National Post

Patient was charged $40 for crying at doctor’s appointmen­t

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A young woman in New York had been having health issues for some time and when she finally was able to see a doctor, she was so relieved she had a brief cry.

“She has a rare disease so she’s been really struggling to find care,” sister Camille Johnson said in a tweet thread. “She got emotional because she feels frustrated and helpless. One tear in and they charged her $40 without addressing why she is crying, trying to help, doing any evaluation, any prescripti­on, nothing.”

“They charged her more for crying than they did for a vision assessment test. They charged her more for crying than for a hemoglobin test. They charged her more for crying than for a health risk assessment. They charged her more for crying than for a capillary blood draw,” Johnson pointed out.

The New York Post detailed why U.S. doctors can charge for such an assessment. “A brief emotional/ behavioral assessment is a mental health screening that tests for signs of attention-deficit/hyperactiv­ity disorder (ADHD), depression, anxiety, suicidal risk or substance abuse,” the Post wrote. “It is usually issued as a questionna­ire.”

Johnson told The Independen­t her sister was never evaluated. She claimed the doctor noticed her sister’s tears but said nothing.

“They did not evaluate her for depression or other mental illnesses, nor did they discuss her mental health with her,” Johnson said. “She never talked to a specialist, was not referred to anyone, not prescribed anything, and they did nothing to assist with her mental health.”

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