Date: Fri 06-Feb-1998
Date: Fri 06-Feb-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
health-Reid-psychotherapy
Full Text:
Offering Therapy In A Private And Comfortable Setting
(with cut)
BY KAAREN VALENTA
There is no psychotherapy couch in Gwenann L. Reid's office.
"That's a 1930s-50s stereotype, the kind that Woody Allen pokes fun at in his
movies," Ms Reid explains, laughing.
A licensed clinical social worker who opened a private practice, Clarity
Counseling Services, in Newtown late last year, Gwenann Reid offers
psychotherapy and consultation services as well as individual, marriage and
family counseling at her office at 54 South Main Street.
"I'm establishing a generalist practice, one which serves a broad range of
needs in the community," she said. "In addition to psychotherapy, I have
experience in marriage and family counseling, grief and loss issues,
adolescent development, substance abuse, parenting issues, the problems of
persons who grew up with parents who were alcoholics or drug abusers,
infertility problems and the issues surrounding them, and issues related to
adoption.
"I also provide help in the area of general stress management," she said.
"Stress can lead to anxiety and physical problems. People can become anxious
and depressed."
Gwenann Reid earned two undergraduate degrees and a master's degree in social
work at the University of Wisconsin doing two one-year internships and holding
a part-time job. Offered jobs in California and in Rhode Island after
graduation, she opted for the east coast and went to work for a community
counseling center as a child and family therapist, working with at-risk
children in dysfunctional families.
Having worked at the University of Wisconsin's counseling center, she jumped
when an opportunity arose to take a similar job at the University of Rhode
Island. She spent the next seven years there, working with students and
consulting with faculty and staff.
"The range of students in college now is much greater than it used to be," she
said. "There are a lot of very young freshmen, of course, but also older
people returning to, or starting, college, and moms returning to graduate
school facing work, family and school issues. And, of course, there are a lot
of problems involving substance abuse among students at colleges and
universities."
While in Rhode Island, she performed two years of supervised clinical work and
passed the examinations required to become a licensed clinical social worker.
She also started her own private practice.
On a trip to Boston, Ms Reid met, and later married, Jay Higham. When Mr
Higham became vice president of marketing and development for a small public
health care company, Integra Med America, in Purchase, N.Y., nearly three
years ago, the couple moved to Sandy Hook with their son, Reid Higham, now 4.
As the mother of a small child, Gwenann Reid wanted a job that was flexible,
so she became a medical social worker and consultant, working with elderly,
ill, homebound persons, and also became a consultant for the state's Birth To
Three program, which provides services for eligible infants who are premature,
autistic and developmentally delayed. She also decided recently to establish a
private practice here. But one issue that she has been forced to confront is
the intrusion of managed care plans into the area of patient confidentiality.
"I question the ethics of submitted information to the insurance company," she
said. "For treatment to be covered for reimbursement, or to extend the
treatment for someone who is seriously depressed, the managed care companies
want to know, in writing, information that I feel is a breach of confidence
for a health care professional to reveal. If I have to say that someone is
seriously depressed and could be suicidal, that information goes into the
record and could show up later when that person tries to apply for life
insurance. But if I don't report the seriousness of the condition, the person
can be denied the request for additional treatment."
Often the person at the managed care company who is requesting the information
and making the decision isn't medically qualified to make those decisions, she
said.
"If a client wishes to use an insurance company for reimbursement, they can,"
Ms Reid said. "But I am also very willing to work with people on a
fee-for-service basis. People want to feel comfortable. They need to feel that
everything will be private and confidential. So that's how I plan to operate
my business. I want a private practice that is professional and confidential
and won't cross ethical lines like managed care companies ask you to do."
Ms Reid also offers services to companies to cover employees for both personal
and work-related issues involving a limited number of sessions.
For private patients, she offers initial free consultations of approximately
20-25 minutes.
"For most people it's very scary to go into counseling," she said. "But we all
have crises, we all have problems a few times in our lives. That's when
professional counseling can be extremely helpful. And by coming in and meeting
me in a casual setting, people see that it's not scary - it's not."
The role of a psychotherapist is not to tell people what to do with their
lives, nor to simply listen and not comment, she said.
"Psychotherapy is a dialogue," she said. "You help the person see what they
want to do, what is not working for them, what is right for them. The person
ultimately is helping themselves with your guidance."
Gwenann L. Reid offers hours by appointment. Her office at 54 South Main
Street is located in the building that also houses the Newtown Chiropractic
Health Center. For more information, call Ms Reid at 270-3722 or, if no
answer, 426-5439.
