• Fees & Insurance

    Fees

    Fees for appointments vary by clinician. Clients with health insurance may have some or all of the appointment fee covered by their plan. Clients are then responsible for any deductible or co-pay/co-insurance amounts that are set by their insurance policy. Uninsured clients or clients with an insurance plan we cannot accept may pay out-of-pocket (self-pay) for appointments. We also offer a sliding fee scale for self-pay clients on a case-by-case basis.

    • Initial Intake (60 min) | $160 - $180 per session
    • Individual Therapy (60 min) | $160 - $180 per session
    • Couples Therapy (60 min) | $160 - $180 per session
    • Intern Appointment (60 min) | $35 per session

     

    Insurance

    We are in network with most commercial insurance plans, as well as several Medicaid and Medicare plans. See below for details.

     

    First Tier | All of our clinicians accept:

    • Aetna (and Meritain)
      - including the Cleveland Clinic employee insurance plan through Aetna
    • Anthem / Blue Cross Blue Shield
      - including the University Hopsitals employee insurance plan through BCBS
    • Cigna
    • CareSource
    • Medicaid Managed Care Plans: AmeriHealth Caritas, Buckeye, CareSource, Humana, Molina, United Healthcare Community Plan
    • Medical Mutual of Ohio (see exceptions below)
    • SummaCare
    • Ohio Health Choice (OSU employee plan)

     

    Second Tier | Some of our clinicians accept:

    • Ohio Medicare Part B
    • United Healthcare (including Optum & UMR)
    • United Healthcare Medicare
    • SummaCare Medicare

     

    Third Tier | We are not in network with:

    • Anthem Medicaid
    • Oscar Health (Cleveland Clinic employee insurance plan through Oscar)
    • Medical Mutual Skyway Plus EPO (MetroHealth affiliated plan)
    • Medical Mutual CLE CARE HMO (Case Western Reserve University affiliated plan)

     

    For questions related to fees or insurance, please email admin@clesexandintimacycounseling.com .

     

     

    Good Faith Estimate

    You have the right to receive a “Good Faith Estimate” explaining how much your medical care will cost. Under the law, healthcare providers need to give patients who don’t have insurance or who are not using insurance an estimate of the bill for medical items and services. You can receive a Good Faith Estimate for the total expected cost of any non-emergency items or services. Make sure your healthcare provider gives you a Good Faith Estimate in writing at least 1 business day before your medical service or item. You can also ask your health care provider, and any other provider you choose, for a Good Faith Estimate before you schedule an item or service. If you receive a bill that is at least $400 more than your Good Faith Estimate, you can dispute the bill. Make sure to save a copy or picture of your Good Faith Estimate.

     

    For questions or more information about your right to a Good Faith Estimate, visit www.cms.gov/nosurprises.