Why this comparison matters when you are starting care
Three patterns drive most of the confusion around this question.
Practices vary in what they push first. An integrated practice with in-house psychiatry has a structural reason to evaluate medication early. A talk-therapy-only practice will work the case clinically through therapy and refer out for medication only when it is genuinely indicated. Neither approach is inherently wrong, but the default a practice starts with often reflects its business model as much as its clinical reasoning.
Primary care often starts with medication. When someone first raises depression or anxiety with a family doctor, an SSRI prescription is a common opening move because primary care has limited time for a full clinical assessment and limited access to therapists. This is not the same as concluding that medication is the right answer. It often reflects the constraints of a fifteen-minute appointment.
Severity gets compressed. The clinical guidelines treat mild, moderate, and severe symptoms differently. Public conversation rarely does. The result is that mild cases get over-medicated and severe cases get under-treated. Knowing where your situation actually sits on that spectrum changes which approach makes sense first.
What talk therapy actually does
Talk therapy is a structured, conversation-based treatment with a licensed therapist (LPC, LMFT, LCSW, or licensed psychologist). The therapist works with you on thoughts, behaviors, emotional patterns, relationships, trauma, and life circumstances using one or more evidence-based modalities. The most common modalities for adult outpatient work are Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), EMDR for trauma, Internal Family Systems, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, and emotion-focused or psychodynamic approaches.
Sessions are typically fifty minutes, weekly or biweekly. A focused course of therapy for a defined issue often runs eight to twenty sessions. Deeper work runs longer. Therapists in Colorado cannot prescribe medication. When medication is clinically indicated, the therapist refers to a psychiatrist, psychiatric nurse practitioner, or primary care physician.
What medication management actually does
Medication management is a separate clinical service. A prescriber (psychiatrist, psychiatric nurse practitioner, or primary care physician) evaluates symptoms, considers diagnostic criteria, prescribes a psychiatric medication, monitors response over four to twelve weeks, and adjusts dosing or switches medications based on how you respond.
The first appointment is usually forty-five to sixty minutes. Follow-ups are often fifteen to thirty minutes and may occur monthly during titration, then quarterly once stable. Most psychiatric medications take two to six weeks to reach full effect. Some categories (mood stabilizers, antipsychotics) require lab work to monitor levels and side effects. Medication management without concurrent therapy is sometimes called "med checks" and is a legitimate care model when therapy is not what the person needs or wants.
What the research says about depression
For mild to moderate adult depression, the American Psychological Association's Clinical Practice Guideline for the Treatment of Depression lists psychotherapy and second-generation antidepressants as equally recommended first-line treatments. There is no strong evidence that one is meaningfully better than the other in the acute phase for most adults with mild or moderate symptoms.
For severe depression, the guideline favors combination treatment (therapy plus medication) over either alone. A 2024 meta-analysis published in The Lancet eClinicalMedicine compared psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy for adult depression across a large number of randomized controlled trials and found that the two approaches produce similar acute response rates, but psychotherapy shows more durable benefit after treatment ends.
That last point matters. A separate analysis on the enduring effects of psychotherapy for depression found that the benefits of therapy persist after treatment ends, in part because the person has acquired skills and insights that continue working. Medication generally works while you take it. When it is discontinued, symptoms commonly return unless the underlying issues have resolved.
What the research says about anxiety disorders
For generalized anxiety, panic disorder, and social anxiety, cognitive behavioral therapy is the strongest evidence-based first-line option. A meta-analysis of brief CBT for anxiety in primary care settings found significant and durable symptom reduction even with shorter treatment courses, which is meaningful because access constraints often push toward shorter therapy episodes.
Medication (typically SSRIs or SNRIs) is added when anxiety is severe, when therapy alone produces partial response, or when symptoms are interfering with the ability to engage in therapy at all. For most adults presenting with anxiety, starting with CBT is the conservative clinical move and produces the most durable result.
What the research says about PTSD
Trauma-focused psychotherapy is the first-line treatment for PTSD. The 2023 VA and Department of Defense Clinical Practice Guideline for PTSD strongly recommends trauma-focused therapies (Cognitive Processing Therapy, Prolonged Exposure, EMDR) over medication as the primary intervention.
Medication has a supportive role: stabilizing severe sleep disruption, reducing hyperarousal enough to make trauma work tolerable, and providing relief when trauma-focused therapy is not accessible. But the order of operations is clear in the guideline. Therapy first. Medication when needed.
When combining both makes sense
Combination treatment (therapy plus medication concurrently) has the strongest evidence base in three situations.
First, severe depression with significant functional impairment, especially when the depression is severe enough that engaging in therapy is itself difficult. Medication can lift symptoms enough for the person to participate in therapy meaningfully.
Second, conditions where medication is the standard of care for the underlying biology: bipolar I disorder, bipolar II disorder, schizophrenia spectrum conditions, and severe OCD. In these cases, medication is rarely optional, and therapy adds skills and supports that medication alone does not provide.
Third, partial response to one approach. Someone who has done six months of therapy with meaningful but incomplete improvement may benefit from adding medication. Someone on medication who feels better but is still struggling with relationships, behavior patterns, or unresolved trauma may benefit from adding therapy.
Northern Colorado practices for each path
Three care models exist in Northern Colorado. The right one depends on what you have decided you want.
Talk therapy without medication management
Foundations Counseling LLC operates four offices across Northern Colorado (two in Fort Collins, plus Loveland and Windsor) and is a talk-therapy-only practice. Sessions are with master's-level licensed therapists (LPCs and LMFTs) and offer the Counselor Match Guarantee, which means if the first counselor is not the right fit, the practice rematches you at no charge until the fit is right. When medication is clinically indicated, the practice refers to outside prescribers, which preserves the option without making it the default.
Catalyst Counseling, Solid Ground Counseling, and several smaller practices in Fort Collins follow a similar therapy-only model. These practices vary in modality specialization, insurance acceptance, and waitlist length.
Medication management without in-house therapy
Standalone psychiatric practices (psychiatrist or PMHNP only) are available in Fort Collins and Loveland. SummitStone Health Partners is the public behavioral health authority and offers medication management for higher-acuity needs on a sliding scale. Many primary care physicians in the region prescribe SSRIs and other common psychiatric medications for straightforward cases.
Both services in one practice
Family Care Center and LifeStance Health both operate offices in Fort Collins, Loveland, and Greeley with therapy and medication management under one roof. The integrated model is convenient for combination treatment because the therapist and the prescriber are typically in the same record system. The trade-off is that an integrated practice has a structural reason to evaluate medication earlier than a talk-therapy-only practice would.
How to decide where to start
Three useful questions when you are deciding which path makes sense.
What is the severity? Severe symptoms with significant functional impairment (cannot work, cannot maintain basic self-care, active suicidal ideation, severe panic preventing daily activities) usually warrant medication evaluation alongside therapy. Mild to moderate symptoms commonly respond to therapy alone. Most people overestimate the severity of their own symptoms when they are in the middle of them; a clinical assessment is usually more accurate than self-rating.
What are the targets? If the work is about thoughts, behaviors, relationships, trauma, or unresolved life material, therapy is the primary tool. If the work is about persistent biological symptoms (severe sleep disruption resistant to behavioral change, mood episodes, panic that does not respond to behavioral techniques), medication often plays a larger role.
What do you want to be true after treatment ends? If the goal is durable change that persists after treatment, therapy generally produces longer-tail effects. If the goal is symptom relief during a defined hard period (a major life crisis, a postpartum depression, a grief episode), medication is often the faster route to relief, with therapy added if the underlying issues need work.
The research, taken together, supports a conservative starting point for most adults with mild to moderate symptoms: begin with therapy, add medication if needed. For severe symptoms or for conditions where medication is the standard of care, combination treatment is the better starting point. Either way, the decision is reversible. Adding medication later is straightforward. Stopping medication and continuing in therapy is also a normal trajectory.
If you are weighing where to start in Northern Colorado and are considering a talk-therapy-first approach, Foundations Counseling LLC offers a free fifteen-minute consultation to talk through whether therapy alone fits your situation or whether a combined approach makes more clinical sense. Schedule a free consult or call 970.900.6130.
Sources and references
- Mavranezouli I, et al. Comparative efficacy of psychotherapies and pharmacotherapies for adult depression: a systematic review and network meta-analysis. The Lancet eClinicalMedicine, 2024.
- American Psychological Association. Clinical Practice Guideline for the Treatment of Depression Across Three Age Cohorts.
- U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and Department of Defense. VA/DoD Clinical Practice Guideline for the Management of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Acute Stress Disorder, 2023.
- Furukawa TA, et al. Enduring effects of psychotherapy versus pharmacotherapy in adult depression. 2024.
- Cape J, et al. Brief psychological therapies for anxiety and depression in primary care: meta-analysis and meta-regression.
This content reflects publicly available clinical guidelines and peer-reviewed research as of the page's last reviewed date. It is informational and does not replace a clinical assessment by a licensed mental health professional.
Related comparisons and resources
- Alternatives to Family Care Center for talk therapy in Northern Colorado
- Alternatives to BetterHelp for in-person therapy in Northern Colorado
- Alternatives to LifeStance Health for therapy in Northern Colorado
- Foundations Counseling individual therapy services
- Schedule a free consult with Foundations Counseling
- Contact Foundations Counseling
Frequently asked questions
What is the actual difference between talk therapy and medication management?
Talk therapy is a structured, conversation-based treatment with a licensed therapist (LPC, LMFT, LCSW, or psychologist) that works through thoughts, behaviors, relationships, trauma, and life circumstances. Medication management is a separate clinical service in which a prescriber (psychiatrist, psychiatric nurse practitioner, or sometimes a primary care physician) evaluates symptoms, prescribes psychiatric medication, and monitors response over time. Therapists do not prescribe. Prescribers do not typically provide weekly therapy. The two services can be used alone or in combination.
Which approach works better for depression?
For mild to moderate depression, both approaches show comparable results in head-to-head studies, and the American Psychological Association guideline lists psychotherapy and antidepressant medication as equally recommended first-line treatments for adults. For severe depression, the evidence supports combination treatment over either alone. The 2024 Lancet eClinicalMedicine meta-analysis confirmed that psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy produce similar acute response rates, but psychotherapy shows more durable benefit after treatment ends.
Which works better for anxiety disorders?
For generalized anxiety, panic, and social anxiety, cognitive behavioral therapy is the strongest evidence-based first-line option. A meta-analysis of brief CBT for anxiety in primary care settings found significant and durable reductions in symptoms even with shorter treatment courses. Medication (typically SSRIs or SNRIs) is often added when anxiety is severe, when therapy alone is not enough, or when symptoms are interfering with the ability to engage in therapy. For most adults with anxiety, starting with CBT is the conservative clinical move.
Which works better for PTSD?
Trauma-focused psychotherapy is the first-line treatment for PTSD. The 2023 VA and Department of Defense Clinical Practice Guideline strongly recommends trauma-focused therapies (Cognitive Processing Therapy, Prolonged Exposure, EMDR) over medication as the primary intervention. Medication is supportive when therapy is unavailable, when symptoms (sleep disruption, severe hyperarousal) need to be stabilized before trauma work can begin, or when a person prefers it. For PTSD, the order of operations matters: therapy first, medication when needed.
Do I need to do both at the same time?
Most people do not. Mild and moderate cases of depression, anxiety, relationship distress, life transitions, grief, and adjustment issues respond well to talk therapy alone. Combination treatment (therapy plus medication) is best supported for severe depression, complex bipolar disorder, schizophrenia spectrum conditions, and cases where symptoms are too severe to engage in therapy without symptom relief first. Starting with one approach and adding the other later if needed is a reasonable conservative path.
Can my therapist prescribe medication?
In Colorado, no. Therapists licensed as LPCs, LMFTs, LCSWs, or LPs (psychologists) cannot prescribe medication. Prescribing authority for psychiatric medication belongs to psychiatrists (MD or DO), psychiatric nurse practitioners (PMHNP), physician assistants under a supervising physician, and primary care physicians. If you need both therapy and medication, you can either use a single practice that offers both services in-house or work with a therapist and a separate prescriber who coordinate care.
How fast does each approach work?
Antidepressant medication typically takes four to six weeks to show full effect, though some people notice changes earlier. Talk therapy benefits often emerge within four to eight sessions for focused issues, with more substantial change typically by twelve to twenty sessions for deeper work. Both approaches require patience. The fastest noticeable relief usually comes from medication, but the most durable change usually comes from therapy, particularly for issues rooted in patterns of thinking, behavior, or relating.
What happens to symptoms when I stop?
This is one of the most important practical differences between the two. Research on the enduring effects of psychotherapy, including a 2024 analysis published in PMC, shows that the benefits of therapy often persist after treatment ends because the person has acquired skills, insights, and behavioral patterns that continue working. Medication generally works while you are taking it. When medication is discontinued, symptoms commonly return unless the underlying conditions have resolved or therapy has built durable change.
Is talk therapy effective for severe cases without medication?
For severe depression with active suicidal ideation, severe bipolar disorder, schizophrenia spectrum disorders, and severe PTSD with significant functional impairment, talk therapy alone is not the first-line approach. These cases typically require medication to stabilize symptoms enough to make therapy productive. For severe but stable cases of anxiety, depression, OCD, and PTSD, evidence-based therapy alone can be effective, but the clinical recommendation usually leans toward combination treatment when severity is high.
Where can I get medication management in Northern Colorado?
For integrated care (therapy and medication in the same practice), Family Care Center and LifeStance Health both have Fort Collins, Loveland, and Greeley offices. SummitStone Health Partners is the public behavioral health authority and offers medication management on a sliding scale for higher-acuity needs. Many primary care physicians in the region prescribe SSRIs and other common psychiatric medications for straightforward cases. Standalone psychiatric practices (psychiatrist or PMHNP only, no in-house therapy) are also available in Fort Collins.
Where can I get talk therapy in Northern Colorado without being pushed toward medication?
Several practices in Northern Colorado offer talk therapy without medication management as a core part of their model. Foundations Counseling LLC has four offices (two in Fort Collins, plus Loveland and Windsor) and is a talk-therapy-only practice. Catalyst Counseling and Solid Ground Counseling are similarly therapy-focused. These practices refer to outside prescribers when medication is clinically indicated, which preserves the option without making it the default.
How do I decide where to start?
Three useful questions. First, what is the severity? Severe symptoms with functional impairment usually warrant medication evaluation alongside therapy. Mild to moderate symptoms often respond to therapy alone. Second, what are the targets? If the work is about thoughts, behaviors, relationships, or trauma, therapy is the primary tool. If the work is about persistent biological symptoms (severe sleep disruption, panic, mood episodes), medication often plays a larger role. Third, what is durable? If you want lasting change after treatment ends, therapy generally produces longer-tail effects.