Welcome to Generational Counseling
Providing a compassionate and comprehensive range of services to support your emotional well-being and mental health
Our lives are the result of the generations that came before us and we have the power to impact the generations to come. Starting as a child, we can learn emotional regulation, life skills, and to process life’s challenges throughout development.
As a child, teen, young adult, and family therapist I help patients learn emotional regulation, coping skills, cognitive strategies, and behavioral strategies to address life’s challenges. I also help families grow together and learn how to handle and address the challenges they come across.
Growing up in an ever changing and unpredictable world can cause anyone to feel unsettled, nervous, fearful, hopeless, or frustrated. Generational counseling is here to help you and your child feel strengthened, confident, and resilient in the face of life’s challenges.
Accepted Insurance
Aetna, Cigna, BCBS of Arizona, Oscar Health, United Healthcare, Oxford Health Insurance and BCBS of Massachusetts.
Good Faith Estimates for Counseling
Effective January 1, 2022, the No Surprises Act, which Congress passed as part of the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2021, is designed to protect patients from surprise bills for emergency services at out-of-network facilities or for out-of-network providers at in-network facilities, holding them liable only for in-network cost-sharing amounts. The No Surprises Act also enables uninsured patients to receive a good faith estimate of the cost of care.
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 have the right to receive a Good Faith Estimate for the total expected cost of any non-emergency items or services. This includes related costs like medical tests, prescription drugs, equipment and hospital fees.
- Make sure your healthcare provider gives you a Good Faith Estimate in writing at least one business day before your medical service or item. You can also ask your healthcare 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.