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.

TMS Centers Near Me: Finding NeuroStar, BrainsWay, and Magstim Providers That Take Insurance

Free stock photo via Pexels

Devon Pritchard had spent four years as a Cincinnati firefighter before the depression became something he could no longer outrun on a treadmill or drown at a craft brewery. The 33-year-old had failed sertraline, escitalopram, duloxetine, and a six-month trial of bupropion that gave him insomnia. His psychiatrist at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center … Read more

Catatonia: Recognition, Lorazepam Challenge, and ECT for the Most-Missed Psychiatric Emergency

Free stock photo via Pexels

Eleanor, a 62-year-old retired schoolteacher from Asheville, North Carolina, had been in the geriatric psychiatry unit for nine days with a diagnosis of severe major depression. She would not eat. She would not speak. She lay in the same position for hours, her right arm raised slightly off the mattress as if she had been … Read more

Catatonia: Recognition, Lorazepam Challenge, and ECT for the Most-Missed Psychiatric Emergency

Free stock photo via Pexels

Eleanor, a 62-year-old retired schoolteacher from Asheville, North Carolina, had been in the geriatric psychiatry unit for nine days with a diagnosis of severe major depression. She would not eat. She would not speak. She lay in the same position for hours, her right arm raised slightly off the mattress as if she had been … Read more

Vitamin D and Depression: When Supplementation Helps and the 50,000 IU vs 5,000 IU Question

Free stock photo via Pexels

Rebecca from Minneapolis came in for her annual physical in late February with a complaint that had become routine. She was tired all winter, irritable in ways she did not recognize as herself, sleeping ten hours and waking up unrefreshed, and her mood was creeping toward what she would have called depression in another context. … Read more

Vitamin D and Depression: When Supplementation Helps and the 50,000 IU vs 5,000 IU Question

Free stock photo via Pexels

Rebecca from Minneapolis came in for her annual physical in late February with a complaint that had become routine. She was tired all winter, irritable in ways she did not recognize as herself, sleeping ten hours and waking up unrefreshed, and her mood was creeping toward what she would have called depression in another context. … Read more

Equine-Assisted Therapy: EAGALA-Certified Programs and Whether the Evidence Supports the Cost

Free stock photo via Pexels

Sergeant First Class Daniel had served three deployments in Afghanistan with the Tenth Mountain Division when he came home to Watertown, New York, with a diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder, a marriage on the brink, and the kind of insomnia that turns three in the morning into a familiar enemy. After eighteen months of trauma-focused … Read more

The Therapist Search That Actually Works: Psychology Today, Insurance Lookups, and Word-of-Mouth Referrals

Why Finding a Therapist Is Harder Than Finding a Cardiologist The American mental health care system has produced an unusual paradox. There are more licensed therapists in the United States today than at any point in history, and yet finding the right one for an individual patient remains a process that most people describe as frustrating, opaque, … Read more

The Therapist Search That Actually Works: Psychology Today, Insurance Lookups, and Word-of-Mouth Referrals

Why Finding a Therapist Is Harder Than Finding a Cardiologist The American mental health care system has produced an unusual paradox. There are more licensed therapists in the United States today than at any point in history, and yet finding the right one for an individual patient remains a process that most people describe as frustrating, opaque, … Read more