Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one complains when doctors charge the same price for 15 minutes of their time.
Most of the specialists charging $250 have masters degrees. And no pretend "education" masters degrees, legit masters degrees from real schools.
People complain because they think women should do this work for charity wages.
100%
The insurance companies are where this should be managed. If they would pay any benefits towards mental health reimbursement it would make such a difference in being able to afford therapy. Docs aren’t trying to price folks out.
Anonymous wrote:No one complains when doctors charge the same price for 15 minutes of their time.
Most of the specialists charging $250 have masters degrees. And no pretend "education" masters degrees, legit masters degrees from real schools.
People complain because they think women should do this work for charity wages.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To be fair though…the math on the per session to income is pretty loose. They’re likely not making $375k
$300 hourly is expensive out of pocket but not wildly expensive for an established provider. I’d check on your benefits and see if your insurance will reimburse you directly for any part of it.
Our experience is that is wildly expensive. The last time one of our kids got therapy was probably 2022 or 2023, so unless it has skyrocketed since then, I would call that wildly expensive. We also found price didn't always tell you how good the person was. Shop around and try a few. Get on waitlists for the less expensive to give them a try.
Anonymous wrote:To be fair though…the math on the per session to income is pretty loose. They’re likely not making $375k
$300 hourly is expensive out of pocket but not wildly expensive for an established provider. I’d check on your benefits and see if your insurance will reimburse you directly for any part of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:say they see 7 patients a day
$250x 7 =$1,750.00 x 4 =$7,000.00 x 52 =$364,000.00
And pay office expenses. It's not that much.
This would be a very heavy load and not done 5 days a week.
So they make less. That's why they charge $250/hour. It's a middle class living. It's a good living, but they aren't making a ton.
That’s in no way middle class.
Around here it absolutely is.
It absolutely is NOT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:say they see 7 patients a day
$250x 7 =$1,750.00 x 4 =$7,000.00 x 52 =$364,000.00
And pay office expenses. It's not that much.
This would be a very heavy load and not done 5 days a week.
So they make less. That's why they charge $250/hour. It's a middle class living. It's a good living, but they aren't making a ton.
That’s in no way middle class.
Around here it absolutely is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cost going from $250 a session to $300 a session in dc. I need to switch therapists for my teen daughter. Is Virginia cheaper? Is this normal cost for a teen?
In person cost per 45 min session
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:say they see 7 patients a day
$250x 7 =$1,750.00 x 4 =$7,000.00 x 52 =$364,000.00
And pay office expenses. It's not that much.
This would be a very heavy load and not done 5 days a week.
So they make less. That's why they charge $250/hour. It's a middle class living. It's a good living, but they aren't making a ton.
That’s in no way middle class.