Maya Hollister

Maya Hollister

Author archive · 183 articles published

Maya Hollister is Managing Editor at Daily Reading (kalmausam.in), leading coverage of how Americans find, evaluate, and pay for mental health care. Her articles focus on health insurance benefits, in-network and out-of-network care, sliding-scale clinics, the levels-of-care continuum (outpatient, IOP, PHP, residential, and inpatient), and the practical steps people take before booking a first appointment.

Maya has spent roughly a decade writing and editing for consumer-focused health publications. Her work prioritises explanatory accuracy — translating ERISA, MHPAEA, ACA, and state parity rules into language a person trying to fill a prescription on a Friday afternoon can actually use.

Maya does not provide medical, psychological, or psychiatric advice. Her articles are informational and are governed by Daily Reading's Editorial Policy and Medical Disclaimer. Reach the editorial team at support@kalmausam.in.

Severe Eating Disorder Decompensation: When Bulimia and Binge Eating Become Medical Emergencies

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Priya, a 26-year-old graduate student in Boston, Massachusetts, had been bingeing and purging multiple times a day for almost five years. She had told one therapist about it, briefly, four years ago. Her boyfriend knew, more or less. Her family did not. The Saturday night that ended her secret began like most Saturday nights: a … Read more

Group Therapy Near Me: Finding Process Groups, Support Groups, and DBT Skills Groups

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Elena, a 36-year-old graphic designer in Minneapolis, had been in individual therapy for six years and felt like she was talking in circles. Her therapist suggested adding a Tuesday-evening interpersonal process group at a downtown clinic—seven members plus two co-leaders, weekly, indefinite duration. Elena resisted for three months. Talking about her marriage in front of … Read more

Group Therapy Near Me: Finding Process Groups, Support Groups, and DBT Skills Groups

Free stock photo via Pexels

Elena, a 36-year-old graphic designer in Minneapolis, had been in individual therapy for six years and felt like she was talking in circles. Her therapist suggested adding a Tuesday-evening interpersonal process group at a downtown clinic—seven members plus two co-leaders, weekly, indefinite duration. Elena resisted for three months. Talking about her marriage in front of … Read more

Navigating the System: How to Schedule, Afford, and Sustain Mental Health Care in the United States

The Gap Between Wanting Help and Getting It You have done the hard part. You have admitted to yourself that the anxiety, the depression, or the constant exhaustion is not something you can simply think your way out of. You have accepted that professional support is not a luxury but a legitimate medical need. Then … Read more

Navigating the System: How to Schedule, Afford, and Sustain Mental Health Care in the United States

The Gap Between Wanting Help and Getting It You have done the hard part. You have admitted to yourself that the anxiety, the depression, or the constant exhaustion is not something you can simply think your way out of. You have accepted that professional support is not a luxury but a legitimate medical need. Then … Read more

Sliding-Scale Therapy Near Me: Open Path Collective, Training Clinics, and Donation-Based Care

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Daniel, a 28-year-old line cook in Pittsburgh, lost his employer health insurance the day his restaurant closed for renovation. He’d been seeing a therapist twice a month for panic attacks that started during the pandemic, and the prospect of losing that work mid-treatment sent him into a fresh spiral. His therapist quoted $185 per session … Read more

Co-Occurring Disorder Sober Living: Recovery Housing That Allows Psychiatric Medications

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When Daniel Hwang got out of his second residential rehab in Delray Beach, the discharge counselor handed him a brochure for a sober house ten minutes away. Daniel had bipolar I disorder. He had been stabilized on lithium and quetiapine for almost two years. The medications were the reason he had finally been able to … Read more

Co-Occurring Disorder Sober Living: Recovery Housing That Allows Psychiatric Medications

Free stock photo via Pexels

When Daniel Hwang got out of his second residential rehab in Delray Beach, the discharge counselor handed him a brochure for a sober house ten minutes away. Daniel had bipolar I disorder. He had been stabilized on lithium and quetiapine for almost two years. The medications were the reason he had finally been able to … Read more