Post-Assessment Treatment Planning & Provider Coordination

A neuropsychological evaluation is most useful when it actually changes what happens next.

That requires more than a well-written report. It requires knowing what kind of provider, program, or treatment environment is likely to fit the clinical picture — and having enough familiarity with the available options to make recommendations that are clinically specific rather than generic.

After the Evaluation

When an evaluation is complete, findings are discussed in a feedback session in clear, practical language. The written report follows with conclusions and specific recommendations. For many clients, that is sufficient — the referring psychiatrist, therapist, or treatment team takes the findings and integrates them into ongoing care.

In other cases, the clinical picture is complex enough, or the treatment landscape unfamiliar enough, that a more guided next step is useful. This is especially true when the client is self-referring, when the family is navigating the system for the first time, when the presenting picture is layered enough that provider fit matters considerably, or when the current treatment team needs a clearer picture of what the evaluation recommends before they can act on it.

In those situations, post-assessment consultation is available — a structured conversation about how to translate the findings into concrete next steps, which providers or programs may be appropriate, and how to prioritize recommendations when several things may need to happen at once.

Provider Recommendations Grounded in Clinical Familiarity

Referral recommendations at Neuro Assessment Center are not generated from a directory. They come from years of direct clinical experience working inside residential treatment, intensive outpatient, and private practice ecosystems across Los Angeles.

Dr. Hai spent years as a therapist in residential treatment before transitioning to neuropsychological assessment. That background means the referral relationships are grounded in direct clinical collaboration over time.

When a referral recommendation appears in a report or post-assessment consultation, it reflects a genuine assessment of fit — who has experience working effectively with this type of presentation, and who has the structure, expertise, and clinical approach the case requires.

For Treatment Teams

When treatment programs, psychiatrists, or outpatient clinicians refer to Neuro Assessment Center, the post-assessment report is designed to re-integrate back into the referring system cleanly. Recommendations are written to be useful to the team, not just the client.

When clinically appropriate, post-assessment recommendations may identify specific providers, levels of care, or adjunctive supports that complement the existing treatment relationship rather than fragment it. The goal is coordination, not competition with existing care.

In more complex cases — particularly those involving executive dysfunction, ADHD, autism spectrum presentations, trauma, personality dynamics, or substance-related complications — Dr. Hai is available for ongoing consultation to ensure that recommendations remain actionable as the case evolves. This is offered selectively based on clinical need and fit, not as a standard add-on.

What This Looks Like in Practice

Post-assessment planning at Neuro Assessment Center is not case management and does not replace the treating clinician, psychiatrist, or program. It provides a clinically informed bridge between findings and implementation — helping clients, families, and teams understand what the evaluation means, which recommendations should be prioritized, and what kinds of providers or treatment environments may be most appropriate.

Depending on the needs of the case, post-assessment coordination may include additional consultation focused on treatment planning, provider recommendations based on clinical fit and practical feasibility, communication with incoming providers when appropriate, or ongoing consultation in especially complex situations where continued clarification remains clinically useful.

Availability for post-assessment coordination is discussed at the time of feedback and determined based on the complexity of the case and clinical appropriateness.

For Families Navigating This for the First Time

If you are a parent, spouse, or family member trying to understand what to do after an evaluation, the feedback session is designed to answer that question directly. The goal is not to hand you a report and a list of diagnoses. The goal is to leave that conversation with a clear sense of what the findings mean, what the priorities are, and where to go next — including specific recommendations when they can be made.

Dr. Hai works with families across Los Angeles and has direct familiarity with the treatment landscape locally, including residential programs, intensive outpatient programs, specialized therapists, psychiatrists, and educational consultants. When a recommendation is made, it is made because the fit has been thought through, not because a name appeared in a search.

To discuss whether post-assessment coordination may be appropriate for your situation, contact the office directly.