Appointment
Request Form
NOTE: If you are a new patient, please also fill out the New Patient Information Form here.
form below to set up
an appointment.
NOTE: If you are a new patient, please also fill out the New Patient Information Form here.
Please fill in the form below to set up an appointment.
Marketing activities
We must obtain your authorization prior to using or disclosing any of your health information for marketing purposes unless such marketing communications take the form of face-to-face communications we may make with individuals or promotional gifts of nominal value that we may provide. If such marketing involves financial payment to us from a third party your authorization must also include consent to such payment.
Sale of health information
We do not currently sell or plan to sell your health information and we must seek your authorization prior to doing so.
Psychotherapy notes
Although we do not create or maintain psychotherapy notes on our patients, we are required to notify you that we generally must obtain your authorization prior to using or disclosing any such notes.
Screen Readers
To assist our visitors who are visually impaired or blind, our website is compatible with screen reading software.
Code Compliance
This site was built using code compliant with W3C standards for HTML and CSS. Standards-compliant code means that the site displays correctly in current browsers and ensures that it will display correctly in future browsers.
Text Alternative
With the exception of decorative imagery, all non-text content presented to the user has a text alternative that serves the equivalent purpose. Screen readers can then present this alternate information to the user in place of the image.
ARIA Landmarks
We use ARIA landmarks to identify regions of the page allowing those with screen readers to jump to different sections of the page.
Skip to Main Content
Our pages all contain a skip to main content link allowing users to jump directly to the page’s main content, avoiding the header content from being read aloud repeatedly.
Accessible Forms
Our forms have the proper markup to associate labels with their form controls, making it easier for screen readers to present the form information to the user.
Headings and Lists
We use the proper markup for headings and lists, i.e. h1-h6 and ol, ul and dl for lists. Heading markup will allow assistive technologies to present the heading status of text to a user. A screen reader can recognize the code and announce the text as a heading with its level, beep or provide some other auditory indicator. Some assistive technologies allow users to navigate from list to list or item to item.
CSS
We use CSS to control visual presentation of text. This will allow users to modify, via the user agent, the visual characteristics of the text to meet their requirement. The text characteristics include aspects such as size, color, font family, and relative placement.
Resizing Text
Text can be resized without assistive technology up to 200 percent without loss of content or functionality.
Raster Images
We avoid the use of text in raster images. This allows user agents to read aloud any text on the page and apply custom style sheets to make the text more legible.
Keyboard Interface
The site is designed with consideration for people unable to use a mouse. The website can be navigated using your computer’s keyboard or by using other assistive devices. All functionality of the content is operable through a keyboard interface without requiring specific timings for individual keystrokes. When all functionality of content can be operated through a keyboard or keyboard interface, it can be operated by those with no vision as well as by those who must use alternate keyboards or input devices that act as keyboard emulators like speech input software or on-screen keyboards.
Flashing Content
Web pages do not contain anything that flashes more than three times in any one second period, or the flash is below the general flash and red flash thresholds. These effects are known to cause seizures if the flashes are bright and large enough.
Page Titles
Our web pages have titles that describe topic or purpose. Descriptive titles help users find content, orient themselves within it, and navigate through it. A descriptive title allows a user to easily identify what Web page they are using and to tell when the Web page has changed. The title can be used to identify the Web page without requiring users to read or interpret page content. Users can more quickly identify the content they need when accurate, descriptive titles appear in site maps or lists of search results. When descriptive titles are used within link text, they help users navigate more precisely to the content they are interested in.
Locating Content
More than one way is available to locate a web page within a set of web pages. We provide breadcrumbs and site maps. This makes it possible for users to locate content in a manner that best meets their needs. Users may find one technique easier or more comprehensible to use than another.
Highlighting
The majority of our web site components allow for highlighting by the user agent when they receive focus.
Default Language
The default human language of each web page can be programmatically determined. Speech synthesizers that support multiple languages will be able to orient and adapt to the pronunciation and syntax that are specific to the language of the page, speaking the text in the appropriate accent with proper pronunciation.
Component Focus
When any of our components receive focus, they do not initiate a change of context, i.e. forms submitted automatically when a component receives focus, new windows launched when a component receives focus.
Consistent Navigation
We have a consistent navigation across our web pages. This technique makes the placement of navigational components more predictable.
Form Input Errors
In forms, if an input error is automatically detected, the item that is in error is identified and the error is described to the user in text.
Proper Coding
Elements have complete start and end tags, elements are nested according to their specifications, elements do not contain duplicate attributes, and any IDs are unique. Errors that are known to cause problems for assistive technologies when they are trying to parse content involve having opening and closing tags that are not used according to specification.
Portable Document Format (PDFs)
Some documents on this website are in PDF format. You need Adobe Acrobat to open these files. You can download Acrobat for free. Download Adobe Acrobat.
Write to us at:
1104 E Ohio St. Clinton MO 64735