Cancel

Open app

Search

Celeste B Waters, MD

2.3 (6 reviews)
Closed • 10:00 am - 5:00 pm

Celeste B Waters, MD Photos

You might also consider

Recommended Reviews - Celeste B Waters, MD

Your trust is our priority, so businesses can't pay to alter or remove their reviews. Learn more about reviews.
Yelp app icon
Browse more easily on the app
Review Feed Illustration

6 years ago

Helpful 4
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

5 years ago

Helpful 1
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

9 years ago

Helpful 0
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

12 years ago

Helpful 4
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

14 years ago

Helpful 0
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

11 years ago

Helpful 0
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

Ask the Community - Celeste B Waters, MD

You might also consider

Verify this business for free

People searched for Psychiatrists 285 times last month within 15 miles of this business.

Verify this business

Remis Paul MD - Paul Remis,MD

Remis Paul MD

3.8(13 reviews)
0.6 mi

I have been seeing Dr. Remis for almost a year. He was able to step in for my long time…read morepsychiatrist (17 years) who stepped away for her own medical leave. Dr. Remis is extremely attentive and he takes time to understand my symptoms and cautiously adjust medications by measuring reactions in real time with intermittent calls between weekly or even biweekly visits. There are a few negative reviews for Dr. Remis on yelp and I cannot imagine they are talking about the same person who I have been meeting with. Dr. Remis is kind and caring. He has established a strong relationship with me and I truly appreciate his professionalism and dedication to his patients.

extreme malpractice. Remis is evil. i was given 9 different medications by Remis to take a day! i…read morewas heavily sedated. i was given vraylar AS SAMPLES. no prescription trail, vraylar is an antipsychotic medication. i was forced to take since i was 14 till 19. vraylar is only for adults over the age of 18. this psychiatrist's actions toward me as a minor were completely unethical and illegal. i was given medication with no prescription, no documentation, and no parental consent. i've repeatedly requested my medical records, and he has completely ignored me. as an adult, i realize how dangerous and irresponsible this was. i've filed formal complaints with the state medical board and the department of health for investigation. no one should ever have to experience this kind of medical neglect or abuse of trust.

Schwartz Joseph A MD

Schwartz Joseph A MD

5.0(1 review)
0.7 mi

This review is for anyone who is considering having ECT…read more Dr. Schwartz saved my life in 1997. His research-based level of ECT treatments kickstarted my brain into finally starting to respond to medication. I thank Dr. Schwartz for that, and I also thank God, because Dr. Schwartz had given it to me straight: not everyone responds positively to ECT, and the research-based treatment plan that he had formulated for me (a lot more than what patients usually receive) was likely to induce memory loss. He told me what it would be like for me if that were to happen, and he told me that research had not yet shown if the memories would be erased or only blocked. With his straight, objective information, not trying to sugar-coat the prognosis or railroad me, he put the informed decision into my hands. I considered it very carefully. I finally decided that it was incrementally better to jump off the ECT cliff than it was to let the depression swamp suck me ever-downward and kill me, as it had almost done in 1996. I thank God that He chose that I was in the population of people whom ECT would help. A doctor may tell you statistics of risk and benefit, but neither you nor the doctor knows on which side of the statistics you fall, as an individual. Dr. Schwartz had told me that. He had empowered me to make my own decision. And I thank God that my body was one of those that responded. I actually was able to rebuild my memories over the next few years, slowly. I was able to go back to school, even when I still couldn't remember very much from before 1997. I made it through. The process was slow and hard, but it was very much better than the swamp. People who are not depressed have an unconscious assumption that they take for granted. It's a basic, vague belief that they are not presently undergoing trauma. They don't fathom what it's like to not have that background assumption, to be seriously depressed and to experience every waking moment as trauma. It is ironic to me that there is stigma regarding a person with serious depression, as though they were weak in their character, as though they were choosing to not function. I would honestly like to see how someone self-righteous, passing judgement on people with depression, would survive just one week of serious depression, with different brain chemicals from those they already had--with the trap-door suddenly opened underneath them. I wonder if they would survive even one day. We are stronger than the judges of the world, my friend. We are stronger than them. I wish I could make an "It gets better" video. People had been amazed in 1996 that I had survived. They told me, "God wanted you to survive. You're going to help people and make a difference in their lives." 20 years later, I finally know why I survived. It wasn't for other people; it was for me, so that I could learn how to enjoy something, anything. So that I could learn how to thrive. I function as a manager now, at an aerospace company. I know how to make friends and keep them. I know how to value the things in my family that are precious, even if other things hurt. I have my intelligence back. It really is possible for it to get better, my friend who is considering ECT. Learn all you can. Make your own decision. Keep pushing for your own right to heal, thrive, and function. And please accept a big hug and respect from me for your strength and resilience.

Celeste B Waters, MD - psychiatrists - Updated May 2026

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...