Clinical Supervision for LCMHCA’s in North Carolina
Deepen your clinical confidence. Find your professional footing.
You didn’t go to graduate school just to feel stuck, uncertain, or overworked as a provider. Yet many therapists, especially in private practice or in roles with little oversight, struggle in silence. You may feel isolated, second-guess your interventions, or worry about ethical boundaries and burnout.
I believe….
You deserve supervision that empowers you to grow with confidence, reflect authentically, and build a clinical identity that feels both skilled and sustainable.
I’m Dr. Chase
My Approach
My supervision approach is collaborative, reflective, and rooted in both clinical excellence and professional authenticity. With over 8 years of experience as a licensed clinician, I integrate a person-centered and developmental supervision model that balances support with accountability, empowering supervisees to strengthen their clinical judgment, refine case conceptualization, and uphold ethical practice.
Drawing on my specialties in perinatal mental health, high-achieving women’s mental health, anxiety, burnout, and Child-Centered Play Therapy, I guide clinicians in building both competence and confidence while also attending to their well-being and professional identity.
Topics we will address….
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Work/ Life Balance
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Ethics
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Self-Trust
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Discipline
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Niche Alignment
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Self-Care

FAQs
Supervision
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Dr. Chase supervises LCMHCAs in North Carolina working toward full LCMHC licensure (#QS154893). You should have an active LCMHCA license (or in process), liability insurance, and be working in a clinical setting (private practice, agency, school, telehealth, etc.).
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Per North Carolina rules, you need 100 hours of clinical supervision total, with at least 75 hours being individual supervision. You must receive at least 1 hour individual or 2 hours group supervision for every 40 hours of supervised counseling practice.
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Individual supervision includes yourself alone or in a dyad (1:1 or 1:2) with the supervisor.
Group supervision involves multiple supervisees (up to 12 under NC rules) meeting together.
Note: only a portion of group hours (max ~25 of the 100) can count toward your total; the majority must be individual supervision.
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We generally meet at least once every other week, though many supervisees prefer weekly check-ins. The board requirement of “1 hour per 40 clinical hours (or 2 group)” is the minimum.
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I offer secure tele-supervision (live video with visual + audio connection). For observational supervision, we will use methods such as live supervision, recordings (audio/video), or co-therapy, as allowed by NC Board rules
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$125/hour individual supervision
Dyadic $100/hour per person
Group $75 per person (2 hour group)
Consultation for fully licensed clinicians $150/hour
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Submit session notes, recordings or case summaries, or other materials in advance for discussion.
Be prepared to discuss your cases, ethical challenges, theoretical orientation.
Engage in recommended readings, reflection, and activities.
Keep a supervision log with dates, hours, modality, and topics (as required by NC rules). ncblcmhc.org
Maintain professional liability insurance and provide proof.
Complete all forms, contracts, and required documentation.