If you’re a woman at UC Riverside and you’ve been quietly struggling — with anxiety, depression, trauma, burnout, or something you haven’t quite named yet — you’re not imagining it, and you’re not alone. UCR’s on-campus counseling services are a real and accessible starting point. But for many students, especially those managing more complex mental health needs, campus support has limits. When it isn’t enough, outpatient mental health programs in Riverside offer a next step — one that works around your schedule and stays grounded in your real life.

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TL;DR

UCR has counseling services — but session caps, waitlists, and scope limitations mean they can’t always meet every student’s needs. Women dealing with anxiety, depression, trauma, or co-occurring conditions may benefit from structured off-campus care. Sol Women’s Treatment accepts UC SHIP and offers outpatient programs in Riverside, including a Student Support Program built specifically for students in recovery and healing.

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Key Takeaways
01Campus counseling is a valuable first step, but it typically has session limits, limited scheduling flexibility, and a scope focused on mild-to-moderate concerns.
02Women students managing anxiety, depression, trauma, PTSD, or co-occurring conditions often need a higher or more consistent level of care.
03Off-campus outpatient programs — PHP, IOP, and OP — provide structured, evidence-based support that complements or continues what campus counseling begins.
04Sol Women’s Treatment is an all-female outpatient program in Riverside, just minutes from UCR, with a Student Support Program designed around student schedules and stressors.
05Sol accepts UC SHIP — UC Riverside’s student health insurance plan — along with Aetna, Anthem, Cigna, BCBS, and other major carriers. Most students have coverage they can use.
06Asking for more support is not a sign of weakness. It’s how healing actually happens.

What UCR’s Campus Counseling Offers

UCR’s Student Health and Counseling Center (SHCS) provides individual counseling, group therapy, crisis support, and psychiatric referrals. For many students, it’s a lifeline — especially for those who are navigating mental health support for the first time.

Where campus services tend to have limits:

  • Session caps. Most university counseling centers, including UCR’s, operate with a limited number of individual sessions per student per academic year — typically around 8 to 12.
  • Waitlists. Demand for campus counseling consistently outpaces availability. If you’re in a rough stretch right now, “we’ll call you in a few weeks” isn’t the answer you need.
  • Scope. Campus counselors are trained to support a wide range of students. But if your needs are more complex — ongoing trauma, a co-occurring disorder, significant depression or anxiety — a short-term college counseling model may not be structured for that depth of work.
  • Year-round consistency. Campus services largely follow the academic calendar. Support can become fragmented over summer break, winter session, or when you transfer.

None of this means campus counseling isn’t worth using. It absolutely is. But it’s a starting point, not a ceiling.

Signs You Might Need More Than Campus Support

It’s easy to talk yourself out of seeking additional help. You’re a student. Everyone is stressed. You don’t want to make a big deal of it. But some experiences go beyond ordinary academic stress — and recognizing the difference matters. For UCR students balancing long drives with packed schedules, the chronic commuter stress that builds across a semester is often one of those experiences — easy to normalize, harder to outrun.

You may benefit from a higher level of care if you’re:

  • Dealing with symptoms that are getting in the way of daily life — skipping class, not sleeping, pulling away from friends, struggling to eat normally
  • Carrying trauma from childhood, a past relationship, or something more recent that still shows up in how you feel and function day-to-day
  • Managing anxiety or depression that doesn’t lift between high-stress periods — it’s the background noise of every week, not just finals
  • Using alcohol or substances more than you’d like, especially to cope with stress, social situations, or emotional pain
  • Experiencing symptoms of PTSD, OCD, bipolar disorder, or borderline personality disorder that haven’t responded to talk therapy alone
  • Feeling like you’re holding yourself together on the outside while quietly unraveling on the inside

These experiences are more common among women in college than most people realize. If any of this feels familiar, it might be worth exploring women’s mental health programs that go deeper than a weekly 50-minute session.

Two women studying together outdoors near UCR campus

What Off-Campus Outpatient Treatment Looks Like

Outpatient mental health treatment is not what many people picture when they hear “treatment.” It’s not inpatient. It’s not a leave of absence from school. It’s structured, evidence-based care that fits around your life.

There are three primary outpatient levels of care:

Level
What it involves
Good fit for
PHP
Partial Hospitalization
Learn more ↗
5 days/week, several hours per day. The most intensive outpatient option.
Students stepping down from a higher level of care, or managing significant symptoms that need daily structure.
IOP
Intensive Outpatient
Learn more ↗
3 days/week, 3 hours per session. Structured but flexible enough to maintain school or work.
Students who need regular, structured support but can manage daily responsibilities between sessions.
OP
Outpatient Program
Learn more ↗
Individual and group sessions on an ongoing basis, less frequent than IOP. Closest to traditional therapy.
Students maintaining stability who want continued therapeutic support with more flexibility.

Sol Women’s Treatment offers all three levels of care — PHP, IOP, and OP — in an all-female environment in Riverside, minutes from the UCR campus.

The Student Support Program at Sol Women’s Treatment

Sol’s Student Support Program was built with the reality of student life in mind. College isn’t just a schedule — it’s a particular kind of pressure, identity, and transition. The program integrates treatment with the stressors that are specific to women navigating academic demands, social dynamics, financial stress, and questions about what comes next.

What makes this program distinct:

  • Schedule-conscious treatment. Programming is structured to work around class and study commitments, not against them.
  • Women-only environment. Every client at Sol is a woman. The space is designed to feel safe, not guarded — which matters especially if you’re processing trauma or working through experiences that feel easier to name among women.
  • Small by design. Sol maintains a maximum of 25 clients at any time. This is an intentional choice — treatment at this scale means you’re seen as a person, not a case number.
  • Clinically led by a woman. Sol was founded by Tania Acevedo, MA, LPCC, whose background in women’s mental health and trauma-informed care shapes how the program is run.

Conditions and Concerns Commonly Treated

Students reach out to Sol for a range of mental health concerns. Some arrive with a formal diagnosis. Others come in knowing only that they’re not okay and that campus resources weren’t enough.

Conditions frequently addressed include:

Sol also works extensively with women navigating high-functioning anxiety, emotional numbness, burnout, and feelings of overwhelm — experiences that are common in college and often go unaddressed until they become more serious.

Therapies Used in Treatment

Sol’s clinical team draws from an intentionally broad modality menu. The goal is to match treatment to each woman’s needs — not to fit her into one approach.

Therapy modalities offered include:

Smiling woman holding books outdoors in Riverside sunlight
UC SHIP plans cover outpatient mental health

UC SHIP and Insurance Coverage for UCR Students

Sol Women’s Treatment accepts UC SHIP — the University of California’s student health insurance plan, which most UCR students carry. For many students, this is how treatment becomes genuinely accessible. Sol also accepts Aetna, Anthem, BCBS, Cigna, Carelon, CareFirst, and UHC.The best way to confirm exactly what your plan covers is to use the free insurance verification form. The admissions team will review your specific benefits and walk you through your options — clearly, and with no pressure.

1
Fill out the verify insurance form
It’s short and takes just a few minutes. Find it at solwomenstreatment.com/contact/verify-insurance/
2
Sol’s team reviews your coverage
The admissions team checks your UC SHIP or other insurance benefits and reaches out with a clear breakdown of what’s covered.
3
Get a clear picture before committing to anything
You’ll know your cost, your options, and what the next step looks like — with no pressure and no obligation.
Ready to check your coverage?
Verify Insurance →

Supportive Housing Near UCR

For students who need more stability than home or campus housing provides during treatment, Sol also offers supportive housing — a sober, all-female living environment in Riverside with 24/7 house manager support. This option allows students to fully focus on recovery without the disruptions of a less structured living situation, and pairs well with PHP or IOP.

When to Reach Out

You don’t need to hit a crisis point before you deserve support. The following are all valid reasons to reach out to Sol or explore an admissions conversation:

  • You’ve tried campus counseling and it hasn’t been enough
  • You’re on a waitlist and you’re not okay right now
  • You’re managing something that feels too complex for occasional weekly sessions
  • You want a women-only space — somewhere you can be completely honest
  • You’re wondering whether what you’re experiencing might be more than stress
  • Someone who loves you has gently suggested you might need more support

Asking for more help is not an overreaction. If you’re reading this and something is resonating, that’s probably worth paying attention to. The admissions team at Sol is easy to talk to — and a conversation doesn’t commit you to anything.

Frequently Asked Questions by UCR Students

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Does UCR have on-campus mental health counseling?
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What happens when campus counseling isn’t enough?
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Is Sol Women’s Treatment close to UC Riverside?
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Does Sol accept UC SHIP insurance?
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Can I keep attending classes during treatment?
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What is the Student Support Program at Sol?
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What types of therapy does Sol offer?
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Is Sol inpatient or residential?
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What if I’m on a waitlist at UCR right now?
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How do I know if I need PHP, IOP, or standard outpatient?
Answer
Does UCR have on-campus mental health counseling?
Yes. UCR’s Student Health and Counseling Center (SHCS) offers individual counseling, group therapy, crisis services, and psychiatric referrals. It’s a strong starting point, particularly for students managing mild-to-moderate concerns. Session availability is limited, and the center operates primarily during the academic year.
A woman smiling — Sol Women's Treatment, Riverside CA
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You deserve support that actually meets you where you are.
Sol Women’s Treatment is an all-female outpatient program in Riverside, CA — minutes from UCR and accepting UC SHIP. Verify your insurance today and find out what’s covered.
Tania Acevedo, MA, LPCC
Tania Acevedo, MA, LPCC
Founder & Chief Clinical Officer · Sol Women’s Treatment

Written by the Sol Women’s Treatment clinical team and reviewed by Tania Acevedo, MA, LPCC. Content is grounded in women’s mental health, trauma-informed care, and outpatient behavioral health practice. Updated regularly for clinical accuracy.

CDSS Licensed Outpatient · Riverside, CA Women’s Mental Health
Medical Disclaimer

This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendations. If you or someone you know is experiencing a mental health crisis, please contact a qualified healthcare provider or call 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline). Sol Women’s Treatment is a CDSS-licensed outpatient program — not inpatient or residential care. Individual results vary and no specific outcomes are guaranteed.