top of page

INSURANCE

I am licensed to provide nutrition counseling in Oregon, North Carolina, Washington DC, and Massachusetts. I am in-network as a registered dietitian with the following insurance companies:

​

  • Regence/BlueCross BlueShield

  • Providence (not OHP)

  • PacificSource (not OHP)

  • Moda

​​

While I am in-network with these companies, the quantity and quality of coverage for nutrition counseling is dependent on your specific policy. It is your responsibility to understand the specific nutrition counseling benefits of your individual policy.* Please call your insurance company at least 1 week prior to our first appointment. This document provides a list of questions you should ask when speaking with your insurance company regarding working with a registered dietitian.


* According to the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA), nutrition counseling for the treatment of eating disorders is a required (by law) mental health insurance benefit. If you have been denied insurance coverage of nutrition counseling for a diagnosed eating disorder and would like help fighting the denial, please visit Help With Insurance Denials through the International Federation of Eating Disorder Dietitians.

​

Out-of-Network Options

If I am out-of-network with your insurance company, I am happy to provide you with a superbill that you can submit to them for potential reimbursement.

​

FEES

(If paying out-of-pocket, at the time of our appointment, rather than

using insurance)

INITIAL INTAKE (90 MIN)                               $210

NUTRITION FOLLOW UP (60 MIN)             $140

NUTRITION FOLLOW UP (30 MIN)             $70

​

NO-SHOW OR LATE CANCELLATION

$140 charged for any nutrition counseling appointment you do not show up for.
$70 charged for any nutrition counseling appointment you do not cancel at least 24 hours in advance.

surface-sR24zAyFgJE-unsplash.jpg
Leaves 4_edited.jpg

The No Surprises Act and Good Faith Estimates

​

To protect patients from surprise medical bills, the No Surprises Act requires that providers give patients who don’t have insurance, or who are not using insurance, a "good faith estimate" of the cost of care, upon request.

If actual charges exceed this “good faith estimate” by at least $400, the patient can dispute the bill. You may ask for a Good Faith Estimate from me anytime.

For more information, or to dispute a bill, visit www.cms.gov/nosurprises/consumers

bottom of page