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About the practice

Psychiatric care
that talks to you
like a person.

LiveWell Psychiatry & Men's Health. Small team, plain language, Vancouver WA plus telehealth across Oregon and Washington.

What we're actually doing here

Not a conveyor belt

Most psychiatry in this country has been hollowed out into a quick refill where the prescriber barely looks up from the screen. That's the version we're explicitly not running.

If you've been through that mill before and walked out feeling like you got processed instead of treated, that's the thing we're trying to fix. LiveWell Psychiatry and Men's Health is the clinic. It's small on purpose. The first visit is forty five to sixty minutes, not fifteen, and we use that time to actually figure out what's going on instead of pattern matching you to whatever diagnosis pops out of the first ten minutes. We'll ask about sleep and substance use and your job and your relationships and your history, not because we're filling out a form but because that's where the answers usually live.

We're also not going to talk to you in clinical bureaucratese. If you've got a question about a medication, you'll get a plain English answer about what it does, what side effects to actually watch for, and what we'd do if it doesn't work, instead of a brochure-voice non-answer. If we don't know something, we'll tell you. If something the field is doing seems sloppy to us, we'll tell you that too.

The other thing worth saying up front: medication isn't the whole answer, and we're not pretending it does. A real chunk of our patients aren't on anything at any given time, because they don't need to be, and forcing pills into a problem that's actually about sleep and alcohol and a job you hate is bad medicine. When meds help, we use them, and we use them honestly. When they're not the right tool, we say so. If we're being honest, most of what we do is help people stop lying to themselves about what's working in their life, what isn't, and what they're going to do about it. The prescription pad is a tool. It's not the cure, and it's not a substitute for changing things.

What a visit actually feels like

Two adults, a real conversation, enough time to get it right.

Listened to, not processed

The first visit runs forty five to sixty minutes.

Conservative about medication

A real chunk of our patients aren't on anything at a given time, because they don't need to be. When meds help, we use them honestly.

Small on purpose

Everybody knows the patients.

Vancouver WA plus telehealth

Oregon and Washington, no four-hour drive.

Direct answers, no platitudes

Treated like the smartest stakeholder in your own care.

A calm room, not a treadmill

Built for the conversation.

45 to 60 min

First visit length, because rushed appointments produce rushed clinical decisions.

Founded by Dr. Ragnar Scott

DNP, PMHNP-BC.

In person and telehealth, Washington and Oregon

Think this might be a fit?

Talk to a provider

Care that's human, anti-corporate, and direct. If that sounds like marketing, fair enough... watch the actual visit and decide for yourself.

Where this started

The practice was founded by Dr. Ragnar Scott, DNP, PMHNP-BC. He spent years inside the standard psychiatric system, the kind where the schedule is built to move bodies through a door and the chart is built to protect the institution, and watched a lot of patients get worse on the treadmill version of care. The clinic exists because that wasn't sustainable, ethically or clinically, and because there was a clear gap between the care he wanted to deliver and the care that was actually being delivered at scale.

The headquarters is in Vancouver, Washington, which is across the river from Portland and tends to get treated like a Portland suburb, but it has its own identity and its own patient population. From there, the clinic also sees patients via telehealth across Oregon and Washington, which means somebody in Bend or Spokane or Eugene can have the same conversation with the same clinician without driving four hours each way.

The other clinicians on the team were brought in because their actual clinical instincts match the model, not because they checked recruiting boxes. Different specialties, different communication styles, but the underlying ethic is the same... treat the person in front of you like an adult, tell them the truth, and don't pretend you've got answers you don't have.

How it's built

  • Small on purposeThere's no plan to scale this into a national network, no private equity buyout, no investor deck.
  • Vancouver WA plus telehealthHeadquartered across the river from Portland, seeing patients all over Oregon and Washington.
  • Everybody knows the patientsIt works at this size because the team actually talks to each other. Grow past that and the care gets diluted.

What sets us apart

Four things we do differently

Visits long enough to think

Forty five to sixty minutes for the initial, and follow ups long enough to have a conversation instead of a status check. Rushed appointments produce rushed clinical decisions.

Conservative about medication

We don't reach for a script to end the appointment, and we don't write benzos like candy. We'll tell you honestly when something isn't a good idea long term, and we won't undermedicate out of false modesty either.

Direct answers, no platitudes

No therapist platitudes or risk-management hedges. A direct question gets a direct answer, because patients figure things out faster when they're treated as the smartest stakeholder in their own care.

Access that actually works

Between visit messaging through the portal goes to the actual clinician, not a triage layer.

Who fits here

  • Guys, 15 to 55Teens and grown men across Oregon and Washington, dealing with depression, anxiety, ADHD, sleep, alcohol, or stress that tipped into something more.
  • Done with the millPeople who got processed instead of treated somewhere else and want a prescriber who actually reads what they sent.
  • Willing to put in the effortMeds support the effort, they don't replace it. If you want a script with no questions asked, we're not your clinic.

Who we serve, and who we don't

The patient panel runs teens to men in their fifties, roughly fifteen to fifty five, mostly working guys in Oregon or Washington, dealing with some mix of depression, anxiety, ADHD, sleep problems, alcohol use, stress that has tipped into something more, or some combination of all of the above. That's not because we exclude anyone else, it's just the population that tends to seek out this style of care and stick with it. The clinic also sees students and younger adults from roughly fifteen up, particularly around ADHD, anxiety, and the transition years where everything tends to come apart at once.

We're not, however, the right clinic for everybody. If you're looking for a prescriber who'll write whatever you ask for, or who'll keep you on something indefinitely without checking whether it's still working, or who won't push back on choices that are quietly making your life worse, you're going to be frustrated with us. The clinic is built for people who actually want to engage with the work, even when the work is uncomfortable, and that has to be the starting point or none of this is going to land.

For acute psychiatric emergencies, severe psychotic illness requiring inpatient stabilization, or anything that would normally route through a hospital level of care, the right call is the emergency department or the local crisis line, not this clinic. We can pick up the longitudinal care after the acute phase has settled, but we're not set up to be the front line for a true crisis.

Think this might be a fit?

Drop a line. Our care team reaches out within a business day and gets you set up with the right clinician.