crop unrecognizable female psychologist and patient discussing mental problems during session
Photo by SHVETS production on Pexels.com

“In 2019, Lydia Bugg was working from home when a man tried to break into her house. She fought off the intruder on her porch by hitting him and screaming until he ran away. Shaken by the incident, Ms. Bugg knew what she needed to do next: see a therapist,” Jenny Singer writes over at The New York Times. “‘I couldn’t feel comfortable in my house,/ she said. “I really didn’t feel comfortable in public.’ A friend told Ms. Bugg that if she didn’t get treated for post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, right away, her symptoms could worsen. But in Nashville, where she lived at the time, no therapist she approached would take her insurance. Ms. Bugg had Blue Cross Blue Shield, the most popular health care plan in Tennessee. But each therapist told her the same thing: ‘The way that Blue Cross Blue Shield pays people doesn’t allow us to actually have the time and resources to help you,’ Ms. Bugg recalled. Therapists in private practice have many reasons for not accepting insurance. If they do, they cannot negotiate with the insurance company for a higher wage, ask for a raise or be paid more commensurate with their experience. Despite a federal mental health parity law passed in 2008, insurance plans aren’t actually required to cover mental health treatment. Undeterred, Ms. Bugg found a cognitive behavioral therapist who specialized in PTSD. The therapist was ‘hugely helpful,’ she said. The therapist’s fee, $170 per session, was not. ‘That was a lot of money for me and my husband at the time,’ said Ms. Bugg, 35. To make it work, she went to therapy sporadically, going only when she could afford it. But seeing the therapy bills come in felt, ‘retraumatizing,’ Ms. Bugg said. Ms. Bugg’s situation — the cost of therapy becoming a source of psychological distress — is not unusual. Increasingly, therapy is recommended as a crucial treatment for people with mental health disorders and a kind of mandatory finishing school for well-rounded adults. Less discussed is how the cost of therapy is out of reach for many Americans.” Jenny Singer, “Therapy can be a Ffnancial burden. Try telling your therapist that,” The New York Times.

Jeanne Pinder  is the founder and CEO of ClearHealthCosts. She worked at The New York Times for almost 25 years as a reporter, editor and human resources executive, then volunteered for a buyout and founded...