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« Developing a Successful Private Practice - Efficacy of Talk Therapy: Dr. Lynn Friedman - Johns Hopkins | Main | Developing a Successful Private Practice - Psychiatric Diagnosis: Dr. Lynn Friedman - Johns Hopkins »

February 23, 2010

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Kelly Walsh

In beginning my internship, I was immediately forced to face the anxieties I had regarding fee collection. At my placement, there is no front-desk receptionist and thus I was required to accept payment from my client’s directly, immediately following our session.
For me, collecting payment of any amount (especially directly) caused me to intensely evaluate the effectiveness of my services and the quality of each session. While to a certain extent, this evaluation is a beneficial motivator for me to provide the highest level of service possible, as a neophyte counselor I struggled with the anxiety of actually being able to provide a valuable service to my clients.
After becoming more comfortable in my counseling skin, I believe that it was no coincidence that my clients showed greater progress and I simultaneously became more comfortable and confident in receiving payment. If it does not exist already, it would be an interesting study to correlate a clinician’s confidence level with the fee they charge.
I think a particularly useful reference for me was reading an excerpt from Nancy McWilliams’ Psychoanalytic Case Conceptualization,
“Given that money is a reality of a professional relationship, it is important to be straightforward, unapologetic, and reasonable about it. Such an attitude conveys that the therapist is appropriately concerned with his or her welfare-a particularly good example to set for masochistic clients,” p. 36.

Kelly Walsh

Correction:

The correct title of Nancy McWilliams' book is:

Psychoanalytic Case Formulation

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