Dr. Lindasue Farrell

Clinical Social WorkerFemale41+ years of experience
Dr. Lindasue Farrell is a clinical social worker in Corydon, Indiana. She graduated from Indiana Medical College, School of Medicine of Purdue University in 1981 and has been in practice for 41+ years.
LocationEducationRatingsAbout MeConditions TreatedSpecialtySimilar

Location

Dr. Lindasue Farrell
1060 Sharon Dr
Jeffersonville, Indiana 47130
Dr. Lindasue Farrell
1036 Sharon Dr
Jeffersonville, Indiana 47130
Dr. Lindasue Farrell
535 Country Club Serd
Corydon, Indiana 47112

Education

Medical school

Dr. Farrell attended Indiana Medical College, School of Medicine of Purdue University and graduated in 1981 (41 years ago).

About Me

Dr. Farrell works at Lifespring Inc, which has 62 other health providers.

Primary specialty
Clinical Social Worker
Years of experience
41+ years
Gender
Female
NPI
1255464673

Conditions Treated

As a clinical social worker, Dr. Farrell may see patients with the following conditions. Please check with Dr. Farrell what conditions she treats. Dr. Farrell may treat additional conditions not listed.

  • Anger management
  • Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
  • Bipolar disorder
  • Career counseling
  • Child abuse
  • Compassion fatigue
  • Dialectical behavior therapy
  • Drug abuse
  • Eating disorder
  • Emdr
Show more +

Specialties

Dr. Farrell is a clinical social worker.

Clinical Social Worker

Clinical social work is a specialty within the broader profession of social work. The American Board of Clinical Social Work (ABCSW) defines clinical social work as "a healthcare profession based on theories and methods of prevention and treatment in providing mental-health/healthcare services, with special focus on behavioral and bio-psychosocial problems and disorders." The National Association of Social Workers defines clinical social work as "a specialty practice area of social work which focuses on the assessment, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of mental illness, emotional, and other behavioral disturbances. Individual, group and family therapy are common treatment modalities."