Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:U of MD is getting out for winter break soon and do not return till late January. Staff is still there so I would see if you can get on the wait list. Remember the university's are on college schedules. It is hit or miss depending on the student clinicians as the pp said. Do you actually need an evaluation or do you need therapy. We only do evaluations for insurance purposes. When we private paid, we just paid for the speech therapy. Then we got our insurance to start covering it and they require periodic evaluations.
National Speech in Bethesda and other locations advertises free evaluations.
If you don't have an evaluation, how do you know if therapy will correct the issue? For my child, it's a language issue, not a speech issue. What no one can tell me without an evaluation is if this is just a delay that will be outgrown or a true issue that will need assistance to work through. Sometimes I think there are expressive issues only; sometimes it seems to be receptive; sometimes it seems like both disorders are displaying; sometimes I think it's because he's 4. In other words, in the absence of a professional telling me what is going on, I have no clue.
Anonymous wrote:Our child is 4 and clearly has delays. Until his brain was ready, therapy did not help. When he was ready, it helped. I'd just go in for an initial consultation rather than a full evaluation and if recommended try a few sessions. We knew we need help, so it was a non-issue. The evaluations only confirm what we know. I do not find them helpful except for insurance payment. If you are concerned, get help and worst case you do a few sessions and do find the benefit you stop (we tried several therapists before finding the right one who listened and saw the issue). I would also get a private one for a school IEP.
Anonymous wrote:U of MD is getting out for winter break soon and do not return till late January. Staff is still there so I would see if you can get on the wait list. Remember the university's are on college schedules. It is hit or miss depending on the student clinicians as the pp said. Do you actually need an evaluation or do you need therapy. We only do evaluations for insurance purposes. When we private paid, we just paid for the speech therapy. Then we got our insurance to start covering it and they require periodic evaluations.
National Speech in Bethesda and other locations advertises free evaluations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We pay $125/hr. Most places we've worked with have billed in 15 increments and have offered us sessions of 30, 45 or 60 minutes.
I think OP was looking for an evaluation vs. ST sessions.
OP have you gone through early intervention or child find? That would be free.
The university systems are less expensive but not always the best quality. We've had mixed experiences. They also run on a college calendar, so if you're looking for expediency and don't want to wait, you'll probably pay more through a private.
Where are you located? VA, MD, DC?
Anonymous wrote:We pay $125/hr. Most places we've worked with have billed in 15 increments and have offered us sessions of 30, 45 or 60 minutes.
Anonymous wrote:Try some of the speech clinics. U of MD has one:
http://www.hesp.umd.edu/landing/Clinic
GW
http://departments.columbian.gwu.edu/speechhearing/center
Loyola
http://www.loyola.edu/clinical-centers/services/speech-language.aspx
Some will range from free to probably $500-1000 depending on the need and provider.