~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"TIPS and TOPICS" from David
Mee-Lee, M.D.
Volume 1, No. 9
January
2004
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In this issue
-- SAVVY........
-- SKILLS........
-- SOUL.........
-- STUMP the SHRINK...
-- SUCCESS STORIES..........
-- Until next time........
WELCOME!
It
is already moving towards February. I know it
is clichéd to say, but I can't believe how fast
the year is racing by. I hope you are as busy
(in the productive sense) as I am. But I also
hope you have more balance in your life than
I have at present. I have already broken my
New Year's resolution for more balance. By declaring
this here I am putting myself on notice to check
the balance-meter more often and more effectively.
SAVVY........
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A
colleague once called me an "intellectual scavenger"
- meaning that I pick up bits and pieces from
others' presentations and writings to use in
my own training. I think this was meant in a
positive sense and I believe she was right.
In this Savvy Tip, I want to share some language
or phrases we use that express attitudes (unintentionally
perhaps) which are less than desirable. I will
reference the originator where I can.
Tips:
- Check
whether you want to convey the meaning these
words represent.
These may seem too subtle and hair-splitting
for your taste, but try these on for size
and see what you think.
(a) Treatment compliance versus treatment
adherence
In the literature, significant other parts
of healthcare have been using "adherence"
long before the mental health and addiction
treatment field had their consciousness raised
to the implications of using "compliance"
versus "adherence" terminology. In this age
of empowerment and collaborative service planning,
it is not for the expert counselor and professional
to develop a plan with which the client must
comply. It isn't for the physician to prescribe
the medication with which the patient must
demonstrate medication compliance. Webster's
Dictionary defines "comply" as follows: to
act in accordance with another's wishes, or
with rules and regulations. It defines "adhere":
to cling, cleave (to be steadfast, hold fast),
stick fast.
(b) Drug of choice
I heard Carlton K. Erikson, Ph. D. of the
University of Texas in Austin challenge our
innocent use of asking people what is their
drug of choice- not everybody with an addiction
problem is drawn to the same drug or drug
class. This comes close to hair-splitting
for me, but it made me think. Carlton challenged
that when a person, however, has crossed the
line into addiction and developed an addictive
relationship to a drug, they are not "at choice"
with the drug anymore. It isn't their drug
of choice, it is their drug of necessity.
And he added, for us to think and talk about
it as if it is a drug of choice perpetuates
that it is willful misconduct that they could
choose to do differently.
(c) Clean/ dirty urines versus negative/positive
urines
A participant in one of my workshops some
years back was either courageous, concerned
enough or both, to let me know that she did
not appreciate my use of "dirty urines". Even
though we have positive associations to being
"clean and sober", she was concerned that
using "dirty" instead of "negative" urine
drug screen results only added to the stigma
of drug users as being dirty. I think there
is some merit to that. I now usually stick
with positive and negative results rather
than dirty and clean urines.
(d) Client, patient, consumer or customer
I once heard an addiction medicine physician
deeply committed to serving the sick and suffering
person with alcoholism and drug addiction
lament the increasing reference to consumers
and customers. To him, the field was forgetting
the hard won fight to have medicine, society,
health insurance, payers and disability policies
recognize alcoholism and addiction as a disease
and chronic illness. These are patients who
are ill and need healthcare; not consumers
or supermarket or hardware store customers
who need butter or light bulbs. It was painful
for him to see the shift that consumer advocates
and empowerment movements have been promoting.
We can get so consumed with being politically
correct that we forget to be human and real.
It's a bit like a doctor who is so worried
about being sued for malpractice that he or
she can't be warm, spontaneous and real with
a patient. However, words can reveal and shape
attitudes that are almost subliminal and insidious.
I raise these so you can choose whether you
wish to change your use of these terms or
not.
SKILLS........
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I
don't know how many of your referrals are mandated
to attend treatment by the courts, child protective
services or an employer, but some programs tell
me it is close to 80% for them. In the client's
mind, they are there to comply and jump through
whatever hoops you construct so they get their
treatment completion letter. Here are a couple
of Tips to encourage the client's doing treatment,
not doing time.
Tips:
- Thank
the client for choosing to come to treatment
to seek your help.
The client may very well look at you cross-eyed
and say: "I'm here because I have to. They
made me come. I didn't choose to come here."
Genuinely and politely you can answer: "I
didn't see anyone force you in the door to
sit down and talk to me as you are doing and
which I appreciate your doing. You must have
come here because you want my help to get
something you want very much; or to figure
something out that is very important to you."
"No, they made me come" he or she may say.
"Then what would happen if you had said -
I'm not going? What would have happened to
you?"
"Well they would put me in jail or keep me
longer", or "I'd lose my job or my children".
"Would that be bad for you? So is that what
you want me to help you with? Stay out of
jail, keep your job, or get your children
back?"
Now we have a customer who wants something
from treatment and wants your help to get
them something important to them.
- Resist
the impulse to immediately set out the rules
and regulations with which they must comply.
Remember we are engaging them to do treatment,
not do time. We are hoping they will adhere
and stick with treatment; not jump through
the hoops of our wishes and comply with our
rules and regulations.
Unfortunately clinicians don't usually get
a lot of help from mandated referral sources
to develop an assessment-based, individualized
service plan that engages people into accountable
plans geared to match the client's stage of
change. The pressure is on for compliance,
not independent assessment and thinking. Instead
of engaging people into participatory treatment
that holds the promise for lasting change,
there exists a lot of push for quick program
compliance.
While you may not be able to change the system
overnight, you can work on joining with referral
sources to emphasize these:
>>Common purpose and mission-
That as clinicians we join the referral agencies
in our commitment to public safety, security
and safety for children, etc. We all share
similar outcome goals.
>> Common language of assessment
of Stages ofChange
Can we both work on lasting change for our
clients by understanding and using Stages
of Change assessment and treatment?
>>Consensus philosophy of addressing
readiness to change
Meeting clients where they are at, and
using solution-focused, motivational enhancement
strategies is not some softer, wimpy way.
Rather it upholds accountability and treatment
adherence as the path to lasting change and
reduced recidivism and relapse.
>> Communication and conflict resolution
As we chart a different path together, can
we keep discussion and innovation alive? Can
we be committed to common goals, keeping our
collective eyes on the prize?
SOUL.........
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Between
now and Election Day on November 2, 2004, it
will be hard to not be consumed with the clash
of contentious opinions from candidates jostling
for supremacy. I know I would make a lousy politician.
I am not well suited to the world of either-or;
all right and all wrong; you against me and
me against you. I remember a mini- sermon in
my high school chapel days when the chaplain
tweaked our minds about the paradoxes of proverbs
and what is the truth.
-
Is it: Fools rush in where angels fear to
tread? Or, He who hesitates is lost?
- Is
it: Too many cooks spoil the broth? Or, Many
hands make light work?
- Is
it: Opportunity knocks but once and carpe
diem - seize the day? Or, Patience is a virtue,
possess it if you can?
His message was that it is not "either-or",
but "both-and."
A few years ago I chaired a small workgroup
composed of an African-American woman, a Caucasian
man, a Caucasian woman and myself, an Australian-born,
Chinese man. We were supposed to be working
together for the good of people with co-occurring
disorders. What a rich opportunity we had to
draw on such diverse experience for a common,
noble goal. It was a sad and troubling experience
for me. I struggled to understand the anger
and mistrust that whirled around issues of male
dominance in society; race relations; empathy
for sexual and physical abuse and trauma; and
cultural competency and more. I think I did
poorly in harnessing the rich experience and
jelling that into superior work for the purpose
we had gathered. And this was with people of
goodwill gathered for a purpose we all believed
in.
I
know it is probably naively idealistic to think
we could ever be a "both-and" society instead
of an "either-or" one. It is tempting to only
see my resolve and his stubbornness; my determination
and her block-headedness; my compassion and
her wimpiness; my assertiveness and leadership
and his aggressiveness and control problem.
But in this season of adversarial politics,
might it just be possible that you and I at
least, might try to resist the "us against them"
mentality?
STUMP
the SHRINK...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Question:
"Insurance companies are abusing the ASAM
Criteria. Without seeing the patient or knowing
anything about the case, gatekeepers employed
by some managed care companies are saying: "Patient
does not meet ASAM Criteria." How do we overcome
that? The abuse has become the Criteria.
Allen
McQuarrie
PRO-ACT Chair
Pennsylvania Recovery Organization
Achieving Community Together
Response:
It
is frustrating when managed care companies simply
declare, "Patient does not meet ASAM Criteria".
I suggest you ask them in which of the ASAM
Criteria assessment dimensions do they disagree
with your assessed severity? Also, what services
for the problems in the most severe ASAM assessment
dimensions do they specifically disagree with?
Presumably
you have told them which of the assessed ASAM
Criteria dimensions have problems that need
treatment services, the intensity of which can
only safely be delivered in the level of care
for which you sought authorization. Ask them
to tell you what they would do differently for
the problems in the dimensions that need treatment.
If they cannot explain where they disagree with
the assessed severity in your evaluation, then
you should appeal their ruling so that you indicate
where there is disagreement, possibly overturning
the original denial of authorization.
Hope
this helps, but let me know if not.
David
SUCCESS
STORIES..........
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
At
a recent workshop, I suggested that we relieve
some of the burden of our paperwork by involving
clients more in their own treatment plan and
documentation - that we get them to do
more of the paperwork since it is, after all,
their treatment plan and their
life. Some participants went right to work on
this. Here is what one clinician reports about
getting her clients to write a weekly progress
note, and then to share it with the group for
feedback and suggestions.
Success
Story
Dr.
Mee-Lee:
The progress notes have helped improve the group
in many ways. The clients I work with are dual
diagnosed individuals whose ages range from
late twenties through late thirties. They are
court ordered by the criminal justice system
and have experienced several years of substance
abuse and criminal behavior. The average IQ
is above average but their social skills are
at teen-age level. The clients are capable of
success, but have been turned down at every
turn because of their lack of social skills,
low self-esteem, as well as mental illness and
ill-mannered behavior.
After
hearing about your progress note exercise, I
started to do it every Monday. I would have
the clients write down their past week's perceived
progress, read it out loud and the other clients
add to the improvements or discount the actual
progress. We added if there were any indications
of danger symptoms of indicated relapse or negative
resurfacing behaviors. The benefits I have seen
from this weekly event is that the clients have
become more aware of the positive improvements
they are showing, reinforcing these improvements,
and showing them how these small improvements
keep adding up to acceptable social behaviors
as well as improved life skills. Examples of
improvements and progress are incidents that
show their abilities to drop their pride and
ask for help, keeping appointments, clearing
up past warrants and financial issues, setting
boundaries with significant others and families,
medication compliance, improved social behaviors
in group, and taking responsibility for their
actions.
The
results have been increased trust in group,
and a willingness to ask for help as well as
seek help. The group has bonded very closely,
and they are also using each other as a sober
support system outside of the group. They are
acting to help the clients that need extra help
due to their lack of emotional stability because
their medication has not yet become fully effective
or have a hard time advocating for themselves.
They also watch each other more closely so that
they can offer something positive to each other
each week as well as accountability for themselves.
This
is a real bonus because the clients are actually
improving their actions because they know that
the other group members hold them and each other
accountable for continuing their improvements
and to follow through with the feedback that
they all offer each other when resolving issues
or problems. They are starting to learn how
to advocate for themselves and understand that
by discussing their positive progress to their
probation officers and judges, that they are
getting back more respect and a different attitude,
which is significantly improving their communication
skills.
The
group members have bonded more by relaying positive
compliments to each other and reinforcing the
person's positive behavior every week. It also
makes the group more comfortable about confrontation
and more willing to accept feedback that will
help change their behaviors. The increased self-esteem
gives them more confidence to share more and
work on the real issues they need to look at
in a more positive atmosphere. The group has
bonded so well that the quieter individuals
will open up more and the group members also
are more inclined to follow through with feedback
because they know they will be accountable to
the group the following week.
Thank
you for this suggestion. It is a wonderful tool
for group process.
Deborah
Harkness
Dual Diagnosis Substance Abuse Counselor
Fresno New Connections
Fresno, CA
Until next time........
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I
hope 2004 is a successful year for you. I look
forward to your interesting 'Stump the Shrink'
questions and 'Success Stories.'
David.
Contact Information
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
email: info@dmlmd.com
voice: 530-753-4300
web: http://www.dmlmd.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|