Let’s bust some myths about neurodivergent healthcare in Idaho.
Myth: There aren’t enough providers. Reality: There are 999 in our directory alone. The problem isn’t quantity — it’s finding the ones who are actually affirming.
Myth: You have to go in person. Reality: 66% of Idaho providers in our directory offer telehealth.
Myth: Affirming care is just “being nice.” Reality: It’s a fundamentally different clinical philosophy that changes outcomes.
Now let’s talk about what this means for you.
Why Another Provider Directory
Fair question. There are already directories out there — Psychology Today, Zocdoc, your insurance company’s website. We use them too. But here’s what they don’t do:
They don’t tell you whether a provider actually practices in a neuro-affirming way. They don’t flag compliance-based approaches. They don’t score providers on strengths-based Philosophy, accessibility, or accommodation. They just list whoever pays to be listed.
Our Idaho directory is different. We’ve evaluated 999 providers across Boise, Nampa, Idaho Falls, Caldwell, Meridian and surrounding areas against a 10-point scoring system that measures what actually matters to neurodivergent people seeking care.
The Idaho Specifics
Idaho. The Gem State. A state where the conversation about neurodiversity is just getting started.
Healthcare access here is shaped by factors that are unique to this state. The distance between major metros and rural communities, the insurance landscape, the cultural attitudes toward mental health — all of it affects how neurodivergent people experience seeking care.
That’s why we built a Idaho-specific resource rather than just pointing you at a national database. The providers in this directory practice in Idaho. They know Idaho’s insurance requirements. They understand what it means to serve this community.
Our Scoring System, Explained Simply
Every provider gets a Neuro-Affirming Score from 0 to 10. Here’s the logic:
You earn points for taking a strengths-based approach, offering telehealth, having a sliding scale, covering multiple neurotypes, accepting new clients, and maintaining a web presence.
You lose points for offering ABA or other compliance-based behavioral approaches.
That’s it. Simple, transparent, and values-driven. We believe neurodivergent care should celebrate how your brain works, not try to make it work like someone else’s.
Who This Directory Serves
Everyone. Specifically:
Adults who just realized they’re neurodivergent after 30 years of wondering why everything felt so much harder. Our directory has providers who specialize in late diagnosis and don’t waste time questioning whether you “really” have ADHD.
Parents looking for affirming care for their children. Providers who will see your kid’s differences as strengths, not deficits.
Teens navigating school, identity, and the particular hell of being neurodivergent in a system designed for neurotypical brains.
Older adults who grew up in an era when “neurodivergent” wasn’t even a word, and are finally finding language for a lifetime of experience.
What to Watch Out For
Not all providers who claim neurodivergent expertise practice affirming care. Here are real warning signs:
They talk about “overcoming” or “managing” your neurotype like it’s a disease. They recommend approaches focused on conformity. Their office has zero accommodations — harsh lighting, loud music, paper-only forms, phone-only booking. They seem surprised when you describe your experience.
Our directory exists to help you skip those providers and find the ones who’ve done the work.
Using the Directory
Search by city or go statewide with telehealth. Filter by your neurotype, insurance, and whether you need someone taking new clients. Look at the Neuro-Affirming Score — 5+ is solid, 7+ is excellent.
Then do your gut check. A good provider match isn’t just about credentials. It’s about feeling understood. Trust that feeling.
The Community Angle
Idaho’s neurodivergent community is growing and organizing. Research institutions like Boise State and Idaho State are contributing to how the field understands and serves neurodivergent people. Local support groups are forming. The conversation is shifting.
This directory is one piece of a larger movement toward a Idaho where neurodivergent People don’t have to fight for adequate care. Where affirming practice is the default, not the exception.
We’re not there yet. But with 999 providers and counting, Idaho is heading in the right direction.