Anonymous wrote:I would encourage you to say something. Being regularly late like this is unprofessional and unacceptable. If he can't get out the door on time to make it to his first appointment, then he needs to adjust his work hours to starting later. Being able to discuss things like this is actually part of therapy, so yes, bring it up.
Anonymous wrote:“We need to talk about your tardiness. Today you were 15 minutes late. This is the fourth time. Either we need to adjust the start time for the full 50 minutes or I need a reduced rate for the reduced time. (Or whatever would work for you.)
Once is fine. But repeatedly? Hell no.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry, he is also not going OVER? Keeping you waiting is pretty bad not givng you the full hour or 50 minutes is really bad. To the point where I feel like - are you sure you aren't supposed to start at 4:15-5 versus 4-5?
Anonymous wrote:If he is habitually late and is not making up the time then he is very unprofessional, and this is unacceptable behavior. Have you addressed this with him?
Anonymous wrote:That’s very unusual and if it ever happens the customary practice would be to give you your full time. This would concern me about his professionalism in other areas. -therapist
Anonymous wrote:Is he seeing other patients and tunning late? Or showing up at the office? Or is this telemedicine?