FAQs
Have a question that has not been answered here? Drop us an e-mail at [email protected] or call at 917.510.6422.
What is an LMFT?
An LMFT is a licensed marriage and family therapist who is trained in family systems and psychotherapy. This license is recognized in 48 states and denotes an individual who is an expert in family therapy. LMFTs are trained to assess, diagnose, and treat individuals, couples, and family members of all ages
What are the qualifications for a Marriage and Family Therapist?
The regulatory requirements vary from state to state but most state requirements are consistent with the American Association of Marriage and Family Therapists Clinical Membership standards. In New York, first, candidates must graduate from a master’s level accredited program. Next, individuals receive at least 1,500 hours and two years of post-degree supervised clinical experience. Finally, LMFTs must pass a state licensing exam.
Do I need therapy?
You get to decide if you go to therapy, for how long, and what your goals will be. If you have exhausted friends and family and still do not feel better it might be a good next step.
What will therapy consist of?
The first session is for the client to meet the therapist and evaluate the therapist – client relationship. Not all therapists are going to be a great fit for all clients. The first session also gives the therapist an opportunity to assess what the problem is and help the client come up with goals to resolve the problems. Typically within the first three sessions the client and therapist will sign off on a treatment plan that will outline the goals and timeline for therapy and interventions. The treatment plan is a guide that can be changed at any time. Following the assessment and development of a treatment plan the therapist and client will work towards the goals.
What can I hope to achieve from therapy?
Everyone comes to therapy with different concerns and different goals. Therapy can be a place to talk about thoughts and feelings, express emotions, learn new skills, develop better relationships, resolve conflict, find solutions, and feel better!
What kind of therapy is right for me?
It is worth the time and effort to find a therapist with a style and approach that fits your personal needs. Every individual’s therapy is different. The type, length and frequency of therapy is determined by the therapist and client together.
How do I get started?
Call for an initial phone consultation and to schedule the first appointment. During the phone consultation you can ask questions and provide some information about your concern to ensure that the therapist can help you with those issues.
What is the fee for treatment services?
The fee for service is $150.00 – $200.00 per hour. Payment is required at the time services are rendered.
* Late cancellation policy – there is a $75 fee for any appointments canceled within 24 hours of scheduled appointment time.
How do I pay for services?
Many insurance companies reimburse for some form of mental health services. Start by calling your insurance company to find out how many sessions of therapy you have in your plan, what the in-network and out of network benefits are, what the copay and deductible are and the list of providers in your insurance plan.
Is therapy confidential?
Therapy is completely confidential unless a situation of physical or sexual abuse or a plan of suicide or homocide is disclosed in therapy. By law in such cases a therapist must report this information to the proper authorities. If a client signs a release of information only the information listed on the consent form can be released and only to the individual(s) listed on the form.
Are you HIPAA compliant?
Yes. All clients are given a copy of the Notice of Privacy Practices during their initial session. They are also asked to sign a consent form stating they have received a copy of the Notice of Privacy Practices. Any questions clients have are also answered. Below you can view a copy of the Notice of Privacy Practices. It is a standard form that most providers share with clients.
Notice of Privacy Practices
THIS NOTICE DESCRIBES HOW MEDICAL INFORMATION ABOUT YOU MAY BE USED AND DISCLOSED AND HOW YOU CAN GET ACCESS TO THIS INFORMATION. PLEASE REVIEW IT CAREFULLY.
Privacy is a very important concern for all those who come to this office. It is also complicated, because of the many federal and state laws and our professional ethics. Because the rules are so complicated, some parts of this notice are very detailed, and you probably will have to read them several times to understand them. If you have any questions, our privacy officer will be happy to help you understand our procedures and your rights. His or her name and address are at the end of this notice.
Contents of this notice
- A. Introduction: To our clients
- B. What we mean by your medical information
- C. Privacy and the laws about privacy
- D. How your protected health information can be used and shared
- 1. Uses and disclosures with your consent
- a. The basic uses and disclosures: For treatment, payment, and health care operations
- b. Other uses and disclosures in health care
- 2. Uses and disclosures that require your authorization
- 3. Uses and disclosures that don’t require your consent or authorization
- a. When required by law
- b. For law enforcement purposes
- c. For public health activities
- d. Relating to decedents
- e. For specific government functions
- f. To prevent a serious threat to health or safety
- 4. Uses and disclosures where you have an opportunity to object
- 5. An accounting of disclosures we have made
- 1. Uses and disclosures with your consent
- E. Your rights concerning your health information
- F. If you have questions or problems
This notice will tell you how we handle your medical information. It tells how we use this information here in this office, how we share it with other professionals and organizations, and how you can see it. We want you to know all of this so that you can make the best decisions for yourself and your family. If you have any questions or want to know more about anything in this notice, please ask our privacy officer for more explanations or more details.
B. What we mean by your medical information
Each time you visit us or any doctor’s office, hospital, clinic, or other health care provider, information is collected about you and your physical and mental health. It may be information about your past, present, or future health or conditions, or the tests and treatment you got from us or from others, or about payment for health care. The information we collect from you is called “PHI,” which stands for “protected health information.” This information goes into your medical or health care records in our office.
In this office, your PHI is likely to include these kinds of information:
_ Your history: Things that happened to you as a child; your school and work experiences; your marriage and other personal history.
_ Reasons you came for treatment: Your problems, complaints, symptoms, or needs.
_ Diagnoses: These are the medical terms for your problems or symptoms.
_ A treatment plan: This is a list of the treatments and other services that we think will best help you.
_ Progress notes: Each time you come in, we write down some things about how you are doing, what we notice about you, and what you tell us.
_ Records we get from others who treated you or evaluated you.
_ Psychological test scores, school records, and other reports.
_ Information about medications you took or are taking.
_ Legal matters.
_ Billing and insurance information
There may also be other kinds of information that go into your health care records here.
We use PHI for many purposes. For example, we may use it:
_ To plan your care and treatment.
_ To decide how well our treatments are working for you.
_ When we talk with other health care professionals who are also treating you, such as your family doctor or the professional who referred you to us.
_ To show that you actually received services from us, which we billed to you or to your health insurance company.
_ For teaching and training other health care professionals.
_ For medical or psychological research.
_ For public health officials trying to improve health care in this area of the country.
_ To improve the way we do our job by measuring the results of our work.
When you understand what is in your record and what it is used for, you can make better decisions about who, when, and why others should have this information.
Although your health care records in our office are our physical property, the information belongs to you. You can read your records, and if you want a copy we can make one for you (but we may charge you for the costs of copying and mailing, if you want it mailed to you). In some very rare situations, you cannot see all of what is in your records. If you find anything in your records that you think is incorrect or believe that something important is missing, you can ask us to amend (add information to) your records, although in some rare situations we don’t have to agree to do that.
C. Privacy and the laws about privacy
We are required to tell you about privacy because of a federal law, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA). HIPAA requires us to keep your PHI private and to give you this notice about our legal duties and our privacy practices. We will obey the rules described in this notice. If we change our privacy practices, they will apply to all the PHI we keep. We will also post the new notice of privacy practices in our office where everyone can see. You or anyone else can also get a copy from our privacy officer at any time. It is also posted on our website at [email protected].
D. How your protected health information can be used and shared
Except in some special circumstances, when we use your PHI in this office or disclose it to others, we share only the minimum necessary PHI needed for those other people to do their jobs. The law gives you rights to know about your PHI, to know how it is used, and to have a say in how it is shared. So we will tell you more about what we do with your information.
Mainly, we will use and disclose your PHI for routine purposes to provide for your care, and we will explain more about these below. For other uses, we must tell you about them and ask you to sign a written authorization form. However, the law also says that there are some uses and disclosures that don’t need your consent or authorization.
1. Uses and disclosures with your consent
After you have read this notice, you will be asked to sign a separate consent form to allow us to use and share your PHI. In almost all cases we intend to use your PHI here or share it with other people or organizations to provide treatment to you, arrange for payment for our services, or some other business functions called “health care operations.” In other words, we need information about you and your condition to provide care to you. You have to agree to let us collect the information, use it, and share it to care for you properly. Therefore, you must sign the consent form before we begin to treat you. If you do not agree and consent we cannot treat you.
a. The basic uses and disclosure: For treatment, payment, and health care operations.
Next, we will tell you more about how your information will be used for treatment, payment, and health care operations.
For treatment. We use your medical information to provide you with psychological treatments or services. These might include individual, family, or group therapy; psychological, educational, or vocational testing; treatment planning; or measuring the benefits of our services.
We may share your PHI with others who provide treatment to you. We are likely to share your information with your personal physician. If you are being treated by a team, we can share some of your PHI with the team members, so that the services you receive will work best together. The other professionals treating you will also enter their findings, the actions they took, and their plans into your medical record, and so we all can decide what treatments work best for you and make up a treatment plan. We may refer you to other professionals or consultants for services we cannot provide. When we do this, we need to tell them things about you and your conditions. We will get back their findings and opinions, and those will go into your records here. If you receive treatment in the future from other professionals, we can also share your PHI with them. These are some examples so that you can see how we use and disclose your PHI for treatment.
Notice of Privacy Practices (p. 3 of 6)
For payment. We may use your information to bill you, your insurance, or others, so we can be paid for the treatments we provide to you. We may contact your insurance company to find out exactly what your insurance covers. We may have to tell them about your diagnoses, what treatments you have received, and the changes we expect in your conditions. We will need to tell them about when we met, your progress, and other similar things.
For health care operations. Using or disclosing your PHI for health care operations goes beyond our care and your payment. For example, we may use your PHI to see where we can make improvements in the care and services we provide. We may be required to supply some information to some government health agencies, so they can study disorders and treatment and make plans for services that are needed. If we do, your name and personal information will be removed from what we send.
b. Other uses and disclosures in health care
Appointment reminders. We may use and disclose your PHI to reschedule or remind you of appointments for treatment or other care. If you want us to call or write to you only at your home or your work, or you prefer some other way to reach you, we usually can arrange that. Just tell us.
Treatment alternatives. We may use and disclose your PHI to tell you about or recommend possible treatments or alternatives that may be of help to you.
Other benefits and services. We may use and disclose your PHI to tell you about health-related benefits or services that may be of interest to you.
Research. We may use or share your PHI to do research to improve treatments—for example, comparing two treatments for the same disorder, to see which works better or faster or costs less. In all cases, your name, address, and other personal information will be removed from the information given to researchers. If they need to know who you are, we will discuss the research project with you, and we will not send any information unless you sign a special authorization form.
Business associates. We hire other businesses to do some jobs for us. In the law, they are called our “business associates.” Examples include a copy service to make copies of your health records, and a billing service to figure out, print, and mail our bills. These business associates need to receive some of your PHI to do their jobs properly. To protect your privacy, they have agreed in their contract with us to safeguard your information.
2. Uses and disclosures that require your authorization
If we want to use your information for any purpose besides those described above, we need your permission on an authorization form. We don’t expect to need this very often. If you do allow us to use or disclose your PHI, you can cancel that permission in writing at any time. We would then stop using or disclosing your information for that purpose. Of course, we cannot take back any information we have already disclosed or used with your permission.
3. Uses and disclosures that don’t require your consent or authorization
The law lets us use and disclose some of your PHI without your consent or authorization in some cases. Here are some examples of when we might do this.
a. When required by law
There are some federal, state, or local laws that require us to disclose PHI:
_ We have to report suspected child abuse. If you are involved in a lawsuit or legal proceeding, and we receive a subpoena, discovery request, or other lawful process,we may have to release some of your PHI.We will only do so after trying to tell you about the request, consulting your lawyer, or trying to get a court order to protect the information they requested.
_ We have to disclose some information to the government agencies that check on us to see that we are obeying the privacy laws.
b. For law enforcement purposes
We may release medical information if asked to do so by a law enforcement official to investigate a crime or criminal.
c. For public health activities
We may disclose some of your PHI to agencies that investigate diseases or injuries.
d. Relating to decedents
We may disclose PHI to coroners, medical examiners, or funeral directors, and to organizations relating to organ, eye, or tissue donations or transplants.
e. For specific government functions
We may disclose PHI of military personnel and veterans to government benefit programs relating to eligibility and enrollment. We may disclose your PHI to workers’ compensation and disability programs, to correctional facilities if you are an inmate, or to other government agencies for national security reasons.
f. To prevent a serious threat to health or safety
If we come to believe that there is a serious threat to your health or safety, or that of another person or the public, we can disclose some of your PHI. We will only do this to persons who can prevent the danger.
4. Uses and disclosures where you have an opportunity to object
We can share some information about you with your family or close others. We will only share information with those involved in your care and anyone else you choose, such as close friends or clergy. We will ask you which persons you want us to tell, and what information you want us to tell them, about your condition or treatment. You can tell us what you want, and we will honor your wishes as long as it is not against the law.
If it is an emergency, and so we cannot ask if you disagree, we can share information if we believe that it is what you would have wanted and if we believe it will help you if we do share it. If we do share information, in an emergency, we will tell you as soon as we can. If you don’t approve we will stop, as long as it is not against the law.
5. An accounting of disclosures we have made When we disclose your PHI, we may keep some records of whom we sent it to, when we sent it, and what we sent. You can get an accounting (a list) of many of these disclosures.
E. Your rights concerning your health information
1. You can ask us to communicate with you about your health and related issues in a particular way or at a certain place that is more private for you. For example, you can ask us to call you at home, and not at work, to schedule or cancel an appointment. We will try our best to do as you ask.
2. You have the right to ask us to limit what we tell people involved in your care or with payment for your care, such as family members and friends. We don’t have to agree to your request, but if we do agree, we will honor it except when it is against the law, or in an emergency, or when the information is necessary to treat you.
3. You have the right to look at the health information we have about you, such as your medical and billing records. You can get a summary of your records, but we may charge you.
4. If you believe that the information in your records is incorrect or missing something important, you can ask us to make additions to your records to correct the situation. You have to make this request in writing and send it to our privacy officer. You must also tell us the reasons you want to make the changes.
5. You have the right to a copy of this notice. If we change this notice, we will post the new one in our waiting area, and you can always get a copy from the privacy officer.
6. You have the right to file a complaint if you believe your privacy rights have been violated. You can file a complaint with our privacy officer and with the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. All complaints must be in writing. Filing a complaint will not change the health care we provide to you in any way. You may have other rights that are granted to you by the laws of our state, and these may be the same as or different from the rights described above. We will be happy to discuss these situations with you now or as they arise.
F. If you have questions or problems
If you need more information or have questions about the privacy practices described above, please speak to the privacy officer, whose name and telephone number are listed below. If you have a problem with how your PHI has been handled, or if you believe your privacy rights have been violated, contact the privacy officer. As stated above, you have the right to file a complaint with us and with the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. We promise that we will not in any way limit your care here or take any actions against you if you complain. If you have any questions or problems about this notice or our health information privacy policies, please contact our privacy officer, who is and can be reached by phone at or by e-mail at [email protected] or call (518) 474-3817.