Sure.
Psychiatrists in Canada are covered by OHIP—if you can find one, and if you can find one to treat eating disorders. I would say that within psychiatry, because this is a long-standing, entrenched illness, a lot of psychiatrists don't want to take eating disorder clients on. They view them as high-risk—their mortality rates are very high—and they view it as a very long commitment.
So that's one thing.
Psychologists charge over $200 per session in Canada. I have a private practice where I've followed clients, and I charge $150 an hour. So that's $600 a month if you're going to treatment only once a week, which I would say is not enough when you are in crisis. One hour of counselling a week is not going to do it.
Our clients often need dietitians. Ms. Martin may be able to speak to the rates they charge a little better than I can. But you need a team, as she said. We know that eating disorders are co-morbid with anxiety and depression, and often trauma. We don't have medication to treat the eating disorder—that's food—but what we can use medication for is to control the co-morbid things.
So you need a psychiatrist, you need a dietitian, and you need a therapist. That's an expensive team if you have to pay for it yourself.