View Single Post
 
Old Aug 19, 2014, 08:00 AM
HazelGirl's Avatar
HazelGirl HazelGirl is offline
Elder
 
Member Since: Jan 2014
Location: USA
Posts: 5,248
Quote:
Originally Posted by feralkittymom View Post
I'm not so sure. There may be something in the governance of grievance procedure in your state that mandates that the client's preference be honored until the grievance is adjudicated. Since they haven't paid her, I'm assuming despite what they've said, the grievance has not been formally settled.

I can see where this would make sense in a medical situation--say a patient was undergoing a specialist treatment at the time of the grievance being filed. It would work against the patient to have treatment interrupted, and probably require a new medical assessment for malpractice purposes, if for no other reason. So it is to protect the patient's continuing care.

You can check your state's Dept of Insurance, rather than the individual company, to find out how the grievance procedure works. There's also usually a time frame for the adjudication; I would have thought @ 6 months in most states.
It is possible that this is the case. Although I haven't ever heard of something like this applying to therapy.
__________________
HazelGirl
PTSD, Depression, ADHD, Anxiety
Propranolol 10mg as needed for anxiety, Wellbutrin XL 150mg