Hi, all
I have been looking for a new psychiatrist for a bit, and called a provider that is finally in my network. I told the receptionist my insurance struggles, double confirmed I was covered, and then asked what services they provide. At first he was very helpful and started asking some generic questions, like “have you seen a psychiatrist before?” “Have you revived diagnoses?” etc. I told him that I have PTSD, and he got very serious. He immediately asked *why* I have PTSD. I was shocked. I stuttered and asked, “excuse me?” He repeated himself and said, “why do you have PTSD, what caused it?” I started panicking, but flat out said, “you can’t ask me that.”
He got very defensive and said he was only asking because there is a separate clinic that is part of their facility for trauma victims. He said he wanted to see if that would be a better fit for me than just medication management. I told him that I would be interested in learning more about that, but I did not want to make an appointment right away. He gave me the doctors name and her direct line, but I feel very skeptical now.
Can a receptionist ask a question like that? It was very triggering - I broke into tears as soon as I hung up. That seems much more like an intake question that a nurse, NP, or doctor would ask when assessing a patient - not one for a receptionist, unprompted.
Anyone else have an experience like this? How can I prevent this in the future, or be better prepared for it?
I have been looking for a new psychiatrist for a bit, and called a provider that is finally in my network. I told the receptionist my insurance struggles, double confirmed I was covered, and then asked what services they provide. At first he was very helpful and started asking some generic questions, like “have you seen a psychiatrist before?” “Have you revived diagnoses?” etc. I told him that I have PTSD, and he got very serious. He immediately asked *why* I have PTSD. I was shocked. I stuttered and asked, “excuse me?” He repeated himself and said, “why do you have PTSD, what caused it?” I started panicking, but flat out said, “you can’t ask me that.”
He got very defensive and said he was only asking because there is a separate clinic that is part of their facility for trauma victims. He said he wanted to see if that would be a better fit for me than just medication management. I told him that I would be interested in learning more about that, but I did not want to make an appointment right away. He gave me the doctors name and her direct line, but I feel very skeptical now.
Can a receptionist ask a question like that? It was very triggering - I broke into tears as soon as I hung up. That seems much more like an intake question that a nurse, NP, or doctor would ask when assessing a patient - not one for a receptionist, unprompted.
Anyone else have an experience like this? How can I prevent this in the future, or be better prepared for it?