Outpatient Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) Treatment for Children

Oppositional Defiant Disorder is not a child misbehaving or acting out occasionally. It is a developmental disorder in which children constantly show disobedient behaviors to elders and caregivers. This persistent opposition interferes with their learning capabilities, relationships, and difficult upbringing for parents.

Headspace Wellness Clinic provides outpatient ODD treatment with evidence-based psychiatric evaluation. Our clinicians take time to understand how your child manages emotions to build a personalized treatment plan that helps children improve emotional regulation and control anger.

How ODD Affects Daily Life for Children and Families

Clinical data suggests that ODD affects roughly 3–5% of children, with symptoms often appearing in early childhood and intensifying over time if left unaddressed. For parents, this can result in constant arguments with children and helplessness to maintain a healthy family environment. For children, these unincorporated behaviors often result in academic disengagement and ultimately their learning capabilities.

 

Headspace Wellness Clinic always focuses on why the behaviors are happening, rather than only trying to suppress them. Early understanding helps manage behaviors and emotional dysregulation in children. What often gets missed is that these behaviors are not intentional. In many cases, acts of defiance show how a child is struggling to process frustration.

Types of Oppositional Defiant Disorder We Treat

Oppositional defiant disorder can vary by the severity of symptoms and its impact on daily life. Headspace Wellness Clinic assesses how often symptoms occur, where they appear, and how much they affect daily functioning to build a personalized treatment plan that fits into our child’s daily life.

Stimulus-Dependent ODD

They arise in specific situations, such as when your child might show defiance in loud gatherings, sudden changes in acts or environments, or direct pressure.

Cognitive Overload ODD

Opposition emerges when a child's mental capacity cannot handle instructions or expectations given, resulting in refusal or irritability.

Fearful ODD

In fearful ODD children, resistance is caused by anxiety. A child may avoid unpredictable situations where they feel unsafe or emotionally threatened.

ODD Symptoms in Childhood and Adulthood

Oppositional Defiant Disorder is commonly diagnosed in childhood, but as children grow they might adopt this pattern of defiance.

ODD Symptoms in Children

ODD Symptoms in Adulthood

How Headspace Wellness Clinic Evaluates ODD

The evidence-based evaluation by our board-certified providers includes:

If diagnostic criteria are met, we develop a structured, individualized treatment plan that aligns with the child’s emotional and developmental needs.

Why Parents Choose Headspace Wellness Clinic

Parents trust Headspace Wellness Clinic because we take time to understand how children experience ODD and create a clear treatment plan accordingly.

When Defiance Isn’t the Problem, We Help Manage It

ODD is often misunderstood as defiance, but in reality, many children with ODD struggle with tolerance and frustration to control their emotions. At Headspace Wellness Clinic, we help children manage emotions in a structured treatment plan. Care is available through in-person visits and secure telepsychiatry.

Where We Provide Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) Treatment

You can access our addiction psychiatry services across state lines. We see patients in person at our clinics in Clemmons, NC; Mechanicsville, VA; and Washington, D.C., and via secure telehealth throughout all three states.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Headspace Wellness Clinic works with most major insurance plans.

ODD is typically identified in childhood, often before age 8.

Not always. Our psychiatrist's medication decisions are based on the severity of the symptom and functional impairment.

Treatment duration varies depending on how fast children improve emotions and defiance behaviors.

Yes. Without proper intervention, its symptoms may persist.