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Behavioral Health Clinic (BHC) Psychology Department, The University of Arizona

BHC Photo Tour

The photo above shows the outside of the Psychology Building. The clinic is on the ground floor of the Psychology Building on our main campus, with ADA-compliant access. Please note, we are not professional photographers, but we can tell you that our clinic has a warm and inviting décor and spatial arrangement, which may or may not be captured well in these photos.

(Left) We have a parking spot behind the building, for use by clients. Many of our clients from our health psychology or neuropsychology tracks are in poor physical health, making this accessibility vital. (Right) The entry to the Psychology Building has information and our statement about diversity and inclusivity. The door to the left of the elevator is the door to the Behavioral Health Clinic (BHC), creating a separated space from the rest of the activities of the building.
(Left) Upon entering the clinic, you are greeted through the window to our administrative assistant’s office, Anna Gastelum. (Right) Looking back at the same window, you will see on the wall the faces of the faculty, graduate students, and staff who work in the clinic.
(Left) Continuing forward, a partially private waiting area is a place to get water and wait for your therapist. (Right) This is the view from sitting in the waiting area.
(Left) Seated in the waiting area, you see two hallways extending in front of you, as you are at the base of a U. One hallway contains offices of faculty, including the Director of Clinical Training (Mary-Frances O’Connor), the Clinic Director (Jolene Jacquart), the Externship Coordinator (Julie Feldman) and clinical faculty Daniel Taylor. (Center) Next to the DCTs office is the office of the former DCT (Dave Sbarra), providing easy access for questions and continuity! (Right) The other hallway that forms the U contains our therapy rooms, assessment room, video-reviewing room, and storage room. Continuing further down the hall, you enter the lab and assessment rooms of our director of the Neuropsychology Track, Matt Grilli.
(Left) The BHC houses two therapy rooms and an assessment room. Therapy Room A is the smaller room, comfortably seating two people and a white board for illustrating therapeutic interventions. (Right) This is a view from inside Therapy Room A.
(Left) The second therapy room is much larger, although difficult to capture in a photo. It comfortably seats four, with space on the floor for children to play. It is used for individual, couples or family therapy. (Right) Another view from inside the second therapy room.
(Left) Our Assessment room can be used for therapy as well, but is set up for neuropsychological testing with a table. (Right) From inside the Assessment Room, you can see that it also houses our printer, scanner, and a computer.
(Left) We maintain a video-viewing room, where clinical graduate students and supervisors can review recordings of therapy sessions. (Right) Finally, a storage room houses client files, neuropsychological assessments, a shredder, petty cash and receipt book, and mail boxes for therapists.
Since the BHC is entirely conducting telehealth currently, the usually populated clinic looks so empty of people in these photos! Although we don’t have a photo of all of our clinical graduate students, I wanted to include some of them for you to see. From left to right: Austin Grinberg (2017), Brian Arizmendi (2018), Saren Seeley (2021), Mary-Frances O’Connor, Eva Stelzer (Social, 2021), Deanna Kaplan (2020), Roman Palitsky (2020), Lindsey Knowles (2019), Mairead McConnell (2021)
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