ADHD Therapy Services for Women | Kristen McClure, LCSW
Neurodivergent-affirming telehealth therapy in North Carolina and South Carolina
Individual Therapy
One-on-one telehealth therapy for adult women with ADHD in North Carolina and South Carolina.
Most of my clients are navigating late diagnosis, burnout, rejection sensitive dysphoria, anxiety, or the particular experience of having struggled in systems that never understood how their brain worked. Some are freshly diagnosed and trying to make sense of a lifetime through a new lens. Others have known about their ADHD for years but have never had therapy that actually addressed it.
Sessions focus on what matters to you — not a generic symptom checklist, but the specific ways ADHD is affecting your work, your relationships, your sense of self, and your daily capacity.
Session length: 55 minutes Fee: $110 per session Insurance: Most BCBS plans accepted. I am an out-of-network provider and can provide superbills for reimbursement. Format: Secure telehealth via HIPAA-compliant video platform
Email to inquire about availability → Find me on Psychology Today →
Group Therapy
Small-group therapy for women with ADHD via telehealth.
Groups offer something individual therapy cannot fully replicate — the experience of being in a room with people who understand your nervous system without explanation. For many ADHD women, the group itself is the first time they have felt genuinely understood.
Current groups are open to women in North Carolina and South Carolina. Groups are small and structured to allow real connection, not just psychoeducation.
Email to ask about current group availability →
What I Work With
I specialize in ADHD in women, and the conditions that commonly overlap with it:
- ADHD — including late diagnosis, masking, burnout, and twice-exceptional presentations
- Anxiety — particularly when anxiety has developed as a long-term coping response to unaddressed ADHD
- OCD — including OCD that has been missed or misattributed to ADHD
- Depression — including dysthymia and depression that co-occurs with ADHD
- Trauma — including complex trauma and the particular shame that accumulates when ADHD goes unrecognized for years
- RSD — rejection sensitive dysphoria and its impact on relationships, work, and self-worth
- Hormonal transitions — perimenopause, PMDD, postpartum, and how hormonal shifts affect the ADHD brain
My Approach
My work is explicitly neurodivergent-affirming. That means I don't treat ADHD as a deficit to be corrected — I treat it as a nervous system that works differently and deserves a life built around how it actually functions.
My framework is organized around five areas: self-awareness, self-compassion, self-accommodation, self-advocacy, and self-care. The goal is not symptom reduction. It is a life that fits who you are.
Who I See
I work exclusively with adult women via telehealth. I am licensed in North Carolina and South Carolina.
I do not currently offer in-person sessions.
Take the First Step
I have limited availability. If you are in North Carolina or South Carolina and would like to explore working together, please reach out.
Email: kristenlynnmcclure@gmail.com
You can also find me on Psychology Today →