Paying out of pocket for doctors

Anonymous
I feel like the social skills group is a good therapy. My son is learning how to communicate with peers. This is the main area where he has difficulty. But I know that this type of therapy is a long-term commitment but so is OT or any other therapy. Even though insurance isn't accepted, I don't have a lot of choices.

I think that OP will have to try some therapies and see what is working and what is not... Something most of us have had to do. We sunk money into a couple of places that turned out to be wastes of time and money. But I like the combination of therapies that we have in place now.

No one has a crystal ball. There is no real road map and it is maddening bc we do waste our child's precious time and our hard earned money with no guarantees.
Anonymous
OP here. Our insurance provides zero benefits for out of network. I think we will have to switch next year but it is a lot of money in the meantime. And, like a pp said, no guarantee that any of it will help.
Anonymous
I could write so much on this topic. I'm both a mental health provider (although not for children) and a parent with a special needs child.I'm only able to use my insurance OON for most of my child's providers. And don't get me started on the tutors -- that's another small fortune!

At the same time I appreciate why a lot of doctors don't take insurance. They pay shockingly little and demand a lot of information from providers. It simply isn't worth it to many therapists to be on insurance panels getting $80/hr when they can charge more than double that and maintain control over their caseload. As a parent paying this, however, I sympathize with you all.
Anonymous
We just had to change from a great policy to a mediocre one. Look up letter of medical necessity and gap request. I'm pursuing both of these to get better benefits.
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