My understanding of the word practitioner is anyone with a suitable qualification in the field. Rules out men in pubs, gym nickel tossers, witch doctors, websites etc.
The medical insurance aspect is probably purely down to the plan.Hi,
€1,200 seems very expensive and one would have to question why the medical insurance won't cover it. They most likely see it as alternative treatment. Has your wife visited a physiotherapist already which would be partly covered by your health insurance if you have day to day cover?
She would need a referral for the physio.
It might raise questions with Revenue if the bill is €1,200.
Wow. Thanks for letting us know.My tax return was auditted and I had to submit all receipts and was told to provide a letter from the GP referring me for Physiotherapy.
There may be issues getting a referral from a GP for this reason.Please be extremely careful going to a non-medical person like a chiropractor. My understanding is that chiropractic can be really dangerous. I don't seem to be able to post links here, so if you google "chiropractor dangers", the first link (for me anyway) is an Irish Times article looking at chiropractic. The "Is It Safe" section is pretty chilling, I think.
Thanks for the tip!My tax return was auditted and I had to submit all receipts and was told to provide a letter from the GP referring me for Physiotherapy.
OP : €60 to your GP to get a referral is money well spent to get €240 back
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?