Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Yes - that’s it. He says she told him this on day 1. She’s been in practice for 45+ years and demands a hefty sum. I’m pi$$ed that we can’t coordinate based on the last 6 years of therapy he has done.
A therapist who has a universal “I won’t talk to another healthcare professional about one of my patients, even when they consent to me doing so” is unethical. Period. I say this as a licensed psychologist who doesn’t use that term lightly. My guess is she hides behind the “old school” thing and ignores her responsibility to actually practice healthcare the way it’s practiced now. Also, when people do consult in these cases, they’re not sharing every little detail of what’s discussed. It’s general information about diagnostic impressions, information that impacts the marriage, etc. Unacceptable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your husband has to consent to it. And can. I’m completely sure she has a release of information that she’d accept if her client signed it (client meaning your husband). So blame your husband, he can give consent if he wants to.
He did consent.
DP - your husband signed consent to disclose to the couples therapist (i.e., he wants them to talk) and his individual therapist is refusing?
I’d fire her and possibly report her to the licensing board. That’s unethical.
Yes - that’s it. He says she told him this on day 1. She’s been in practice for 45+ years and demands a hefty sum. I’m pi$$ed that we can’t coordinate based on the last 6 years of therapy he has done.
Anonymous wrote: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.
OP here. This does concern me. I agree - he is totally the driver. He doesn’t seem to get that he is the customer here. (Or client.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes he signed a release.
He did it for show. He doesn't want his therapist talking to the joint therapist. His therapist is being the "bad guy" by refusing, but is doing so at your dh's request.
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:Yes he signed a release.
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:Title says it all. I am so angry that his therapist refuses to speak to our therapist. He says she disclosed this from day one - because she will not breach confidence. I cannot understand why a professional would refuse to collaborate on care to benefit the patient. She says she will only do it by court order.
Is it me or is this total BS? Apparently she is “old school” if that means anything. I know he won’t push her on this because he will think he owes her professional respect. Our therapist called her and she didn’t return the calls. Finally she got her on the phone and the therapist said no. And that was it. It seems totally unprofessional to me.
Anonymous wrote:Why do you think it would help? I see your husband’s therapists point. What they talk about is confidential. If he was ever annoyed or angry at you or made comments to his therapist that you were annoyingly controlling all that shouldn’t be disclosed.
Is your therapist of 6 years sharing intimate details about you to the marriage counselor? It wouldn’t be fair if someone is talking about him but not you to the marriage therapist. Your insistence makes it seem like you think all the problems in your marriage are your husband’s fault.
Anonymous wrote:Why is this necessary?
Anonymous wrote: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.
Yes - that’s it. He says she told him this on day 1. She’s been in practice for 45+ years and demands a hefty sum. I’m pi$$ed that we can’t coordinate based on the last 6 years of therapy he has done.