that's what a real psychiatric evaluation takes. After that, follow-up appointments for medication management are typically 20 to 30 minutes, done over secure video on whatever device you have. No app to download. No waiting room. You schedule around your actual life — your lunch break, the hour after the kids go to school, whatever works. And because you're not spending 45 minutes driving and parking and waiting, you're more likely to keep the appointment. That regularity matters. Consistent follow-up is what makes ADHD medication work well — catching when a dose needs to change, making sure side effects aren't quietly building, checking in on how things are actually going.
Here's something that happens a lot: someone gets diagnosed, starts a stimulant, feels dramatically better, and then... keeps refilling without really checking in. Which works fine — until it doesn't. Doses need adjusting as life circumstances change. Tolerance can develop. Side effects can creep in slowly enough that you stop noticing them as medication-related. A new stress or a new condition can change how the medication is working. Regular follow-up — every one to three months for most stable ADHD patients — catches all of this before it becomes a problem. Sindhia makes follow-up easy by keeping it telehealth-accessible and keeping the appointments focused and efficient. You're in and out in under 30 minutes, most of the time.
Connecticut allows full psychiatric care — including prescriptions for controlled substances — via telehealth for established patients. So after your initial evaluation, you can manage your ADHD entirely by telehealth if that works for your life. Sindhia prescribes stimulant medications and non-stimulants through telehealth for patients in Seymour and across the state. There's no requirement to come in for every refill. And if something comes up that genuinely needs an in-person appointment, the New Britain office is close — well under an hour from Seymour. We accept Aetna, Cigna, Husky Health, Medicaid, United Healthcare, Anthem, ConnectiCare, and self-pay.
Serving Seymour, CT and all of Connecticut via telehealth.
Call 860-515-8689 or book online below.
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