Client Information and Acknowledgment of
Informed Consent to Treatment
Columbus Behavioral Health, LLC (hereinafter “CBH”) provides counseling through Ohio licensed mental health therapists and allied health professionals (all of which will be referred to as “therapist”) which are independently contracted with the practice. This Agreement applies to the therapist you will be seeing, and it will also describe the business practices of the therapists at CBH.
MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES
The purpose of mental health services is to help you better understand your situation, change your behavior or move toward resolving your difficulties. Using your therapist’s knowledge of human development and behavior, he or she will make observations about situations and help you to develop new ways to approach them. It will be important for you to examine your own feelings, thoughts and behavior, and to try new approaches in order for change to occur.
The services offered can have risks as well as benefits. Treatment often involves discussing unpleasant issues, and you might experience uncomfortable feelings like sadness, guilt, anger, frustration, loneliness, and helplessness. On the other hand, mental health care may often lead to better relationships, solutions to specific problems, and significant reductions in feelings of distress. But there are no guarantees of what you will experience.
FMLA/DISABILITY/ESA: We do NOT complete FMLA paperwork, disabililty paperwork, leave of absence paperwork and do not write Emotional Support Animal letters.
APPOINTMENTS
Appointments are made online or by calling the main line.
Please call to cancel or reschedule AT LEAST 48 HOURS in advance, or the following late cancel/no show charges will apply -
LATE CANCELS/NO SHOWS
No charge for the 1st cancellation in a calendar year
$65 for the 2nd
$125 for the 3rd
$190 for the 4th+ late cancellation/no show.
Third party payers (insurance) will NOT cover or reimburse for missed appointments. These fees are PATIENT'S RESPONSIBILITY.
APPOINTMENT REMINDERS are sent as a courtesy but should not be relied upon. YOU are responsible for knowing when you are scheduled. You can see booked appointments on the dashboard screen in your patient portal. Not getting an appointment reminder is NOT an excuse for a late cancellation or no show.
Appointments are typically 45 or 60 minutes in length, but session length may vary for clinical reasons. The number of appointments depends on many factors and your therapist will discuss this as part of your treatment planning.
Since there is no way a therapist can see another client when they have a LATE ARRIVAL, no reductions are provided when a client arrives late for an appointment. Arrival more than 10 minutes after the scheduled start time for an hour-long appointment, or 5 minutes for a half hour appointment, will typically be considered a no show. However, it can vary by provider. Your provider will go over their late arrival policy during your intake appointment.
Some insurance companies will only pay for the actual time during which services are rendered. In that case you, the client, will be billed for the portion of the appointment time when no services could be rendered. Some governmental insurance or employee assistance programs do not allow billing for missed or partially missed appointments and if that is the case you will be billed in accordance with those programs’ rules.
COBRA: If you lose insurance and are applying for COBRA, visits between application and approval will be PATIENT'S RESPONSIBILITY/SELF-PAY until COBRA is active. If coverage is made retro-active, claims will be submitted and patient will be refunded when COBRA pays.
RELATIONSHIP
Your therapist’s relationship with clients is a professional and therapeutic relationship. In order to preserve this relationship, it is imperative that your therapist not have any other type of relationship with you. Personal and/or business relationships undermine the effectiveness of the therapeutic relationship. Please do not attempt to “friend” your therapist or anyone else in the practice on Facebook or on any other social media site. You always have the right to terminate services with your therapist at any time and for any reason.
GOALS, PURPOSES AND TECHNIQUES
There may be alternative ways to effectively treat the problems you are experiencing. It is important for you to discuss any questions you may have regarding the treatment your therapist recommends and to have input into setting the goals of your therapy. As therapy progresses these goals may change. You and your therapist will jointly determine how to effect the changes you are seeking to make for yourself. You always have the opportunity to seek either another opinion or a different therapist. Your therapist will let you know if he or she feels that you are not a good fit or if you might obtain better help with someone else. Your therapist will always retain the right to terminate therapy with you. Some examples of when this may happen is in the event that he or she feels you would be better served with another therapist, for rude or abusive behavior, for a pattern of missed or cancelled appointments, if he or she feels you are not complying with treatment requests, or if payments due remain unpaid. In the event that your therapist terminates services with you he or she will offer you referrals.
CONFIDENTIALITY
Laws protect the privacy of all communications between a client and a therapist. In most situations your therapist can only release information about your treatment to others if you sign a written authorization. There are some situations where they are permitted or required to disclose information either with or without your consent or authorization. For example:
-If you are involved in a court proceeding and a request is made for information concerning your treatment, your therapist cannot provide such information without your written authorization or a court order. If you are involved in or contemplating litigation, you should consult your attorney to determine whether a court would be likely to order your therapist to disclose information;
-If a government agency is requesting the information, your therapist may be required to provide it;
-If you file a complaint or lawsuit against your therapist, he or she may disclose relevant information about you as part of a defense to your charges;
-If you file a worker’s compensation claim, your therapist may be required, upon appropriate request, to provide a copy of your records, or a report of your treatment.
There are some situations in which your therapist is legally obligated to take actions that he or she believes is necessary to attempt to protect others from harm, and in such cases they might have to reveal some information about your treatment. If such a situation arises, your therapist will make every effort to fully discuss it with you before taking any action, if they deem that to be appropriate under the circumstances, and will limit disclosure to what is necessary. For instance:
-If your therapist has reason to believe that a child, a developmentally or physically disabled or elderly adult, or an animal is being neglected or abused, the law may require them to report that information to the appropriate state or local agency;
-If your therapist believes you present a clear and substantial danger of harm to yourself and/or others, he or she may be obligated to take certain protective actions. This may include contacting family members, seeking hospitalization for you, notifying any potential victim(s), and/or notifying the police.
You agree that the practice may release information about your claim(s) to the Ohio Department of Insurance in connection with any insurance company’s failure to properly pay a claim in a timely manner as well as to the Ohio Department of Commerce, which requires certain reporting of unclaimed funds. In those instances, only the minimal, required, information will be supplied.
You agree that from time to time your therapist may have the need to consult with his or her practice attorney regarding legal issues involving your care (this is an infrequent occurrence, but does happen from time to time). The practice attorney is bound by confidentiality rules also. In addition, your therapist will reveal only the information that he or she needs to reveal to receive appropriate legal advice in connection with those contacts.
You should be aware that your therapist practices with other mental health professionals and that the practice may employ administrative staff. In most cases, protected information may need to be shared with these individuals, as well as outside medical professionals for both clinical and administrative purposes, such as typing, scheduling, billing, and quality assurance, or to coordinate care in the event that another therapist in the practice is seeing one of your family members. If your therapist or the practice does that only the information necessary in order for them to provide help to you, the client, will be released. All of the health care professionals are bound by the same rules of confidentiality. All staff members have been given training about protecting your privacy and have agreed not to release any information outside of the practice without the permission of a professional staff member.
The practice may have a contract with a collection agency. If that is the case, the practice will have a formal contract with this business, in which the business promises to maintain the confidentiality of the data except where release of certain information is allowed in the contract or is required by law. Only limited information, just enough to collect the amount you owe, will be disclosed by the practice in this situation.
PATIENT PORTAL
The patient portal is part of our Practice Management platform, Therapy Appointment (TA). TA is fully compliant with HIPAA and HITECH standards for encrypted transmission and storage of your Protected Health Information (PHI). However, it is YOUR RESPONSIBILITY to protect access to your Patient Portal Account. DO NOT SHARE YOUR ACCOUNT LOGIN INFORMATION. If you believe your login has been compromised, go into your profile settings immediately and change your username and password. Be advised that if you do choose to share your login information with anyone, you are granting them full access to your PHI and automatically releasing CBH, your provider, Therapy Appointment and any/all affiliates for any and all subsequent disclosures of your PHI.
This summary is designed to provide an overview of confidentiality and its limits. It is important that you read the Notice of Privacy Practices form that has been provided to you for more detailed explanations, and that you discuss with your therapist any questions or concerns that you have.
LEGAL SITUATIONS
If you or the client (if the client is a minor or a ward of a guardian) become involved in legal proceedings that require your therapist’s participation you will be expected to pay for all of their professional time, even if they are called to testify by another party. Your therapist will ask that a retainer be paid of half of the expected fees at least one week prior to providing these services, and the second half of expected fees and any additional fees that may have been accrued be paid within one week after services are delivered. Any unused amounts will be refunded. Your therapist’s professional time for legal proceedings may include preparation (document review or letter preparation), phone consultation with other professionals or you, record copying fees, and travel time to and from proceedings, testifying, and time that they wait in court prior to or after they may be called to testify. Due to the time-consuming and often difficult nature of legal involvement, your therapist charges $375.00 per hour for these services. You will also be responsible for any legal fees that they may incur in connection with the legal proceeding, which may include responding to subpoenas.
Please be advised that as a treating therapist, your therapist cannot ethically provide any recommendations on guardianship, custody, visitation, parenting capacity or abilities or what is in the best interest of the child(ren) if you or your child(ren) are involved in custody/divorce/guardianship proceedings.
PROFESSIONAL RECORDS
The laws and standards of your therapist’s profession require that your therapist keep Protected Health Information about you in your Clinical Record. Your Clinical Record may include information about your reasons for seeking therapy, a description of the ways in which your problems affect your life, your diagnosis, the goals for treatment, your progress toward those goals, your medical and social history, your treatment history, results of clinical tests (including raw test data), any past treatment records that your therapist receives from other providers, reports of any professional consultations, any payment records, and copies of any reports that have been sent to anyone. You may examine and/or receive a copy of your Clinical Record if you request it in writing, unless your therapist determines for clearly stated treatment reasons that disclosure of the records to you is likely to have an adverse effect on you, and in that event under Ohio law they may exercise the option of turning the records over to another mental health therapist designated by you, unless otherwise required by federal law. Because these are professional records they can be misinterpreted and/or upsetting to untrained readers, it is therefore recommended that you initially review them with your therapist, or have them forwarded to another mental health professional so you can discuss the contents. In most circumstances, your therapist is allowed to charge fees set under Ohio and federal laws for copying and sending records. These fees may change every year, so he or she will let you know what the charge is at the time that a records request is made. If you desire to have the information sent to you electronically, and if we store the information in an electronic format, your therapist will provide the information to you in an electronic format if you agree to accept the potential risks involved in sending the records that way.
Your therapist may also keep a set of psychotherapy notes which are for their own use and which are designed to assist them in providing you with the best treatment. These notes are kept separate from your Clinical Record. They are not routinely released to others with your Clinical Record, except in rare legal circumstances. Their release requires a separate authorization in addition to one for the Clinical Record. Your therapist will discuss with you whether or not they are maintaining psychotherapy notes on you.
FEES, PAYMENTS and BILLING
Payment for services is an important part of any professional relationship. This is even more true in therapy; one treatment goal is to make relationships and the duties and obligations they involve clear. You are responsible for seeing that your therapist’s services are paid for. Meeting this responsibility shows your commitment and maturity.
Our current billable rates are $160-$230 per session, depending on service and duration. Fees are billed to your insurance, if applicable, and you are responsible for copay, coinsurance and/or deductible amounts. If you are not using insurance, please ask about cash rates. Payment for each session is due at its start or at its end. The practice has found that this arrangement helps you and your therapist to stay focused on our goals, and so it works best. It also allows your therapist to keep their fees as low as possible because it cuts down on bookkeeping costs. The practice suggests you make out your check, or pay by credit card, before each session begins, so that your time will be used best. The practice accepts Visa, Mastercard, American Express, and Discover credit cards and offers a way for the practice to store your credit card information for incurred charges. Other payment or fee arrangements must be worked out before the end of the first session.
LATE CANCEL/NO SHOW FEES
Please call to cancel or reschedule AT LEAST 48 HOURS in advance, or the following charges will apply -
No charge for the 1st cancellation in a calendar year
$65 for the 2nd
$125 for the 3rd
$190 for the 4th+ late cancellation/no show.
Third party payers (insurance) will NOT cover or reimburse for missed appointments. These fees are PATIENT'S RESPONSIBILITY.
Telephone consultations: Your therapist believes that telephone consultations may be suitable or even needed at times in therapy. If so, he or she will charge you their regular fee, prorated for the time needed. If your therapist needs to have long telephone conferences with other professionals as part of your treatment, you will be billed for these at the same rate as for regular therapy services. If you are concerned about this, please be sure to discuss it with your therapist in advance so you and they can set a policy that is comfortable for both of you. Of course, there is no charge for calls about appointments or similar business issues. Insurance companies will typically not provide reimbursement for telephone consultations.
Extended sessions: Occasionally it may be better to go on with a session, rather than stop or postpone work on a particular issue. When this extension is more than 10 minutes your therapist will tell you, because sessions that are extended beyond 10 minutes will be charged on a prorated basis. Insurance may not pay for the extended portion of a session.
Reports: Your therapist will not charge you for his or her time spent making routine reports to your insurance company.
A late payment fee of $25.00 will be charged each month that a balance remains unpaid, since your therapist will incur costs to rebill and other accounting costs. A returned check fee of $35.00 will be charged if your check bounces.
If you think you may have trouble paying your bills on time, please discuss this with your therapist. Your therapist will also raise the matter with you so you can arrive at a solution. If your unpaid balance reaches $400.00 your therapist will notify you. If it then remains unpaid, he or she may stop therapy with you if you and he or she cannot agree on a payment plan. Fees that continue unpaid after this may be turned over to small-claims court or a collection service and you agree to allow the practice to do that. If the practice chooses to do that, they will report only enough information to collect fees due to your therapist.
Because your therapist is a licensed mental health therapist, many health insurance plans will help you pay for therapy and other services he or she offers. Because health insurance is written by many different companies, your therapist cannot tell you what your plan covers. Please read your plan’s booklet under coverage for “Outpatient Psychotherapy” or under “Treatment of Mental and Nervous Conditions.” Or call your employer’s benefits office to find out what you need to know.
If your health insurance will pay part of your therapist’s fee, the practice will help you with your insurance claim forms. However, please keep some things in mind: Your therapist had no role in deciding what your insurance covers. Your employer or you (if you have individual coverage) decided which, if any, services will be covered and how much you have to pay. You are responsible for checking your insurance coverage, deductibles, payment rates, copayments, and so forth. Your insurance contract is between you and your insurance company; it is not between your therapist and the insurance company unless he or she or the practice has signed a separate agreement with that particular company. You are responsible for paying the fees that are agreed upon. If you ask the practice to bill a separated spouse, a relative, or an insurance company and payment is not received on time, then you agree to pay this amount. In addition, the plan may have rules, limits, and procedures that should be discussed, and your therapist may not be on one of their panels. Please bring your health insurance plan’s description of services to one of the early meetings with your therapist, so that you can talk about it and decide what to do. The practice does not participate in all insurance or governmental plans, so it’s important to check whether or not you have coverage available before you begin therapy.
The practice will provide information about you, including your diagnosis, to your insurance company. By signing below, you agree that it may do that. If the practice or your therapist has a contract with your insurance company then billing will be sent in accordance with the contract with that company. If your therapist or the practice is not contracted with that insurance company then you will be supplied with an invoice for your therapist’s services with the standard diagnostic and procedure codes for billing purposes, the times you met, the charges, and your payments. You can use this to apply for reimbursement. By signing this form, you agree to assign any reimbursement you receive from your insurance company to the practice.
If you choose to not have your therapist send information to your insurance company, you must select this option before each session and then pay for the session in full. With this option no report of any information will be made to your insurance company about that session. Although insurance companies say that they maintain confidentiality, oftentimes they report information to a national data bank that may later affect your ability to obtain other types of insurance.
MINORS
If you are under 18 years of age, please be aware that the law generally provides your parents the right to examine your treatment records, unless blocked by court order or if your therapist feels that the release of your records to your parents might have an adverse effect on you, in which case under Ohio law they can name another mental health therapist that your therapist will have to turn them over to, unless otherwise required by federal law. Before giving your parents any information your therapist will discuss the matter with you, if possible, and do their best to handle any objections you may have. Except in unusual circumstances, your therapist likes to make both parents aware of and involved in the treatment. In addition, if one parent brings in a child and the therapy only involves the child, under Ohio law since generally both parents have access to the child’s records unless that access is blocked by a court order, and therefore anything that either parent says in the sessions is available to both parents. Legal documents need to be provided in cases where custody, visitation, shared parenting, guardianship or other matters which are covered by court documents are involved before your therapist sees a minor for treatment. Minors 14 years of age and older should be aware that they have an option to see a therapist on a limited basis without their parents’ knowledge, except where there is a compelling need for disclosure based on a substantial probability of harm to the minor or to other persons, and if the minor is notified of your therapist’s intent to inform the minor’s parent, or guardian. Only the minor is responsible for paying for services under this option.
EMERGENCIES AND AFTER HOURS CARE
If you have an emergency, you should go directly to a hospital emergency department or call 911 or Netcare Access at 614-276-2273. The National Suicide Prevention Lifeline number is 988 or 1-800-273-8255. Emergencies are urgent situations and require your immediate action.
INCAPACITY OR DEATH OF THERAPIST
In the event that your therapist is incapacitated or dies, it will be necessary for another therapist to take possession of your file and records. By signing this form you consent to allow another licensed mental health professional whom your therapist or the practice designates to take possession of your file and records, provide you with copies upon request, or to deliver them to a therapist of your choice.
RELEASE OF LIABILITY
If you fail to show for an appointment, we will try to contact you during that appt. time at the number you have provided. If we do not hear from you within one week of the missed appointment, you have released us of all liability for your psychological counseling/care. If you cancel an appointment without rescheduling, you release us from liability for your psychological care/counseling. You are welcome to reschedule at any time, provided any past balances, including no show fees, are paid. If you have not been seen for 90 days, the relationship is considered terminated, your chart will be made inactive, and you release us from liability for your psychological care/counseling. Of course there are extenuating circumstances, such as an extended vacation, family emergency, unforeseen business trip, etc. In such cases, please contact us as soon as possible to keep us informed.