February
2004
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In this issue
--
SAVVY........
-- SKILLS........
-- SOUL.........
-- STUMP the SHRINK...
-- SUGGESTIONS.........
-- SHARING SOLUTIONS.......
-- Until next time........
WELCOME!
On February 11, 2004 there was a press release from Join Together- a project of the Boston University School of Public Health- that had convened a national policy panel in the summer of 2002. Their task was to address the quality of treatment for substance use disorders. The panel's primary recommendation called for a fundamental change in the payment system for treating drug and alcohol disorders - that payment should be based on the results achieved; that purchasers of treatment services should reward results.
SAVVY........
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You
can read the full report published
December 2003 at www.jointogether.org/sa/files/pdf/quality.pdf
In each of the following Tips,
I will outline some of the panel's
key points of perspective and
provide some commentary.
Tips:
SKILLS........
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So.....
if this is the time to start
moving towards a results- oriented
approach, what does that
mean in the real world of daily
clinical practice? We are
still a long way from the imaginings
at the conclusion of a paper
written by Jerry Shulman and
myself six years ago:
" Imagine the day when
a patient, referred by the courts
for a first drinking and driving
violation, completes the assessment
process, is found to be Alcohol
Dependent and awaits the treatment
options discussion. He is presented
with various treatment options
and their costs and information
about the various probabilities
of success that he needs to
make an informed decision. He
could refuse all treatment,
take the legal consequences,
spend no money on treatment,
but have a 95% chance of further
alcohol-related consequences;
a 50% probability of arrest
for an alcohol-related offense;
and a 20% probability of an
alcohol-related accident in
one year. For a combination
of 12-Step groups and outpatient
groups focused on education
about addiction for 10 weeks,
he could spend $1,000 with the
chances of alcohol-related problems
reduced to 60%. Or, for $2,900,
he could have four weeks of
intensive outpatient treatment;
attend 12-Step groups and receive
twenty continuing care sessions;
weekly access to a significant
others therapy group with only
a 20% chance of further problems
and a 5% probability of arrest.
Imagine the day when an employer decides to shift the remedial costs of all employees testing positive in random drug screens; or facing mandatory supervisory referral for declining job performance due to addiction; or involved in a drug-related, post accident incident report to the training and development budget away from the health benefits cost center. Now the employee can access any of the three company-approved providers, all of whom have met standards by presenting efficacy and performance data that demonstrate minimum results of 60% improvement in job productivity; 80% drop in absenteeism; virtual elimination of positive random drug screens; and 50% reduction in accident rates on the job over two years of monitoring. The employer will match employee expenditures at these providers on a 70%(employer) - 30%(employee) basis as long as all employee performance data is improving at a satisfactory rate as monitored by the supervised employee development plan. Imagine the day when the health plan administrator can review the outcomes from a variety of different treatment providers and determine their relative merits by cost-per-case; percentage decrease in health care utilization; and the level of patient satisfaction and well-being. Developing the provider network now becomes a data-driven survey of cost-effectiveness and return on investment data; and bonuses are awarded based on quality and performance data, not just cost reductions."
Excerpted
from:
(Mee-Lee, David, Shulman Gerald
D (1998): "Towards Clinically
Effective, Cost Efficient, Outcomes-Driven
Treatment". NCADD Amethyst.
Vol.6, No.3, pp.1-2.)
Tips:
SOUL.........
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I just returned from a conference on Pain Management and End of Life care. It wouldn't have been my first choice, but California requires all physicians to complete 12 hours of continuing education on these topics to keep their medical license. It's mandated education, just like our clients. The conference provoked much thought. Here is but one piece rich in its content and implications:
Dale Borglum, Ph.D., Executive Director of the Living/Dying Project in Fairfax, California (www.livingdying.org) suggested there are three reactions we can have when confronted with pain:
(1) Separation - we don't want to see or be that; and so deal with pain in a detached clinical and intellectual manner. It keeps us shielded from experiencing the pain and keeps us separated from the person.
(2) Identification - realization and startled alarm that there I am. While we have a better chance to understand and join with the client, this reaction can actually keep us more focused on ourselves and what worked for us - this too can separate us from this person and their pain and path to recovery. (This can be an occupational hazard for recovered addiction counselors).
(3) Compassion - joining and feeling with the person, allowing the painful to be bearable. Compassion isn't about changing the other person; it is about changing us and allowing us to meet that person as an equal. How to stay present with the other person - not pity them, judge them, or condescendingly educate them about their deficits.
In our field, we are constantly confronted with pain and suffering. With big caseloads, time pressures, and paperwork, compassion is a fine idea and ideal. But, excuse me, I have to get my charting done. Practicing compassion is like practicing progressive relaxation exercises - it doesn't come quickly or naturally. But it is worth it in the end - for you and for those we serve.
STUMP the SHRINK...
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Question:
Dear Dr. Mee-Lee:
I work as an Assessment Specialist for a chemical dependency treatment agency that has both outpatient and residential levels of care.
I have recently encountered conflicts regarding the appropriateness of documenting highly sensitive information in patients' charts and/or ASAM PPC Assessment Summaries. Specifically, whether it is considered best practice to include HIV or HCV diagnoses in Dimension 2, or admissions of serious crimes (such as those without statute of limitations) in Dimension 3. Such disclosures have serious ramifications for patients' privacy and legal status, and nondisclosure has potential consequences regarding the proper care of the patient.
I understand that these questions may not be definitively answered, but I appreciate your input or, alternatively, direction to good sources for information on these ethical/legal questions. At present I am only able to access the somewhat uninformed opinions of colleagues and would like a better source.
Thank
you for your assistance.
MJ.
Response:
Dear MJ:
It is a good question and one
that is sticky. I am not a legal
or HIPAA expert, but knowing
how medical records can be used
or misused, I always have mixed
feelings about how specific
to be. On the one hand, an overall
principle is to have the medical
record be as meaningful a living
document that actually guides
the treatment and is a communication
tool for the client, treatment
team and referral sources and
ongoing continuum of care.
On the other hand, we live in a litigious and adversarial environment where people's privacy can easily be violated. I don't agree with some people who make the whole record so vague that everyone's record sounds the same as another's. Nor would I recommend what some people do, which is to keep two separate records - we have enough paperwork to do without keeping "two sets of books".
My recommendation is to be as specific as possible without jeopardizing a person's privacy unnecessarily. So if there is a sensitive medical or behavioral issue, you could word it so that it is clear to the patient and team what the issue is without having all the specific details documented.
For
example:
1. For a Dimension 3 (Emotional,
Behavioral or Cognitive Conditions
and Complications) issue, it
could be documented as "Upsetting
regrets and feelings about past
behavior in his 20's" (some
illegal act committed) Or "Flashbacks
and fears about traumatic relationship
problem" (an extramarital affair;
or an abusive relationship)
2. For Dimension 2, (Biomedical Conditions and Complications) it could be "Worried about health problems and his energy level" (AIDS or HIV, HCV positive). Or "Stressed about ongoing well being and quality of his physical health" (a chronic illness not named).
I hope this helps, but let me know if not. You could also check with your local medical association to get their advice about legalities and also your malpractice carrier as they often have good risk management advice.
SUGGESTIONS.........
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Suggestions for Stump the Shrink:
Dear
ezine readers:
Do you have a better answer
than what I gave to MJ? What
thoughts, experiences, advice
can you offer? I invite you
to contribute any further tips
you have for MJ's situation.
In
that same vein, below is a another
comment and request from a reader.
Again if you have ideas to share
for this LCSW's obvious frustration,
please send them to me. Do you
share her experience too? How
do you cope?
"Thank you Dr. Mee-Lee
for your newsletter. I am a
dually licensed (MH/SA) therapist
who works for a rural community
mental health center. I just
came back from a family services
team meeting for a juvenile
who suffers from chemical dependency
and I'm so frustrated I want
to scream, cry, etc. She is
a decent kid, no history of
conduct disorder or other behavior
problems prior to the onset
of substance abuse. I was the
lone voice recommending treatment.
I love working with individuals
with CD disorders because treated
appropriately there is so much
hope and improvement. However,
the criminalization of addiction,
the lack of compassion, understanding
and punitive approaches is getting
to me. Thank you for your humanistic
understanding of the disorder
and the men, women and kids
who suffer from it. Any suggestions
on increasing my coping skills
with my frustration?"
LSCW
Email me your ideas at info@dmlmd.com. I will include your various responses in upcoming editions.
SHARING SOLUTIONS.......
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Over the years, I have continued to get requests to review and comment on assessment forms, tools that programs have developed to implement the ASAM Criteria, or treatment planning forms.
If
you are proud of a form or tool
you have created and would like
to share the wisdom in it...........
If you are developing
a form or tool and want input/feedback........
If you need comment/critique
on an intake form? a telephone
response form? outcome results
form? a tracking form?.........
Then................
** Send me your forms, tools,and
documents.
What I will do
.I will comment and give constructive
critical review on any forms
or tools you send me.
.In exchange for my review,
I ask your permission to publish
and sell the best ones I receive-
perhaps twice a year.
What you will receive
.Feedback and suggestions to
improve your tool or form.
.Ongoing feedback by email for
3 months.
.Complimentary copies of the
next two editions of forms and
tools published.
.You ( your program) will receive
full recognition and source
acknowledgement with your contact
information in the publication.
If this appeals to you, I would welcome hearing from you now. Please email me at info@dmlmd.com
Until next time........
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Thanks
again to all of you who send
comments and questions. Email
your suggestions, your solutions,
your wisdom, your forms, your
tools.................
See
you in March.
David
Contact Information
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
email: info@dmlmd.com
voice: 530-753-4300
web: http://www.dmlmd.com
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