Anonymous wrote:Glad it worked out well for you, OP.
Anonymous wrote:I think the therapist should swallow the whole fee (minus the old copy amount) for these two sessions. They accepted your insurance a few months ago, so it's reasonable to assume they still do if you didn't change your insurance plan in December. If they change their billing practices, it's their responsibility to inform you ahead of time.
Anonymous wrote: Just posted, but may not have made myself clear. They should only charge you the co-pay if they were not upfront about costs BEFORE the sessions.
You should not be charged full price for the sessions you had if they did not inform you of the insurance change. That sounds shady.
I would be fine with them telling you after the 2 sessions if you just went back for a 2 session tune up because you are not in dire straits and you now have warning that the next time you need a booster, it will cost much more. I think it would be obnoxious to tell someone in crisis, your next session will cost you 3x as much. There should be a warning of IMO a few weeks in advance so you have time to call around and find someone else you can afford without having to stop treatment.
Anonymous wrote:it's your job to make sure your insurance is accepted. find middle ground and find another therapist.