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I do about 50/50 with 45 verses 60 minutes with the occasional 30 minute thrown into the mix. Often the longer time is clinically indicated especially with trauma patients. We don't dive right in to the trauma, open up the wounds, and then usher them out the door while they are still bleeding which is about how it would work to keep it within 45 minutes. Also, many patients think of therapy as an hour so 55 minutes makes sense to them. Also, United Behavioral Health will deny any claim for 60 minute session without prior auth.Schedule 8 to get 6 seems a reasonable goal for someone in private practice. Not what I would want to do (for similar reasons to erg) but if that is someone's goal I don't think its incredibly unreasonable. 8-5, notes during lunch/no-shows (since you've eliminated that 15 minute "gap" you get when scheduling 45 minute sessions).
That said, there are some other issues I think may play into this that I am hoping someone else can comment on. I'd think ONLY doing 60 minute sessions would raise flags with insurers. I think our collection rate on these is lower, presumably for that reason. Standard of care issues and all that. Neither insurance nor our billing staff seems to understand that the length of session is more dependent on the length of session is more dependent on the patient's tendency to keep talking despite repeated attempts to shuffle them out the door than it is on medical necessity, problem severity or anything else. I suspect the same is true in medicine/primary care practices.
That said - if I can I'll do back-to-back 60 minute sessions on my clinic days. Bmed/primary care type settings it makes financial sense to pile in 30 minute sessions if patient flow allows. I might do this with CBT-I patients too. Both models would pay better than 45-minute sessions would.