A continuous clinical system — not a directory of sessions.
What happens when you start care at AUMHUM, who is on your care team, how psychiatric and endocrine input are integrated, and what our clinical infrastructure does in the background to keep your care coherent.
What the clinical journey looks like
Each step has a clinical purpose. The pathway is structured; every plan is personalised.
- Step 1
Clinical intake
A trained clinical evaluator reviews your presenting concerns, history, and context. The goal is clarity — not a sales call.
- Step 2
Structured assessment
Standardised psychological, behavioural, and — where indicated — medical assessments. For conditions with a biological signature, endocrine workup is recommended.
- Step 3
Care plan and matching
You are matched to a therapist aligned with your clinical needs. If appropriate, a psychiatrist and/or endocrinologist enters the plan.
- Step 4
Therapy + specialist input
Structured therapy sessions, psychiatric reviews, and medical follow-ups move in parallel. The care team coordinates internally.
- Step 5
Measurement
Progress is tracked with validated clinical instruments. Measurement is used to adjust the plan — not to gate access.
- Step 6
Ongoing continuity
Your plan is revisited. Providers can change; continuity of the plan does not.
Who you work with
AUMHUM is not one therapist at a time. It is a care team matched to your clinical picture — and scaled up or down as needed.
Therapist
Licensed psychologist delivering structured therapy matched to your clinical presentation.
Psychiatrist
Involved when diagnostic clarity, medication review, or psychiatric oversight is clinically indicated.
Endocrinologist / physician
Brought in when symptoms suggest a hormonal, metabolic, or medical driver — thyroid, PCOS, cortisol, sleep disorders, and more.
Clinical coordinator
Keeps providers aligned, supports continuity, and ensures nothing falls between the cracks.
When endocrine evaluation becomes part of mental healthcare
Mental health and endocrine health are biologically entangled. Symptoms that look purely psychological often have measurable biological drivers. Treating both produces better, more durable outcomes than treating either alone.
Thyroid disorders
Hypo- and hyperthyroidism can present as depression, anxiety, fatigue, or cognitive complaints. Untreated, therapy progress stalls.
PCOS and reproductive hormones
Hormonal variation through the cycle, perimenopause, and PCOS can drive mood and anxiety symptoms that respond to combined care.
Insulin & metabolic health
Metabolic dysregulation and insulin resistance interact with mood, energy, and cognitive function.
Cortisol and stress physiology
Chronic stress physiology influences sleep, mood, and anxiety — and sometimes requires medical as well as behavioural intervention.
Sleep disorders
Sleep-disordered breathing, circadian disruption, and sleep-related hormonal changes can mimic or worsen psychiatric conditions.
Testosterone and androgens
Low or dysregulated androgens are associated with mood, motivation, and cognitive changes — particularly across the lifespan.
Endocrine workup is recommended when the clinical picture suggests it — not as a default. When indicated, we bring an endocrinologist into your care plan and coordinate with your therapist and psychiatrist.
What the system does in the background
Continuous care is only possible because of clinical infrastructure built to support it: a shared record, measurement, adaptive protocols, and AI-assisted coordination that keeps providers aligned across time.
Shared clinical record
Every provider works from one clinical view — consultations, assessments, therapy notes, prescriptions, and lab results.
Measurement-based care
Validated instruments track symptom change over time, so decisions are informed by data rather than impression.
AI-assisted coordination
Clinical workflows are augmented by AI — summarising context, surfacing patterns, flagging continuity risks, and supporting clinicians between sessions. AI supports clinicians; it does not replace them.
Adaptive protocols
Treatment plans adjust as the clinical picture changes. Protocols are updated as the evidence evolves.
Privacy and governance
Clinical data is protected, access-controlled, and handled under documented clinical governance.
Continuity built-in
If a provider changes, the plan does not restart. The clinical record and care team structure carry forward.
A care plan, not a single appointment
Clinical care at AUMHUM is structured to include what continuous care actually requires — evaluation, coordination, medical context where relevant, and follow-through over time.
Included in every care plan
- Clinical intake and structured assessment
- Matching with a therapist aligned to your presentation
- Access to psychiatric review when clinically indicated
- Access to endocrine and medical workup when relevant
- Shared clinical record across every provider
- Measurement-based tracking of progress
- Between-session continuity and care coordination
- Plan adjustments as your clinical picture changes
Clinical governance, supervision, and privacy are built into the care model — not offered as an add-on.
If your needs are simple and well-matched to a single conversation, many options exist. AUMHUM is built for everything beyond that — and for the many cases where the right answer is combined care.
What people ask before starting
- Do I have to see a psychiatrist or an endocrinologist?
- No. These specialists are brought into your plan only when clinically indicated. Many people are supported entirely by therapy. The point of continuous care is that specialist input is available, coordinated, and seamless if and when it is needed.
- Is this remote or in-person?
- Both. Care is delivered across outpatient clinics, rehabilitation settings, and secure teleconsultation. Your care team and plan stay consistent across settings.
- How does AI fit into clinical care?
- AI is used to support clinicians — summarising clinical context, surfacing longitudinal patterns, flagging continuity gaps, and helping coordinate between providers. It is reviewed, governed, and never replaces clinical judgement.
- How is my clinical data protected?
- Clinical data is protected under documented privacy and governance standards. Access is restricted to your care team, and you retain the right to review and control your record.
- How do I start?
- Begin with a consultation. Your evaluator will help you understand what kind of care is appropriate — therapy alone, combined therapy and psychiatric review, or care that includes medical and endocrine workup.
One step is enough to start.
Whether you’re looking, deciding, or ready — pick the path that fits. Our team takes it from there.