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"TIPS and TOPICS" from David Mee-Lee, M.D.


Vol 1, No.8

December 2003

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In this issue
-- SAVVY........
-- SKILLS........
-- SOUL.........
-- SUCCESS STORIES.....
-- SHAMELESS SELLING.....

-- Until next time......


WELCOME!

Holiday greetings everyone! Thank you for reading this December edition of TIPS and TOPICS. I enjoy sharing some thoughts with you each month. I am glad that many of you find some tidbit to help you think about the work we do for the people we serve.

SAVVY........
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This month, I consulted on two patients who had been admitted to acute psychiatric inpatient units because of suicidal and homicidal ideation. One was a 26 year old, single, employed man who had violent thoughts and impulses towards his supervisor, but was more acute only when under the influence of crack cocaine. The other was a 37 year old, single mother of three and grandmother to a 3 year old girl whom she loved; but she had trouble caring for because of her heavy IV heroin dependence. I was struck again how our clients and families challenge us to look at how we assess their needs and develop services. In fact I was startled that what seemed like basic (not even best) practices were not utilized by the teams involved. We still struggle to bring together mental health and addiction treatment systems to serve their dual diagnosis needs.

These two cases highlight some important tips.

Tips:

 

 

 

SKILLS........
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Here are a few tips prompted by these two clinically rich situations.

Tips:

 

 

 

SOUL.........
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At this holiday season time, we read numerous articles and advice columns on dealing with stress, coping with ambivalent feelings about family gatherings, viewing the change of seasons as opportunity for renewal and New Year's resolutions. So I also won't talk here about how yours or your client's aroused feelings of loss, abandonment and disappointment might be stirred by those cheery TV commercials of the happy family opening gifts around the brightly-lit tree.

I won't talk here about how easy or hard it is to be generous and give to others if you or your clients feel deprived of home, warmth, caring and love. I won't dwell on whether you or your clients feel pressured to cope with or make changes in behavior, location, career, relationships, finances, and lifestyle. Just because the seasons or the calendar changed, or the budget deficit ballooned, or your company or personal relationship folded doesn't mean you or your clients are/were ready to embrace change.

And I certainly won't talk here about pressures to eat or overeat, spend or overspend. Tightening your physical or fiscal belt is not easy this time of year.

So what will I talk about? I don't know who said something like this first (if it was you, then thank-you): "Yesterday has past; tomorrow is not here yet; but today is a present." Join me in opening the gift of today - it really is all you can be sure you have. I know it is hard sometimes to open the gift of today and be present. I too have lived a life of worries - and a couple of them have even come true!!

SUCCESS STORIES.....
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I recently trained on the ASAM Patient Placement Criteria at the Sacred Heart Rehabilitation Center in Memphis, Michigan. Two team members who had attended previous trainings brightened my day with unsolicited success stories. So I asked them to let me share some of their successes with you:


Success #1

"The way I work with clients has changed dramatically since I attended your conference on the ASAM criteria. For instance, I now meet the client where he or she is, rather than try to force my beliefs on them. This attitude is a lot less stressful for me and I am not working harder than the client. Their treatment plan is just that- "THEIR TREATMENT PLAN"! It is their problems and goals, in their words, and I ask them what they would be willing to do to achieve their goals. I make suggestions, but the client must agree to be willing to do the work. Moreover, the treatment plan is now a living document which clients bring to group therapy and share their objectives with the group to receive feedback and encouragement from their peers. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and expertise with me".

Deborah Kokoszka, MSW, CSW
Therapist, Sacred Heart


Success #2

"Here are some thoughts about how helpful your class was for me:
1. Helped me to better my understanding of the client's problems that act as a catalyst to bring them to chemical dependency treatment. By asking follow-up questions to their initial statements, they are better able to state what their immediate needs are for brief treatment, at the time of the initial assessment.
2. The area of the ASAM Dimensions 1 - 6 has expanded to include more details for the primary therapist to work with as they meet the client for the first time.
3. I am now able to use various approaches - psychoanalytic; reality therapy - to approach the client to facilitate a more detailed initial assessment.
4. Your examples of meeting the clients where they are at in their thought process helped to show me a new style - a way to assist the client to experience how their thought process contributes to some of their problems, and encourage the client to think in terms of what options are available for them to remedy some problems (choosing options for treatment and/or recovery for themselves).
5. My Diagnostic Summary has changed in writing style to be more brief; more to the point and provides a clearer sense of direction for the therapist as an indicator of what the client's needs are at the point of entry when I first see them during the intake process and initial assessment."

Gabrielle Hill, RN, BS, CAC
Intake Assessment, Sacred Heart



Success #3

Speaking of the ASAM Patient Placement Criteria, this is a different kind of success story about the influence of the ASAM PPC.

Appropriations Bill Provides $100 Million for Treatment Vouchers
12/5/2003
By Bob Curley

"A House- Senate conference committee has approved a budget plan that gives impressive increases to federal addiction treatment and prevention programs, including $100 million for President Bush's proposed treatment-voucher program.

The Access to Recovery treatment-voucher plan is one of the biggest non-military new programs in the FY2004 budget. While the addiction field embraced President Bush's call for a $600-million investment in treatment, many have been wary about the types of programs that would be funded, particularly given the administration's affection for faith-based interventions. But lawmakers stressed that voucher money should only go to programs with a proven record of effectiveness.

"The conferees expect that the new voucher program will support evidence-based practice and will provide medically appropriate treatment for individuals needing care," the House-Senate conference report said. "To this end, the conferees expect that states and providers receiving funds under this program will use assessment and placement criteria developed by national experts, such as the American Society of Addiction Medicine." "

The rest of this article is online at: http://www.jointogether.org/y/0,2521,567943,00.html

Stay tuned for more on some of the successful research on ASAM Criteria Validity Studies published in the literature.

SHAMELESS SELLING.....
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Last month I presented a workshop and took along ten copies of a book I announced in the October 2003 edition. "Maintain Balance in an Unsteady World" contains a chapter I wrote, along with 11 easy-reading, practically oriented chapters by other recognized national speakers. My chapter title is: "What Do You Want? - The Not-So-Simple- Question". Lightheartedly, I did my best car salesman impression and offered a deal to the attendees to buy their holiday gifts right on the spot. I kicked myself for not taking a box of books, because all ten sold out in a flash. I even signed some for a personal touch!

So I thought - why not offer you the same opportunity? Who knows, you might get some of your holiday shopping done in one swift click of your mouse. Here's how to find out more about the book and here's the deal. You have to act fast, and now really fast - especially if you want a personal touch to have me sign it for you or for whatever name you provide me. I will only be able to sign your book until December 16, as I'm off on a plane to Honolulu. You may still place orders, but only through Thursday, Dec 18, so they can arrive for Christmas giving. (Sorry, I would have given you more time, but I got really behind in getting this issue out to you.)

Shop here for your holiday gifts.


Until next time......
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Stay warm, safe and serene. Talk to you next year.

David.




Contact Information
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email: info@dmlmd.com
voice: 530-753-4300
web: http://www.dmlmd.com

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