Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your husband has to consent to it. And can. I’m completely sure she has a release of information that she’d accept if her client signed it (client meaning your husband). So blame your husband, he can give consent if he wants to.
He did consent.
DP - your husband signed consent to disclose to the couples therapist (i.e., he wants them to talk) and his individual therapist is refusing?
I’d fire her and possibly report her to the licensing board. That’s unethical.
Anonymous wrote:Yes he signed a release.
Anonymous wrote:Your husband is the driver here, not his therapist. If *he* wants her to talk to another healthcare professional who provides care for him, she should do so. I’d argue that not doing so is unethical. That said, her resistance is bizarre and unprofessional - it would make me suspect he’s hiding something huge, frankly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your husband has to consent to it. And can. I’m completely sure she has a release of information that she’d accept if her client signed it (client meaning your husband). So blame your husband, he can give consent if he wants to.
He did consent.
Anonymous wrote:My husband’s therapist signed a waiver so that she could talk to me. She could answer general questions.
Anonymous wrote:Your husband has to consent to it. And can. I’m completely sure she has a release of information that she’d accept if her client signed it (client meaning your husband). So blame your husband, he can give consent if he wants to.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think it's new school/old school thing but sounds about right. I wouldn't either.