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Jason Paul Jarria, MD

About

A careful, longitudinal psychiatrist — by design.

I'm Dr. Jason Paul Jarria. I keep my practice small on purpose — because thoughtful psychiatry takes time, and the patients I work with deserve more than fifteen minutes and a prescription pad.

My story

I was born just outside Detroit to a family of Indian immigrants, and grew up in a large, tight-knit family that taught me the values I still carry: hard work, frugality, and a deep commitment to caring for others.

I've always been a restless learner. Long before medical school, I was reading my way through nutrition, philosophy, psychology, business, literature, accounting, and marketing — anything that promised to teach me something new about how people and the world work. That same curiosity is what eventually drew me to psychiatry, where the chance to sit with people during their most difficult moments felt like the work I was meant to do.

After completing my residency at Oregon Health & Science University, I've had the privilege of working across the full spectrum of psychiatric care — from a high-acuity inpatient unit treating severe mental illness, to community mental health serving patients with chronic conditions like bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, to an intensive outpatient program for severe anxiety and OCD. This breadth shapes the care I bring to my private practice today. It's also why I still dedicate time each week to studying the latest research — my patients deserve a psychiatrist who never stops learning on their behalf.

Outside of work, life is full and grounding. I'm married, we have a dog, and much of our joy comes from chasing down great meals, exploring red wines, and traveling whenever we can. At home, you'll find me lifting weights or working through a stack of personal development books.

Above all, I see my role as walking alongside each person I work with — bringing my training, my curiosity, and my care to the work of helping them move toward a fuller, more meaningful life.

Training & credentials

  • Medical school: University of Arizona College of Medicine
  • Residency: Psychiatry, Oregon Health & Science University
  • Board certification: American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology
  • Licensed in: Washington and Oregon

How I work

Longer visits. Initial consultations are 60 minutes. Follow-ups are long enough to actually have a conversation, not just a medication check.

Evidence, with judgment. I follow the literature closely, but I don't confuse a guideline for a plan. Your history, values, and goals shape what we actually do.

A small panel. I intentionally cap my caseload so I can be accessible between visits when something matters.

Collaboration, not paternalism. Medication is a tool. Therapy — often done with a trusted colleague — is another. You deserve to understand the reasoning behind every decision.