Leann Leach is a licensed clinical social worker offering individual psychotherapy to adults in Oklahoma City, working primarily with anxiety, depression, and major life changes through an evidence-based approach that combines cognitive-behavioral and psychodynamic methods.
Leach provides outpatient individual counseling from a private practice setting, holding both her Master of Social Work (MSW) and Licensed Clinical Social Work (LCSW) credential. The LCSW requires additional supervised clinical hours beyond the MSW and allows independent practice and diagnosis, which means she can work with insurance companies directly and manage complex presentations without requiring physician referral. Her stated focus centers on adults navigating anxiety disorders, depression, relationship stress, and transitional life events—job loss, relocation, identity shifts—rather than psychiatric crisis management or child and adolescent work.
Leach charges a standard individual therapy session rate of $125 per 50-minute session. She accepts major insurance plans including Blue Cross, UnitedHealthcare, and Cigna, though out-of-pocket cost depends on your specific deductible, co-pay structure, and whether your plan covers out-of-network providers. Patients are advised to verify coverage with their insurer before scheduling; many plans require a referral from a primary care physician, though this is a formality most physicians will provide by phone or email on request. She does not accept Medicaid.
Therapy frequency typically runs one session per week, though this adjusts based on presenting concerns and stability. A new therapy engagement without insurance runs roughly $500 to $600 per month at the standard weekly rate. If your insurance copay is $40 per session, weekly visits cost $160 to $180 monthly out-of-pocket, with the insurer covering the remainder.
Oklahoma City has a significant mental health provider landscape. Large practices like Integrative Counseling Group and Pathways Behavioral Health offer multiple clinicians, often shorter wait times, and sometimes weekend or evening slots. Those are appropriate if you need quick access or prefer a larger system with backup providers. Leach operates as a solo practitioner, meaning scheduling is direct and one-to-one continuity is guaranteed, but availability may be more limited and there is no backup if she is unavailable. A solo practice typically suits people who value a stable, long-term therapeutic relationship over convenience of access.
For insurance acceptance, many larger Oklahoma City practices are in-network with more plans, simplifying billing. Leach's narrower network focus means you may pay more out-of-pocket, but solo practitioners often have lower overhead and can sometimes negotiate directly with patients on rate if insurance becomes a barrier.
Leach is well-suited to adults with anxiety or depression who have insurance or the ability to pay out-of-pocket and who can wait for an appointment (private practices often have lead times of 2 to 4 weeks for new intake). She works best for people pursuing longer-term therapy, typically 6 months to 1 year or more, as opposed to short-term crisis intervention or single-session coaching. If you are in acute psychiatric crisis, suicidal, or experiencing active substance withdrawal, she is not the right first call; you need an emergency room or crisis line.
She does not treat children, adolescents, or substance use disorders as a primary focus, and she does not offer medication management (psychiatrists or psychiatric nurse practitioners handle that). If you need concurrent medication review, you will coordinate separately with a prescriber, though Leach can communicate with that clinician if you authorize it.
Your first session typically lasts 60 to 90 minutes and includes intake paperwork covering psychiatric and medical history, current symptoms, medications, insurance details, and emergency contacts. You will describe what brought you in and what you hope therapy will address. Leach will assess your safety, current stressors, and likely give you a preliminary sense of whether her approach and specialties align with your needs. Many clinicians use the first session to establish rapport and gather information rather than launch into treatment. You should expect to discuss fee, frequency, and confidentiality limits.
Insurance verification happens before or during intake. If you do not yet have her specific fee contracted with your plan, you may owe a copay for that first session; ask what your plan requires when you call to schedule.
Leach maintains an office in midtown Oklahoma City with accessible street parking nearby. Hours are weekday evenings and daytime slots; confirm availability for your preferred time directly, as private practices' schedules shift with current caseload. Telehealth (video session) availability varies—ask at intake whether phone or video options exist for specific weeks if you cannot make in-person appointments.
Leach represents a core segment of Oklahoma City's mental health infrastructure: the solo-practice LCSW offering direct, insurance-friendly individual therapy to working adults. She fills the middle ground between DIY online therapy apps and large medical systems, providing continuity and clinical depth at a standard local market rate.
