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Marcia Hill - For Love or Money: The Fee in Feminist Therapy: The Fee in Feminist Therapy

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For Love or Money: The Fee in Feminist Therapy: The Fee in Feminist Therapy: summary, description and annotation

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Realize how you can charge what your services are worth and still care about your clients!For Love or Money: The Fee in Feminist Therapy examines the rarely talked about topic of payment in therapy, taking a symbolic and psychological look at the meaning of fees to both the psychologist and client. This intelligent book offers firsthand advice and information concerning how gender can make a difference in your feelings about fees and how the managed care environment affects women clients. For Love or Money will help you handle your concerns about fees as it discusses payment for missed sessions, bartering, the meaning of fees with African-American women and with women in prison, and a model for pro bono work.Since most therapists dont discuss fees with colleagues, For Love or Money provides you with a way to gain information that might not otherwise be available to you. As a therapist, you will explore perspectives on what other therapists think about fees and what feelings other therapists have about the amounts they charge for their services. Some of the fee issues you will examine include:

  • five typical therapist conflicts that are felt when it comes to fees
  • the need to change managed behavioral health care to include equal payment for mental health care, length and type of treatment at the discretion of the client and provider, and appropriate training in womens mental health issues for all health care providers
  • setting a frame of therapy that includes session time, session length, duration of treatment, fee, confidentiality, and the rules of client participation to allow for successful psychotherapy
  • sound clinical reasons for enforcing payment for missed sessions and considering a situation where flexibility is recommended
  • pro bono work that is satisfying With this insightful and well-written book, you will explore issues such as transference, the symbolic meaning of money, and feelings you may have that could interfere with your ability to follow through with your own payment policies. For Love or Money examines many of the issues that surround the taboo topic of fees and will assist you with tackling this seldom-addressed and often uncomfortable subject for the therapist who wants to help her clients, but may feel distressed at setting and sticking to established fees.

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For Love or Money The Fee in Feminist Therapy For Love or Money The Fee in - photo 1
For Love or Money: The Fee in Feminist Therapy
For Love or Money: The Fee in Feminist Therapy
Marcia Hill, EdD
Ellyn Kaschak, PhD
Editors
Women & Therapy
Volume 22, Number 3
First published 1999 by The Haworth Press Inc Published 2021 by Routledge 605 - photo 2
First published 1999 by The Haworth Press, Inc.
Published 2021 by Routledge
605 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017
2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN
Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers.
Notice:
Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe.
ISBN 13: 978-0-7890-0956-2 (pbk)
EDITORS
MARCIA HILL, EdD, Private Practice, Montpelier, Vermont
ELLYN KASCHAK, PhD, Psychology Department, San Jose State University
EDITORIAL ASSISTANT
TERESA LESKO is a graduate student in clinical psychology at the California School of Professional Psychology.
MARCY ADELMAN, PhD, is a clinical psychologist in private practice in San Francisco, and a researcher on lesbian aging.
RHEA ALMEIDA, PhD, LCSW, DVS, is of Asian Indian descent, founded the Institute for Family Services in Somerset, New Jersey and is a faculty member at the Family Institute of New Jersey in Metuchen.
LEDA ARCE, MS, received a bachelors degree from the Universidad de Costa Rica and an MS degree in Marriage, Family and Child Counseling from San Jo State University and has been in private practice in San Jos, Costa Rica since 1983.
GIOCONDA BATRES MENDEZ, MD, is a psychiatrist, therapist and Director of the Regional Training Program Against Domestic Violence of ILANUD, United Nations, located in San Jos Costa Rica.
JANET R. BRICE-BAKER, PhD, is Professor at Yeshiva University in the Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology-Clinical Program.
CHRISTINE M. CHAO, PhD, Denver, CO, is a clinical psychologist interested in the synthesis of culturally informed therapy and Jungian thought.
DONNA CHILDS, MD, is Board Certified in adult psychiatry and in child psychiatry, as well as a Diplomate Jungian Analyst. She is currently in private practice in Kansas City.
CAROL PIGLER CHRISTENSEN, MSW, DEd, a marriage and family therapist, is Professor at the University of British Columbia School of Social Work, where she specializes in cross-cultural practice, model-building and research.
ELLEN COLE, PhD, is Professor of Psychology and Director of the Master of Science in Counseling Psychology program at Alaska Pacific University in Anchorage.
BETTS CASSADY COLLET, MA, is a feminist psychotherapist in private practice in New York and founding editor of Women & Therapy.
GLADYS L. CROOM, PSYD, is a clinical psychologist and sole proprietor of Delwe Psychological Services in Homewood, Illinois.
ELIZABETH DAVIS-RUSSELL, EDD, PhD, is Professor and Dean for Academic and Professional Affairs at the California School of Professional Psychology-Fresno.
GLORIA ENGUIDANOS, PhD, is currently in private practice in Sonoma County, California.
INGRID FOEKEN is a Dutch psychotherapist and social psychologist, specializing in lesbian, feminist and international issues in private practice and with the Regional Institute for Mental Health in Amsterdam.
KATHY A. GAINOR, PhD, is a staff psychologist at the Rutgers College Counseling Center at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey in New Brunswick.
BEVERLY GREENE, PhD, is a clinical psychologist in private practice in Brooklyn, New York and Professor of Psychology at St. Johns University in Queens, New York.
SUSAN GRIFFIN is a writer, poet, essayist, playwright and filmmaker, based in Berkeley, California.
CLARE G. HOLZMAN, PhD, is a clinical psychologist in independent practice as a feminist therapist in New York City.
DORIS HOWARD, PhD, is Director of a residential program in the San Francisco mental health system. She is licensed as a clinical psychologist in New York State, where she was formerly in private practice as a feminist therapist.
HANNAH LEARMAN, PhD, is a femininst psychologist and author presently practicing in Las Vegas, Nevada.
DONNA K. NAGATA, PhD, is Associate Professor of Psychology at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, in the Clinical Psychology Program.
RUTH ULLMAN PAIGE, PhD, a private practitioner in Seattle, Washington, is also actively involved in the American Psychological Association and in the Washington State Psychological Association in professional and public interest issues.
GAIL PHETERSON, PhD, is Associate Professor of Social Psychology at the University of Picardie Jules Verne and a psychotherapist in private practice.
ELIZABETH J. RAVE, EdD, Professor Emeritus of School Psychology and Womens Studies at the University of Northern Colorado, is Resident Services Coordinator at Northaven Retirement Apartments, Seattle.
EDNA I. RAWLINGS, PhD, is a feminist therapist and Professor of Psychology and Womens Studies at the University of Cincinnati.
SUZANNA ROSE, PhD, is Professor of Psychology at the Institute for Womens and Gender Studies at the University of Missouri-St. Louis.
ESTHER ROTHBLUM, PhD, is Professor of Psychology at the University of Vermont and editor of the Journal of Lesbian Studies.
SARA SHARRATT, PhD, is Professor Emerita of Marriage and Family Counseling at Sonoma State University in California and has been actively involved in the development and application of feminist therapy since its inception.
MELBA VASQUEZ, PhD, is a psychologist in independent practice in Austin, Texas.
NANCY WANG, LCSW, has been in private practice for 16 years working with a multicultural clientele using diverse approaches including psychodynamic, bioenergetics, assertiveness training, bicultural awareness and understanding, NLP, EMDR, visualization and spiritual attainment.
BOOK REVIEW EDITOR
MAUREEN C. McHUGH, Professor of Psychology, Indiana University of Pennsylvania (IUP), is a social psychologist and a gender specialist.
For Love or Money: The Fee in Feminist Therapy
Women & Therapy
Volume 22, Number 3
CONTENTS
Marcia Hill
Ella Lasky
This article focuses on the mixed feelings that psychotherapists have about setting fees. It highlights the different conflicts that male and female therapists have about fees. Sixty psychotherapists were interviewed and these results are presented as well as vignettes illustrating five typical therapist conflicts.
KEYWORDS. Male, female, gender, psychotherapists, money, fees
Ruth Parvin Gail Anderson
This study consisted of eight interviews done with psychologists in private practice, four female and four male, of European American origin. Their responses to questions about decision making regarding fees provide fertile ground for future research. Psychologists thoughts about fee-setting and adjustment appear to be complex and widely variable. Although the findings are limited due to sample size and homogeneity, the results suggest that: psychologists may be ambivalent about discussing their fees; managed care practices may be undercutting a willingness of therapists to do pro bono, sliding or adjusted fee work; a gender analysis should include family-of-origin socioeconomic status in fee decisions; women may be considerably more flexible in adjusting fee decisions; psychologists are increasingly eager to find self-pay clients instead of third party pay or managed care pay clients due to the constraints and burdens of such payers; and psychologists are often confused about their ethical and legal mandates pertaining to fee-setting and management.
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