Quote:
Originally Posted by seventyeight
i understand what you're saying, but beyond the initial call/fax to the insurance company - there is NOTHING else she has to do with them. i submit the claims, they wire the reimbursement payment directly to her banking account, and i pay the difference. (she doesn't even need to sign the claim form, as i have a copy with her signature that i use!)
i spent much of yesterday thinking about the sliding-scale, and have made the decision that i can't accept it. i'm completely uncomfortable with it, for one. two, i don't like how arbitrary it is. when we were doing the math, she was trying to figure out what i could afford and kept changing the fee based on my finances. i know she was being very nice and generous, but it would have been easy for me to say, "no, that's still too high. what about this amount instead?" i think it would be different if she told me that she had a special rate for students or something like that, something pre-determined that everyone paid (which i know is not the point of a "sliding" scale, but still). i also don't understand why the sliding-scale is being offered to me now, when in the past i was struggling a LOT more financially, paying a lot more for therapy*, and she knew all of this. furthermore, my partner also sees this therapist and isn't being offered the reduced rate. so that feels really weird/yucky to me, and complicates the issue.
*the first year, i spent almost $14,000
back to the SCA - i really just don't understand why she'd say no, then yes, then maybe. it's very confusing, and makes me feel like i can't trust her. i keep thinking i should call her to schedule an appointment to talk to her about this, but i don't want to rush the natural decision-making process. plus, to spend another $150 on talking about this doesn't seem practical. but it's all really bothering me. ugh.
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I'm with Chris, if she offered you a rate that would be $17 less per session as you said above , that is $68 a month, at once a week. Yet for her to jack with an insurance company, who she would then have to report to and explain her services quarterly, and also do a little leg work each month she would be out $150.00 an hour. As time is money when you run a practice, you only get paid when client is in the office and the meter is running. So even a 10 minute phone call cost her $150.00, its a full hour she can't see a patient. I think you should accept what she is offering as a caring gesture from your T, It's not charity its generosity. At the end of the day, its better for you NOT to have an insurance company involved as nothing goes on your permanent record.

I hope you work out a deal that pleases you both!