Anonymous ID: 346f0c June 29, 2018, 7:46 p.m. No.1965467   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5509 >>5533 >>5590

>>1965274 (pb)

Well, yes, Occam's Razor

AND

most psychotherapists/counselors/whathaveyou

tend to keep a low profile wrt social media and

definitely keep their accounts as private as possible.

The reasons are pretty obvious.

Regarding the complaint filed against this particular therapist:

No one actually wants to see their records.

They THINK they want to see them and they don't necessarily understand what they are looking at when they do.

Why?? Because the records are written in "Acceptable to XYZ insurance so I can get paid without needing to spend 4 months fighting for that measly percentage of my actual fee"

The necessary language is so cold and absent the actual, real "stuff" of therapy.

Because of that, most folks are very reluctant to provide that documentation. It can be very harmful to A) the client and B) the provider

Anonymous ID: 346f0c June 29, 2018, 8:01 p.m. No.1965643   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1965561

Yepyep.

It may be nothing, it may be something:

I get really sketched out by any Anon posting

"Hey, I don't have LinkedIn, can anyone with LInkedIn check out _____".

I've THOUGHT about saying about how weird that request is, considering the web LinkedIn automatically creates if you look at a profile. And then I got shy about saying anything bc I have enough nutty theories on things.

THANK YOU for pointing this data collection effort out, is what I'm saying. <3

Anonymous ID: 346f0c June 29, 2018, 8:10 p.m. No.1965725   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1965497

Was Belinda Stevenson the business manager at this group practice?

I don't know. Just a thought re: multiple names and one primary phone number.

Not saying there is nothing spoopy, just saying that there are also perfectly legit reasons for some of the things.

Anonymous ID: 346f0c June 29, 2018, 8:17 p.m. No.1965795   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1965734

Not releasing his treatment records to him.

Little known fact: He had every right to ask and she had every right to deny. Therapy docs are not what many people think they are. They are cold. It can be more harmful to the person who wants them than can be helpful. If a therapist has a client who wants the docs and they have a strong alliance and can discuss the language used, cool. If the therapist and client do NOT have that alliance, welp, not so cool. All parties involved can be damaged horribly in that situation.