School’s Out for Summer

Guest post by Alexander Chevalier, MD, Medical Director of Adolescent Programming at SunCloud Health

As I write this, I reflect upon my gratitude to live in arguably America’s most fantastic summer city, Chicago. It is known for lively summer activities, street festivals, water sports, green spaces, and overall buzz; it would be easy to think that all must be well for those living in this city. I contrast this with my day job as an adolescent psychiatrist and recognize this is far from the truth.

Several new challenges arise as adolescents transition out of school and into the summer. Warm weather and beaches bring the social and environmental expectations of less clothing and amplified body image concerns.

New pressure for a “beach body” or “summer fling” can be all the brain needs to tilt from body dysmorphia into a full-blown eating disorder.

Unshackled by the requirements to wake up early and perform academically, the adolescent brain has a different risk/benefit ratio when considering alcohol, marijuana, or other addictive substances. With more friends using, the peer pressure to use rises. When problematic use occurs, the school’s requirements and oversight are not present to catch the problem in its infancy.

Many people expect major depression to alleviate in the summer for teens naturally. However, with the loss of structure from school, it can be even easier to fall into isolation spirals with less reason to leave one’s room and more time spent on screens or engaged in activities we know have pro-depressive effects.

Social anxiety naturally lessened by the diminished demands for anxiety-provoking tasks like speaking in class. Does this mean the disorder is improving? Quite to the contrary, less exposure to events that evoke social anxiety directly worsens this disorder leaving many teens in a precarious place when school does resume in the fall.

Families often face complex challenges in promoting or deferring mental health treatment for their teens over the summer. I get it: booked and paid vacations, and who can refuse the argument of a much-needed break after a long school year? But looking on the flip side, summer is often the best time to receive mental health treatment. Without the demands of school, there is no worry about splitting attention between medicine and academics. Teens can enter and often complete treatment without school or peers being aware of their absence. The group-based treatment provides an ongoing peer structure to replace the school day.

If you or a loved one need help with your mental health, you are far from alone. With the incidence of most adolescent mental health disorders on a rapid increase, it has never been more important to take the time to seize back control of your life and start or further your recovery journey.


Dr Alexander Chevalier

Alexander Chevalier, MD, is the Medical Director of Adolescent Programming at SunCloud Health. He recently completed hiking the Grand Canyon and hopes to spend as many weekends as possible hiking and boating this summer.

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Rachel Collins, LCSW
Site Director of Northbrook PHP and IOP

Rachel Collins, LCSW, is the Site Director of SunCloud Health’s Northbrook Partial Hospitalization (PHP) and Intensive Outpatient (IOP) programs for both adolescents and adults. Rachel earned her bachelor’s degree in psychology and went on to complete her master’s degree in social work from Michigan State University. She has since worked in a wide range of settings, including inpatient treatment, PHP/IOP programs, therapeutic group homes, and private practice. Rachel specializes in treating trauma (using Cognitive Processing Therapy) and anxiety, practicing through a relational, compassionate, and client-centered lens. She is passionate about creating a therapeutic space in which clients feel safe and able to explore various parts of themselves with curiosity as opposed to judgement. In addition to her leadership and clinical work, she is passionate about creating art, and learning about the intersection between creativity and mental health.

Kayla Corirossi, MA, LCSW
Site Director, Naperville PHP/IOP (Adolescents & Adults)

Kayla Corirossi, MA, LCSW, is the Site Director of SunCloud Health’s Naperville Partial Hospitalization (PHP) and Intensive Outpatient (IOP) programs for adolescents and adults. She brings extensive experience working with individuals across the lifespan, including adolescents, adults, and geriatric populations, and specializes in the treatment of mood disorders, trauma, substance use, family systems, forensic populations, and individuals in crisis.

Kayla has worked in a wide range of clinical and community settings, including community-based interventions, police crisis response, correctional facilities, inpatient treatment, PHP/IOP programs, and with vulnerable and underserved populations. In addition to her clinical and leadership work, she is passionate about providing mental health education and advocacy within the community.

Kayla earned her Bachelor’s degree with a double major in Psychology and Sociology from Aurora University and went on to complete her Master’s degree in Forensic Social Work, also at Aurora University. Her clinical approach is evidence-based, compassionate, trauma-informed, and integrative, emphasizing collaboration and individualized care.

Driven by a personal mission to meet individuals where they are, Kayla is committed to helping clients feel safe, supported, and understood. She strives to create a natural and empathetic healing environment while ensuring individuals from all backgrounds and identities know they are not alone and have access to meaningful resources and support.

Elizabeth E. Sita, MD
Medical Director of Adult Services
Dr. Elizabeth E. Sita, MD, is a Board Certified psychiatrist specializing in the care of patients with eating disorders. She completed her undergraduate training at the University of Chicago and graduated with Highest Honors. She then earned her medical degree at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and was recognized with the Chairman’s Award for Excellence in Psychiatry. She subsequently completed residency with the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at McGaw Medical Center of Northwestern University, where she was elected Chief Resident and received the Resident Psychiatrist Leadership & Service Award. Upon completing her training, Dr. Sita came to Ascension Alexian Brothers Behavioral Health Hospital, where she served as Assistant Medical Director of the Center for Eating Disorders and Director of Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Services before transitioning to lead the new inpatient eating disorder unit as Medical Director of Eating Disorder Services at Ascension Saint Joseph Hospital – Chicago. In these roles, she has cared for a multitude of adolescents and adults struggling with anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, binge eating disorder, and other eating disorders as well as severe, cooccurring mood, trauma, personality, and substance use disorders. Dr. Sita has been recognized throughout her training and practice for a commitment to excellence in patient care and for her ability to engage patients in their most challenging moments. Her passions include the care of treatment-resistant eating and mood disorders as well as questions of medical capacity and end-of-life decision making. She believes that, first and foremost, human connection is key to mental health and well-being and strives to share this philosophy in each and every patient encounter. She is excited to bring her expertise to SunCloud Health as the Medical Director of Adult Services!   VIDEO: Meet Elizabeth E. Sita, MD, Medical Director of Adult Services  
Lacey Lemke, PsyD
Assistant Vice President of Clinical Services

Dr. Lacey Lemke (she/her) is a licensed clinical health psychologist with specialized expertise in the treatment of eating disorders and the practice of medical and health psychology. She completed her doctoral training in clinical psychology with a Primary Care emphasis at the Adler School of Professional Psychology. Dr. Lemke went on to complete both her predoctoral clinical internship and postdoctoral fellowship through Ascension Health, where she gained advanced training working with individuals experiencing eating disorders and self-injurious behaviors, as well as within pediatric subspecialty settings including endocrinology, neurology, and adolescent medicine.

Dr. Lemke is deeply committed to providing evidence-based, compassionate care and collaborates closely with interdisciplinary teams to ensure comprehensive treatment. Her professional mission is to support patients in achieving their fullest potential by guiding them to the most appropriate level of care and empowering them to make meaningful, sustainable progress toward improved health and well-being.

VIDEO: 2. Meet Lacey Lemke, PsyD.