Anonymous wrote:
Nadueau looks utterly incompetent.
Anonymous wrote:*theirAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Financial problems due to federal government changes makes a lot of sense. These are admittedly pricey services and between the loss of jobs and the shutdown, it’s been tough for families. It doesn’t surprise me that they had to find alternative care. And there is nothing like financial problems to tear a family apart.
It doesn’t sound like the existing business model could support the costs if clinicians are going to be paid out of the owner’s personal pocket. And it sounds like they are acknowledging their ethical responsibilities and trying to set up a means to meet them.
I almost worked there as a contractor; each practitioner sets their own fees; they earned 60 percent of what there fee was/is. Did anyone say that less people were being seen? That clients dropped off?
So, the owners should not have been paying clinicians "from their own pockets." If you don't bill you don't get paid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is an article about it
https://www.thebanner.com/economy/chesapeake-center-adhd-closing-SQDO6MUDLNGLBK5BZLPURRXFAU/
Wow
*theirAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Financial problems due to federal government changes makes a lot of sense. These are admittedly pricey services and between the loss of jobs and the shutdown, it’s been tough for families. It doesn’t surprise me that they had to find alternative care. And there is nothing like financial problems to tear a family apart.
It doesn’t sound like the existing business model could support the costs if clinicians are going to be paid out of the owner’s personal pocket. And it sounds like they are acknowledging their ethical responsibilities and trying to set up a means to meet them.
I almost worked there as a contractor; each practitioner sets their own fees; they earned 60 percent of what there fee was/is. Did anyone say that less people were being seen? That clients dropped off?
Anonymous wrote:Financial problems due to federal government changes makes a lot of sense. These are admittedly pricey services and between the loss of jobs and the shutdown, it’s been tough for families. It doesn’t surprise me that they had to find alternative care. And there is nothing like financial problems to tear a family apart.
It doesn’t sound like the existing business model could support the costs if clinicians are going to be paid out of the owner’s personal pocket. And it sounds like they are acknowledging their ethical responsibilities and trying to set up a means to meet them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I cannot access any bills in my account. I need copies of my bills so I can submit it to insurance. Anyone knows who to reach out for bills?
Someone else said they found superbills under Messages not Billing in their portal.
Unfortunately I don't see anything there. It just keeps saying that I need to be connected to a provider to use the site.If someone has been able to retrieve their statements, please share the secret.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I cannot access any bills in my account. I need copies of my bills so I can submit it to insurance. Anyone knows who to reach out for bills?
Someone else said they found superbills under Messages not Billing in their portal.
Unfortunately I don't see anything there. It just keeps saying that I need to be connected to a provider to use the site.If someone has been able to retrieve their statements, please share the secret.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I cannot access any bills in my account. I need copies of my bills so I can submit it to insurance. Anyone knows who to reach out for bills?
Someone else said they found superbills under Messages not Billing in their portal.
If someone has been able to retrieve their statements, please share the secret. Anonymous wrote:Agreed. The loss of fed jobs started at the beginning of 2025. Feds who took a buyout were getting their last checks in September. The shutdown began Oct. 1. Maybe a shutdown was unavoidable. Shutting down the WAY they did? In the middle of a holiday break, giving no notice to anyway? THAT was avoidable.
I think it's more likely that the center was on shaky financial footing to begin with for who knows what reason, and losing a number of families might have made the whole house come tumbling down. But this is not the way a healthy organization does business.
Anonymous wrote:Financial problems due to federal government changes makes a lot of sense. These are admittedly pricey services and between the loss of jobs and the shutdown, it’s been tough for families. It doesn’t surprise me that they had to find alternative care. And there is nothing like financial problems to tear a family apart.
It doesn’t sound like the existing business model could support the costs if clinicians are going to be paid out of the owner’s personal pocket. And it sounds like they are acknowledging their ethical responsibilities and trying to set up a means to meet them.
Anonymous wrote:I cannot access any bills in my account. I need copies of my bills so I can submit it to insurance. Anyone knows who to reach out for bills?