May
2004
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In this issue
-- SAVVY........
-- SKILLS........
-- SOUL.........
-- STUMP THE SHRINK....
-- Until next time......
WELCOME!
Welcome to the May edition of TIPS and TOPICS. Unlike big magazines like TIME where you receive the week's edition before the date on the cover, this humble effort usually comes late in the month. Finding the "spare time" to get this to you often gets lost in other deadlines. But here it is.
SAVVY........
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Heavy
on my mind this month is treatment planning
and documentation.
Why? Because I'm working with a major system
to help the team promote person-centered,
participatory, collaborative, strength-based
treatment planning and services. The trick
is how to "walk the talk" on these important
goals and reflect this in the documentation.
Another trick is how to avoid getting caught
up in constructing the perfect forms and wordsmithing
so we miss the whole point of our work -i.e.
tuning into people and helping them improve
their lives. Anyone facing a JCAHO or CARF
accreditation survey, or an audit by some
regulatory agency will identify with the dilemma
of pleasing the surveyor, getting the paperwork
right, while actually helping the people we
serve.
Tips:
Person-centered treatment planning is
not simply searching for some client quote
to demonstrate that they participated.
The problem statement documented in the
treatment plan, or the priorities listed,
must make sense to the client. They must
be concrete, specific, user- friendly
to help clients identify the obstacles
to reaching the goal of their Treatment
Contract.
For example:
If the Treatment Contract with
the client is to help him or her keep
their job, then a problem statement
like "Knowledge deficit about addiction"
or "Poor insight" does not have immediate
buy-in for the client.
Better documentation is:
"Wants to stop drinking but continue marijuana
use" or "Feels his job is threatened because
his boss mistreats him, not because of
his absenteeism".
This ties into a plan around discovering
whether continued marijuana use, or blaming
his boss, will increase his chance of
keeping his job or decrease it.
For
example:
If the Treatment Contract is to
help the patient get out of hospital as
soon as possible and return to independent
living, then problem statements
like "Psychiatric" or "Substance
Abuse" are too general.
Better documentation is:
"Wants to stay in bed all day" or "Punches
people when angry" or "Hallucinating and
delusional and cannot say what she wants
yet" or "Doesn't want to stop using ice
and weed" are better.
These problem statements or priorities
are the kinds of obstacles to the client's
reaching the goal of the treatment contract
- i.e. returning to the community and
living independently. Can the patient
see how demonstrating progress in these
areas will reassure the treatment team
he's ready to go out on his own? This
is the collaborative, participatory process
that "walks the talk."
SKILLS........
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Here are some clinical tips related to these points:
Tips:
The police may well have brought in the
client, but what the person states
is that he wants "to be left alone".
The treatment contract can genuinely
be based on this specific "want".
Client: "I want to be left alone."
Therapist: "I will help you to be
left alone."
Take the client at his/her word. You can
then discuss why people are not leaving
the client alone, and what he/she would
have to do differently to get people to
leave him alone.
|
CLIENT
|
CLINICAL ASSESSMENT
|
TREATMENT PLAN
|
|
|
WHAT?
|
What does client want? | What does client need? | What is the treatment contract? |
|
WHY?
|
Why now? What's the level of commitment? |
Why? What reasons are revealed by the assessment data? | Is it linked to what the client wants? |
|
HOW?
|
How will s/he get there? How quickly? | How will you get him/her to accept the plan? | Does the client buy into the link? |
|
WHERE?
|
Where will s/he do this? | Where is the appropriate setting for treatment? What is indicated by the placement criteria? | Referral to level of care |
|
WHEN?
|
When will this happen? How quickly? How badly does s/he want it? | When?
How soon? What are realistic expectations? What are milestones in the process? |
What
is the degree of urgency? What is the process? What are the expectations of the referral? |
(© David Mee- Lee, MD, 1996)
Q2: Why now and is the client really committed? Play devil's advocate. See if you can talk them out of it in case they are just saying what they think you want to hear. Ask: Have I dug deep enough?
Q3. How does the client plan to achieve his/her goal? Do they have their own tenacious treatment plan, which blinds them to your plan? You may have to start with their plan to see if it works.
Q4. Where are they willing to receive treatment? Do they have tenacious ideas about level of care and type of program?
Q5.
When are they willing to receive
treatment? Do they have tenacious ideas
about when to start and the length of
treatment?
SOUL.........
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Consider these quotes:
You
may think these are quotes on the importance
of a participatory relationship with your
clients, families, team members or community.
Actually these are quotes from the Chiefs
of American Honda Motors, Nissan North America,
Hyundai Motor America, and Toyota USA respectively.
(USA Today, May 24, 2004 Section B, page 6).
They were talking about the importance of
the relationship in working with, and improving
quality with, their manufacturing suppliers.
We live in a results-oriented world where accountability, audits, regulatory compliance and the big stick seem to rule the day. It is interesting to note that even in the cutthroat competitive auto industry, the consensus is that participatory, collaborative relationships are what bring results and quality.
In treatment planning, documentation, staff teams, family life and who knows -maybe even world affairs- it is participatory, collaborative relationships that are important and effective. As the song says in 1960's musical "Hair", it's "Easy to be Hard". But it's not so easy to harness the power of relationship.
STUMP
THE SHRINK....
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Question #1:
" I am struggling with the concept of methadone maintenance treatment coexisting with the 12 step recovery program wherein we promote total abstinence. In your opinion, is someone who is taking methadone in a clinic abstinent? And how can that person be accepted at AA or NA meetings? Having been sober for over 22 years and working in a drug rehab. center for over 6 years as a therapist, I am having a difficult time when people try to tell me methadone should be looked at the same way as a person taking an antidepressant."
Rehab. Counselor
Answer #1:
I know the issue of methadone maintenance is tricky for many 12 Step abstinence- based programs. Just as there are some people in an abstinence-based who are often just doing time and not working a sober, spiritual growth recovery program, so too are there some people on methadone maintenance who are just doing time on methadone. They may be scared to be off drugs; or are trying to cope with the chaos of being addicted to an illegal drug that requires them to do all kinds of illegal and antisocial things just to survive.
A person with alcohol dependence can be a regular citizen and buy their drug at the grocery store. Methadone can help stabilize a person and stop short the daily antisocial life that a person with an alcohol problem doesn't have to face since they are addicted to a legal drug.
My point is that someone on methadone in a 12 Step program may not be "abstinent" as they are indeed on a substance, but they could be "in recovery" as they are working to improve their life as regards drug use. We might want them to be perfectly abstinent and sober today, but if they are making progress in recovery, that is still recovery. Recovery is not perfect abstinence - it is an ongoing process that involves physical, mental, social and spiritual growth. I would say that a person on methadone maintenance can do the same growth in recovery that an alcoholic person does in AA or NA and therefore should be welcome in recovery groups like AA.
Of course, as I said, there can be people in 12 Step, abstinence programs who are not in recovery. There can also be people on methadone maintenance who are not in recovery. To me abstinence isn't the same as recovery and is not the only way to start recovery.
David
Question #2:
"What is the best approach in incorporating the Addiction Severity Index (ASI) with the Patient Placement Criteria?"
Substance Abuse Specialist II
Answer #2:
"The ASI gives you important assessment information that can help you assess the severity and functioning of the client in some of the ASAM six assessment dimensions. So counselors can use the information collected in the ASI to jumpstart the assessment information needed to understand the client's needs in the ASAM assessment dimensions.
However, the ASI will give perhaps only about 40% of what you will need to understand the client's multidimensional needs using the ASAM assessment dimensions. For example, if a client has used every day for the past 30 days, that will not tell you for sure if the person has Withdrawal Potential in Dimension 1 of the ASAM Criteria, because the person may have had just one beer a day for 30 days which would not necessarily require detoxification services.
Also, the ASI does not directly explore Readiness to Change (Dimension 4) or Relapse, Continued Use, Continued Problem Potential (Dimension 5). You can infer some of these issues from the ASI, but more assessment questions would be needed to fully assess all the ASAM assessment dimensions. The ASI was never designed to be a comprehensive assessment of all client needs. The ASAM assessment dimensions were developed to try to address all clinical needs of clients.
So, in summary, the ASI and ASAM dimensions can complement each other, but not replace each other for the purposes they were originally designed to achieve. The ASI, as I understand it, was designed to be an outcome tool to assess the success or not of programs to improve functioning in the ASI domains. The ASAM assessment dimensions were designed to assess and treat all relevant biopsychosocial areas of need in addiction (and now with the ASAM PPC-2R 2001 edition) mental health clients."
David
Until next time......
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Thanks for reading TIPS and TOPICS.Thanks for the feedback, comments and questions you send.
Until
June---
David
Contact Information
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email: info@dmlmd.com
voice: 530-753-4300
web: http://www.dmlmd.com
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