What if the hardest part of being neurodivergent in Wyoming isn’t the neurodivergence itself — but finding someone who actually understands it?
That question has been bouncing around my head ever since we started building this directory. Because the emails we get aren’t from people struggling with their ADHD or their autism. They’re from people struggling to find a single provider who doesn’t treat them like a checklist of symptoms.
The least populated state — where every provider matters. And the neurodivergent community here deserves better than generic provider listings that haven’t been vetted beyond “do they have a license.”
The Problem We Kept Hearing About
Talk to any neurodivergent person in Wyoming for more than five minutes about their healthcare experience and you’ll hear some version of this story:
They finally work up the courage (or the executive function) to find a therapist. They spend an evening scrolling through profiles. They find someone who lists “ADHD” in their specialties. They make an appointment — which itself took three phone calls because there was no online booking. They show up, sit in a fluorescent-lit waiting room with a TV blaring, fill out a paper intake form with 47 questions, and then the therapist says something like “have you tried using a planner?”
That’s not affirming care. That’s checking a box.
What 408 Providers in Wyoming Look Like Through Our Lens
Our Wyoming directory isn’t just big — it’s filtered. Every provider has been evaluated on a 10-point neuro-affirming scale that looks at real indicators of quality care.
We check whether they take a strengths-based approach instead of a deficit model. We check whether they offer telehealth (70% of Wyoming providers do). We check what insurance they take. We flag providers who use compliance-based approaches like ABA therapy, because neurodivergent adults and families deserve transparency about methodology.
The providers span Cheyenne, Casper, Laramie, Green River, Gillette and communities across the state, with specialties including ADHD, Autism, Dyslexia, and Sensory Processing differences.
Why Wyoming Specifically
Every state has its own healthcare personality. Wyoming’s is shaped by its geography, its culture, and its infrastructure.
Wyoming is the Cowboy State, and that identity shapes healthcare access in ways that aren’t always obvious. The least populated state — where every provider matters. The distance between having a provider and having the right provider can feel enormous.
That’s why telehealth matters so much here. With 286 providers offering remote sessions, a neurodivergent person in a smaller Wyoming community can access the same quality of care as someone in the biggest metro area. Your ZIP code shouldn’t determine whether you get affirming care.
The Affirming Care Difference
Here’s what separates a neuro-affirming provider from one who just treats neurodivergent conditions:
An affirming provider sees your neurotype as part of who you are, not as a problem to solve. They understand masking and its costs. They know that sensory needs aren’t preferences — they’re requirements. They build treatment around your actual life, not some neurotypical template of what life should look like.
In Wyoming, we’re seeing more providers move in this direction. Institutions like University of Wyoming are training a new generation of clinicians who understand neurodiversity as variation, not pathology. The shift is happening. It’s just not happening fast enough.
Practical Tips for Your Search
When you search our Wyoming directory, here’s what I’d suggest:
Start with your non-negotiables. Do you need telehealth? Do you need evening hours? Do you need someone who takes your insurance? Filter for those first.
Then look at the Neuro-Affirming Score. Anything 5 and above means the provider demonstrated multiple markers of genuinely affirming practice. A 7 is excellent.
Check their approach to intake. A provider who offers digital forms, text-based booking, and flexible scheduling is already telling you they understand executive function challenges.
And trust your instincts. If a provider’s website talks more about compliance and behavior modification than it does about understanding and accommodation, that’s information.
For Parents in Wyoming
If you’re a parent searching for your neurodivergent child, here’s what I want you to know: the provider you choose shapes how your child understands their own brain. A provider who frames neurodivergence as something to overcome sends a different message than one who frames it as a different way of thinking that comes with genuine strengths.
Choose the provider who will help your kid feel capable, not broken. Our directory flags providers by the ages they serve, so you can find specialists who work specifically with children, adolescents, or the whole family.
Join the Wyoming ND Community
This directory is a starting point. The real power is in the community that forms around it — neurodivergent people in Wyoming sharing recommendations, flagging concerns, and holding providers accountable.
If you’re a neuro-affirming provider in Wyoming who isn’t in our directory yet, reach out. If you’ve found a great provider through our directory, pass it along. Every share makes the path easier for the next person searching at 2 AM because their brain won’t stop wondering “what if I’m actually autistic.”.
You’re not alone in this. Not even close.