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"TIPS and TOPICS" from David
Mee-Lee, M.D.
April
2003
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In this issue
-- Why I started this Ezine!
-- What to expect from the Ezine
-- SAVVY........
-- SKILLS........
-- SOUL.........
-- STUMP the SHRINK...
-- Until next time......
WELCOME!
This
is the very first edition of "Tips and Topics", and marks
the beginning of my free monthly Ezine. I know we are all
overwhelmed with information, spam and solicitations. So,
you might ask, why add to that wave of material?
Why
I started this Ezine!
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>>
Clinicians have ongoing clinical questions that need
answers!
I
have been training and consulting for over 25 years, but
fulltime for nearly the last seven years. I travel the country
& get repeated requests for answers to questions on
the American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM) Patient
Placement Criteria and other topics. People ask about books,
videos and audio learning materials they can obtain. They
want help to implement and apply knowledge and skills presented
in one or two-day workshops. An Ezine is one way to answer
those common questions and requests more efficiently.
>>
To help people apply new-found knowledge!
Budget
deficits are hitting almost every state. Attending a workshop
can change one's knowledge and skills immediately. However,
fewer can afford to take the time and funds to learn onsite
at a workshop. Continual learning is essential, but a challenge
to achieve without some ongoing prompting, supervision or
assistance. An Ezine is a vehicle to provide supplements
and support to previous workshop attendees, or to those
who have so far been unable to get to an onsite training.
>>Because
I want to make a difference in our field!
Out
of sight, out of mind! I want my work to make a real difference
in providing, managing and funding person-centered services.
An Ezine is a channel available to stay in touch and keep
making positive changes in our work. It is a way to feed
"Tips and Topics" to healthcare providers sincerely interested
in applying concepts and skills to change( for the better)
the way we serve people in behavioral health.
What
to expect from the Ezine
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>>
You will receive it once a month.
Please forward it to other interested individuals. Suggest
that colleagues sign up on my website.
>>
It will be a relatively brief communication.
While, on occasion, I may excerpt or include material from
other sources (appropriately referenced of course), most
material will be original and be focused on practical tips
and topics in the following areas:
-- implementation of the ASAM Patient Placement Criteria;
-- providing and documenting individualized person- centered
services;
-- clinical and systems issues to do with co-occurring mental
and substance-related disorders (dual diagnosis);
-- ways to engage, empower and collaborate with people in
getting what they want and changing what they want.
>>
There will be 3 Sections: SAVVY, SKILLS, and SOUL
Each section will hopefully imrpove who we are as professionals
and as people - it's not just about "doing", but also about
the "being"!
"Savvy"- to improve our knowledge, wisdom and practical
grasp of topics;
"Skills" to focus on tips to improve practical competence;
"Soul" to enrich a person's total self - both yourself and
others;
>>From
time to time, I will add in "Successes" & "Stump
the Shrink"
In "Successes", I'll share what has been working for
you and others in the practice of "doing" and "being".
In "Stump the Shrink", I will focus on questions and dilemmas
you and others face in the "real world. " I'll try to answer
them; or perhaps I'll be stumped for a good answer.
>>
YOU CAN EXPECT THE NEXT ISSUE TO BE MUCH SHORTER.
So
enough introduction. On with it!
SAVVY........
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As
many of you know, I am Chair of the ASAM Criteria Committee
and Chief Editor of the Second Edition Revised (ASAM PPC-2R)
published in 2001, which included criteria for co-occurring
disorders and revamped the six ASAM assessment dimensions.
As part of that revision, the dimensions can now be much
better applied to assessment of not only substance-related
disorders, but also for mental health as well. Here is a
reminder of the six dimensions and a few tips on understanding
them.
The
common language of the six assessment dimensions of the
ASAM Patient Placement Criteria can be used to determine
multidimensional assessment of severity and level of function
of behavioral health disorders.
1.
Acute intoxication and/or withdrawal potential
2. Biomedical conditions and complications
3. Emotional/behavioral/cognitive conditions and complications
4. Readiness to Change (formerly Treatment acceptance/resistance)
5. Relapse/Continued Use/Continued Problem potential
6. Recovery environment
Tips:
- Each
assessment dimension is not intended to fragment people
into separate boxes. The dimensions focus on the severity
or function and the kind of services needed for that dimension
e.g., detoxification services for Dimension 1; physical
health services for Dimension 2; mental health services
for Dimension 3; motivational enhancement and engagement
services for Dimension 4; relapse or continued use or
problem prevention for Dimension 5; and family, friends,
vocational, legal, housing, transportation, child care,
financial and community services for Dimension 6.
- Dimension
4 assesses and addresses where the person is in their
"heart" as regards readiness to embrace and work on abstinence
or full mental health functioning. It is not, as some
applied in the previous name for Dimension 4, a measure
of how big a stick you might have to get them to accept
treatment or not.
- If
you find a person has a positive drug urine screen, don't
be quick to apply relapse prevention strategies (Dimension
5). First check whether the person was even trying not
to use. If they are saying something like: "I'm not going
to stop smoking weed because it relaxes me and it's natural
anyway", then that is a Dimension 4 issue, not a Dimension
5 relapse issue. There is high continued use potential.
However, the treatment interventions will be focused on
Dimension 4. The work first will revolve around helping
the person deal with their readiness (or not) to address
their marijuana use.
SKILLS........
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When
assessing the severity or level of function (LOF) for each
ASAM dimension, it is useful to consider the three H's:
History;
Here and Now; and How Worried Now.
The
History is important, but never overrides the Here and
Now. For example, if by History, a person has had severe
alcohol withdrawal with seizures, but has not been drinking
Here and Now at a rate or quantity that would predict any
significant withdrawal; and as you look at them, they are
not shaky or in withdrawal so you are not Worried about
severe withdrawal - then there is no significant Dimension
1 severity.
The
Here and Now can override the History. For example,
if a person has never had serious suicidal behavior before
by History, but Here and Now is depressed and impulsively
suicidal, you would not dismiss their severe suicidality
just because they had never done anything serious before.
Especially if you talked with them now and you are Worried
that they could not reach out to someone if they became
impulsive, then the Dimension 3 severity would be quite
high.
Tips:
- To
prepare or present the multidimensional severity or level
of function profile after initial assessment, first decide
what the severity of each dimension is. Do this by reviewing
the biopsychosocial data and zero-ing in on the pertinent
aspects of the 3H's for each dimension.
- When
you present the severity or LOF to team members or a managed
care reviewer, state first your severity or LOF rating.
Then justify and explain that rating by reciting which
parts of the History, Here and Now finding and How Worried
Now led you to that severity rating.
- Do
not ramble on, reciting every minute detail of the person's
history and treatment episodes. Stay focused on a brief
explanation of your rating, using the framework of the
3H's to structure your information. For example, you might
state: "Dimension 5 is high severity. Even though the
client wants to stop using all substances (Dimension 4),
he has never had a history of being able to stay
abstinent for longer than two weeks. He has never had
treatment or experience with recovery groups. Here
and now he has intense cravings with few peer refusal
and coping skills. As I look at him, he is anxious, craving
and I am worried now that he has no internal knowledge,
coping skills or ability to prevent continued alcohol
use."
SOUL.........
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The
other day I was delivering a training on "Keeping the
Behavioral Health Team Healthy: Communication, Conflicts
and Coping". I shared with my audience some observations
of a recent visit to the main Post Office in my hometown.
Due to budget cutbacks, the Post Office has shut down some
branches creating longer lines and waiting times at the
central facility. Let me share my observations from a simple
visit to the PO - to illustrate how "crazy" we sometimes
make ourselves.
In
most of what we do, we are using who we are - our
feelings, our centeredness, our reactions - as part of the
vehicle and catalyst for change. It makes sense to observe
ourselves, to take responsibility to take care of business
- keep ourselves healthy to maximize our usefulness to others.
Here
are seven ways I increased my stress level that day in the
Post Office:
- I
arrived and saw the long line snaking out into the PO
lobby and immediately huffed and puffed and rolled my
eyes with frustration.
- I
noticed a PO employee walking around in the back behind
the PO desk clerks. I started judging them as to why they
were not helping service the line. Logically, I knew their
job may not have been that of a front desk clerk, but
that didn't stop me judging them for not working to reduce
the long line.
- When
another PO clerk did arrive, she took forever to log in
at her booth and start serving customers. "What does it
take to put her stamps and money in the drawer and punch
in her password into the computer?" I fumed to myself.
- A
clerk came free, but the next person in line was not watching.
The line was slowed up because they had to be waved at,
called out to, and signaled to proceed to the next open
counter. Again I fumed inside: "Why can't people be watching?
Don't they know the line is long and how can you be so
out of it to not be ready to immediately proceed as soon
as a clerk opens up?"
- Another
clerk came free. This time, the next in line noticed,
but sauntered ever so slowly to the booth to be served.
I wasted energy analyzing and judging them: "Is this some
kind of passive aggressive act - that they would walk
so slowly when they know everyone wants the line to move
along?"
- With
two people served in quick succession, the line should
now be moving along nicely. But could you believe it?
The next two in line were talking and socializing, and
didn't immediately take up the slack and advance. Another
chance to fume inside: "Please watch will you two - can't
you see we want the line to feel like it's moving along.
Take up the slack and quit talking so much!"
- Now
I finally get my turn. I buy my stamps. Then the postal
worker starts reciting their litany of services: Do I
want insure the letter? How about Priority Mail rather
than regular? Return Receipt Request by any chance? How
about other stamps I might need? This was getting worse
than a telemarketer interrupting my dinner. "Just give
me the stamps and let me get out of here." I smiled all
through this - which only added to my stress, as it didn't
match what I was thinking or feeling inside. And faking
it this time did not make it!
Before
you judge me too much, look inside your memory banks and
see if you can identify - if not in the Post Office, check
how you drive on the road; or how you are in the checkout
line of the supermarket; or how you treated you loved ones
recently. If you cannot relate in any way, congratulations!
...Celebrate whatever self-care methods you are employing
to continue staying healthy and available to those you serve.
You may be where I want to be.
STUMP
the SHRINK...
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From
a real email
"Dr.
Mee-Lee:
I am reviewing ASAM and my notes and your handouts from
a training you did last summer. I am unable to come up with
a good answer for the staff I'm working with and thought
maybe you could help. The question has to do with methadone
clients. In reviewing the ASAM manual, I did not find what
the level of care placement would be for a methadone client
who continues to smoke marijuana or drink alcohol, but otherwise
is functioning fairly well on the methadone. The ASAM seems
to point only to an outpatient level of care unless there
are health or emotional issues that warrant an inpatient
setting. I guess the bottom line question is, would it be
appropriate to rate Dimension 5 as "low" severity when the
client is actively using, but functioning well? This has
caused much debate among the staff and that is why I thought
to ask "the expert"! Any input would be very much appreciated!
Thanks Dr. Mee- Lee."
M.H., Project Coordinator.
"Dear
M.H.:
Interesting question. If the client continues to drink and
smoke marijuana and has no intention to stop, then by definition
there is a high potential to continue to use (Dim 5). You
could make an argument for not rating Dimension 5 as high
severity if there is no imminent danger with that continued
use. But just because the client is functioning pretty well,
I don't think I could argue for low severity on Dimension
5 as there is almost certainly continued use, especially
if he is not trying to stop using.
You could say that he is medium severity, if there is no
imminent danger, though I would be inclined to rate it as
high severity due to the high potential for continued use.
In treatment however, the main dimensional issue is Dimension
4 to work on seeing if he is interested in even considering
stopping the alcohol and/or marijuana. So even though I
rated Dimension 5 high severity, I would focus on Dimension
4 and watch closely that his continued use in Dimension
5 was not causing any more immediate negative results that
could beome dangerous. Hope this helps."
Until
next time......
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Well that's it for now. I hope you find these helpful. Feel
free to e-mail any comments, successes or questions. I'll
address them here as appropriate.
Please provide your name, job title, and agency affiliation,
but indicate if you want your identity to be anonymous e.g.,
initials only or first name etc.
If you haven't visited the website lately, it has been significantly
revamped. If you run across any hitches or have suggestions,
let us know. I can't guarantee we'll fix or institute them
overnight, but your comments are important and we will address
them.
Thanks
for all you do to help others; and to help me help others
too.
David.
Contact Information
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email: info@dmlmd.com
voice: 530-753-4300
web: http://www.dmlmd.com
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