Virtual appointments currently being offered 7 days a week

Psychological & Mental Health Assessment for Adults

A thoughtful, evidence-based mental health assessment led by a Nurse Practitioner

Many adults seek a psychological or mental health assessment not because they want a specific diagnosis, but because something feels unclear. Emotional distress, changes in functioning, or long-standing patterns may no longer make sense—or previous explanations may no longer fit.
This service offers a structured, clinically grounded mental health assessment designed to help clarify what may be contributing to current concerns. The focus is on understanding, context, and informed next steps—without pressure, assumptions, or predetermined outcomes.
Psychological assessments at Lynch NP Services are provided through secure virtual care to adults located in Ontario and are led by a Nurse Practitioner with advanced training in mental health and complex clinical presentations.

What Is a Psychological or Mental Health Assessment?

A psychological or mental health assessment is a comprehensive clinical evaluation that explores emotional, cognitive, behavioral, and functional patterns over time. It is used to assess whether symptoms align with a mental health condition, reflect a response to stress or life circumstances, or may be better explained by medical, developmental, or situational factors.
An assessment is not therapy, and it is not a test with a guaranteed diagnosis. In some cases, the outcome is diagnostic clarity. In others, the assessment helps rule out certain conditions and guide more appropriate next steps.

Who May Benefit From an Adult Mental Health Assessment

This service may be helpful for adults who:
Many individuals seek assessment during periods of transition, burnout, or cumulative stress. Others pursue evaluation after partial or inconclusive care and are looking for a more comprehensive perspective.

How This Psychological Assessment Approach Is Different

Nurse Practitioner–Led Mental Health Care

Assessments are conducted by Mark Lynch, MN-PHCNP, FNP-C, MSc, a Nurse Practitioner with over a decade of experience across primary care, psychiatry, ADHD management, and virtual care leadership. This allows for integration of both medical and mental health considerations.

Comprehensive, Not Checklist-Only

While validated screening tools may be used where appropriate, diagnosis is never based on questionnaires alone. Clinical interviews, history, and functional impact are central to the assessment process.

Emphasis on Differential Diagnosis

Many mental health conditions share overlapping features. The assessment process explicitly considers alternative and co-occurring explanations—such as medical conditions, trauma history, neurodiversity, or situational stress—before conclusions are reached.

Trauma-Informed and Neurodiversity-Aware

Care is provided in a respectful, non-judgmental manner that recognizes the role of lived experience, context, and individual differences in mental health.

What a Psychological Assessment Involves

Each assessment is individualized, but the process typically includes the following components:

Detailed Intake Form

Prior to the appointment, you will complete a comprehensive intake form covering mental health history, medical background, current concerns, and goals. This helps ensure a focused and meaningful clinical discussion.

Clinical Screening Tools (Where Appropriate)

Standardized screening tools may be used to support clinical reasoning. These tools inform the assessment but do not determine diagnosis on their own.

Comprehensive Diagnostic Interview

A structured clinical interview explores areas such as:

Medical Review and Investigations (If Indicated)

Where clinically appropriate, laboratory testing or other diagnostic investigations may be recommended to rule out medical contributors to psychological symptoms.

Appointment Structure and Timeframe

Assessments may occur over one or more virtual appointments, depending on clinical complexity. Adequate time is reserved to allow for a thorough, unrushed evaluation. No specific diagnosis or outcome is guaranteed within a single visit.

What Happens After the Mental Health Assessment

Following completion of the assessment:
Not all assessments result in a formal diagnosis. Even when a diagnosis is not made, individuals typically leave with clearer understanding and guidance regarding next steps.

Who This Service Is Not For

This service may not be appropriate if you are:

Seeking crisis or emergency mental health care
Looking for a guaranteed diagnosis or medication
Seeking psychotherapy rather than assessment
Under the age of 18
This assessment process is best suited to individuals who value careful exploration and collaborative clinical decision-making rather than rapid conclusions.

Booking a Psychological Assessment in Ontario

If you decide to proceed, booking an appointment allows for a structured, confidential mental health evaluation focused on understanding and informed care planning.
You are encouraged to take your time reviewing this information and to book when you feel ready. Secure virtual care is available to adults located in Ontario and is provided in accordance with provincial regulatory standards.

Psychological & Mental Health Assessment – FAQs (Ontario)

A psychological or mental health assessment is focused on understanding and evaluation, not ongoing treatment. The goal is to clarify what may be contributing to emotional, cognitive, or functional concerns. While recommendations or referrals for therapy may be discussed afterward, therapy itself is a separate service.

Yes. Many people seek assessment after therapy has been partially helpful, confusing, or no longer effective. An assessment can help clarify whether an underlying diagnosis, overlapping conditions, or unaddressed factors may be influencing treatment response.

That is common. Mental health concerns often overlap and evolve over time. This assessment process is designed to explore complexity rather than force symptoms into a single category. In some cases, the outcome may be a working formulation rather than a single diagnosis.

No. Anxiety and depression are explored carefully, but diagnoses are made only when clinical criteria are met and supported by history and context. Situational stress, trauma responses, burnout, medical factors, or neurodivergence may sometimes better explain symptoms.

Yes. Individuals sometimes seek reassessment when prior diagnoses feel incomplete, outdated, or inconsistent with their lived experience. Where appropriate, this process can help review previous diagnoses and clarify whether they remain accurate or useful.

This service is intended for clinical care and treatment planning. It is not designed for medico-legal assessments, court proceedings, disability determinations, or formal workplace accommodations unless explicitly discussed and agreed upon in advance.
Uncertainty is a common reason people seek assessment. You do not need to be sure that something is “wrong” to benefit from a structured clinical conversation. The process is intended to support understanding, not to pressure you toward a diagnosis.
No. This assessment is not designed for urgent or crisis mental health care. If you are experiencing thoughts of self-harm, suicidal ideation, or immediate safety concerns, you should seek emergency services or crisis support in your area.

No. Medication is never required as a condition of diagnosis. If medication is discussed, it is done cautiously and only when clinically appropriate. Non-pharmacologic approaches are often equally important and may be recommended alone or alongside medication.

Where appropriate and with consent, care coordination or recommendations for collaboration with other providers may be discussed. This may include suggestions for therapy focus, follow-up care, or medical considerations to review with your primary care provider.

Not all distress indicates a mental disorder. Trauma responses, adjustment difficulties, and prolonged stress are explored carefully and respectfully. The assessment aims to distinguish between diagnosable conditions and understandable reactions to life experiences.

Yes. When conducted by a regulated healthcare provider using secure, compliant platforms, virtual assessment is an accepted and evidence-based approach for adult mental health evaluation in Ontario. Clinical judgment, history, and structured interviews remain central regardless of format.

The process varies depending on complexity. Some assessments are completed in a single extended visit, while others may require more than one appointment. Adequate time is reserved to ensure the evaluation is thorough rather than rushed.

No referral is required to book this service. You may choose to involve your primary care provider before or after the assessment if that is helpful for continuity of care.
Psychological assessments provided by Nurse Practitioners are not universally covered by OHIP. Some extended health insurance plans may offer reimbursement. You are encouraged to confirm coverage details with your insurer.