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"TIPS
and TOPICS" from David Mee-Lee, M.D.
Vol 2, No.5
September
2004
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In this issue
-- SAVVY........
-- SKILLS........
-- SOUL......
-- SUCCESS STORIES......
-- SHAMELESS SELLING......
-- Until next time......
WELCOME!
I
have just returned from a national conference
on behavioral health care, sponsored by the
Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations (JCAHO). The focus was on outcomes
research and the use of data. If you are a
clinician, just wait! Before you turn off,
and write this edition off to statistics and
dry research information, let me assure you
that I am interested in bridging the gap between
research and clinical practice. Give this
edition a chance!
Here are a few pearls which struck me.
SAVVY........
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Whether
you are on the frontlines of clinical care,
or an administrator of a program, county or
state, there are increasing demands on you
to implement Evidence- based Practices
(EBP). Whole states have declared they will
respond to Federal leadership to move the
behavioral healthcare field into Best Practices
and EBPs. As we do that, keep in mind some
of the other research data as well.
Tips:
-
Evidence-based Practices (EBPs) must be
implemented in collaboration with the client
and family.
This may seem obvious.
I will elaborate. Just because
you may be trained in Motivational Interviewing
for example, and may even be certified and
proficient in that, does not mean you will
automatically achieve good outcomes with
clients in engaging them in treatment and
moving through stages of change. Or just
because your program has embraced Assertive
Community Treatment (ACT) or Multi-systemic
therapy (MST), doesn't guarantee effective
care.
The President's New Freedom Commission on
Mental Health established on April 29, 2002,
adopted the definition of EBPs developed
by the Institute of Medicine in their 2001
report, "Crossing the Quality Chasm".
Definition of EBPs: "The integration
of best research evidence with clinical
expertise and patient values."
Note that EBPs involve:
>> " Best research evidence "
>> " Clinical expertise "
>> " Patient values."
It is the third component I am addressing
in the first tip. You may have the latest
scientific model and technique, and be the
best practitioner of that model. However,
if the client is not engaged and actively
collaborating in the care, your effectiveness
is likely to be minimal. Research on psychotherapy
and what really helps people change emphasizes
this point even more.
-
Most of what contibutes to positive treatment
outcomes comes from client and extratherapeutic
factors, not your program, not your
treatment model, not your techniques.
This is a bitter pill to swallow.
Over forty years of outcomes research on
psychotherapy keeps finding the same thing:
1. Treatment is better than no treatment;
2. No treatment model is superior to any
other;
3. The specific treatment model used contributes
very little to the final successful outcome
anyway.
And the outcome research in addiction treatment
seems to be heading the same direction.
I am processing these research findings
through my brain also. I can't fully get
my head around this yet.
But here are some numbers you should become
aware of:
>> Overall picture
Only 13% of the outcome is due to psychotherapy;
87% is due to client and extratherapeutic
factors. These factors are part of the client's
strengths, personality etc. Others have
to do with the client's environment such
as social support, fortuitous events which
occur between sessions at your program.
(Bruce E. Wampold: "The Great Psychotherapy
Debate - Models, Methods, and Findings"
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Publishers,
Mahwah, NJ 2001, pp 207-208)
>> The treatment effects picture
Of the 13% treatment effects (what clinicians
do with the client in treatment) the vast
majority of the outcome- 70%- involves
common factor effects such as empathy,
warmth, acceptance, encouragement etc. These
are common to a variety of therapies regardless
of theoretical orientation.
Specific effects of your program or theoretical
model accounts for (at most) 8% of the outcome
due to therapy. That is not much of the
total contribution to the client's outcome.
The bottom line is this:
Instead of getting people to passively comply
with your program, model or techniques,
we must set up services in such a way as
to harness clients' energies, abilities,
strengths and collaboration. The focus is
on the alliance, engagement, retention and
specific feedback on whether they are getting
help. Is there a good fit between what
we are doing, and what is working for them?
-
Focus on the quality of your alliance
with the client. Find the best fit between
the client's views and the treatment approach.
Jerome Frank, M.D. first published "Persuasion
and Healing" in 1961. He studied the unifying
principles on which all techniques were
based. In the introduction to the latest
edition published in 1991 (Frank and Frank),
this is what he said:
"My position is not that technique is irrelevant
to outcome. Rather, I maintain that, as
developed in the text, the success of all
techniques depends on the patient's sense
of alliance with an actual or symbolic healer.
This position implies that ideally therapists
should select for each patient the therapy
that accords, or can be brought to accord,
with the patient's personal characteristics
and view of the problem. Also implied is
that therapists should seek to learn as
many approaches as they find congenial and
convincing. Creating a good therapeutic
match may involve both educating the patient
about the therapist's conceptual scheme
and, if necessary, modifying the scheme
to take into account the concepts the patient
brings to therapy."
(p. xv).(Quoted in Wampold's book, page
217)
Clinicians and programs can adopt EBPs.
But if these are not used in the context
of the alliance and the "fit"
with the client, the outcomes research alerts
us that it is just one more model and technique
- the latest flavor of the month.
SKILLS........
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Here
are a couple of clinical skills tips to start
actualizing these research findings. See whether
these work for you.
Tips:
- When
you ask a client "How are things going?
or "How are you?", listen carefully, explore
and discuss their answer.
Often we view these questions as a fleeting
greeting, and from there quickly move onto
the real 'meat' of the session. But the
therapeutic alliance is critical.
Knowing that the vast majority of change
happens outside of the therapy relationship,
and is influenced by the client and environmental
factors, then this is no idle greeting.
If a person says: "Fine" or "I'm
doing OK", there is a wealth of information
to explore.
You could respond something like: "Really?
That's great. What has been "fine"
or "doing OK" since I last saw
you? And how did you do that?" Even
if they say "It was a bad week",
you can say: "I'm glad you came then.
Now we can explore how you coped with everything,
or where you struggled."
You are actually interested in what has
been working (or not) for the client in
their world of family, work, school, the
street, friends etc. And if they really
are fine and doing well, identify and reinforce
what has been working well. We want to assist
them in doing more of what is working.
On the other hand, if things have not gone
well, strategize about what could work better
today or in the coming week. There is power
in the question: "How did you do that?"
It reminds the client there probably was
something they did differently this
week which worked. How did they react
to their environment? How did they cope
with unexpected events or challenges?
-
Deliberately check with the client and/or
family whether the treatment we are doing
together "fits", whether it is
working for them.
As yet, you may not use a specific rating
scale like the Session Rating Scale (SRS)
or Outcome Rating Scale (ORS), developed
by Scott Miller, Ph.D. and colleagues at
the Institute for the Study of Therapeutic
Change (www.talkingcure.co m). Nevertheless, you
can still be sure to leave time in every
session to review whether the client felt
they were working on goals important to
them. Or whether they felt you were
listening to them, whether they felt connected
and engaged; or whether they felt they were
making progress.
You might say something like:
"I'm in charge of the treatment plan,
but you're in charge of me. So if there
is anything that doesn't make sense to you,
please say "That doesn't make sense to me."
I will explain how I think it can help achieve
what we've agreed to work on. But if it
still doesn't make sense and you don't want
to do it, please say so, and we won't put
it in the treatment plan. Whatever we decide
to do together has to be working for you
and if it is, then we'll keep doing it.
If it isn't going well, then we can change
what we are doing."
SOUL......
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A
summer vacation in Australia- especially snorkeling
off a pristine island in the Great Barrier
Reef, sounds like a wonderful opportunity.
And it certainly is! But August being winter
in the Southern Hemisphere, it's easy to catch
colds from the cool winter waters and from
coughing, feverish relatives. That's what
happened.
But this time the cold didn't go away quickly.
Sitting in a plane for 13 hours from Sydney
to San Francisco didn't help. And it didn't
just stay a cough; it became laryngitis -
not a good thing to develop when you train
for a living with a 2-day workshop coming
up. The point is for the first time in my
speaking career, I feared I might not be able
to speak. This had never happened before.
I had no idea how having no voice was so difficult.
Answering the phone was hopeless. I'm sure
people on the receiving end were baffled by
a croaky, inaudible, unintelligible squeak
of sounds. Calling out to my wife in the other
room was out of the question - she didn't
even know I was trying to summon her. Undertaking
2 full days of training was a daunting prospect.
I'm sure my plight is not as alarming as the
image of John Kerry's losing his voice, consequently
valuable campaigning time so close to the
election. But it was actually quite alarming
to me, another reminder of how easy it is
to take for granted what we have - physically,
mentally, socially and spiritually. You've
probably had your version of this. Perhaps
it was back pain that left you flat on your
back, or depression immobilizing your mind
and body, or a death or loss making your heart
ache. Laryngitis is trivial next to some of
what you may have endured and survived.
It sure did remind me however, to guard my
health and well-being carefully, not to take
anything or anyone for granted. I am better
than last week, and hope you are too.
SUCCESS
STORIES......
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#1
Recently, I had conducted a workshop on engaging
clients. We talked about starting where clients
are at, and using Motivational Interviewing
principles. One such principle is that of
developing discrepancy between what the client
wants, and what they actually do (or have
done.)
Soon after, a director and supervisor sent
me her brief success story. She illustrated
how she had avoided a struggle with her client,
how she had engaged him around a focus for
treatment that made sense to him.
"Thought of you yesterday when before me
was a 21 year old male with NO PROBLEMS WHATSOEVER,
except for his mother (totally). Our discrepancy
discussion uncovered a Driving Under the Influence
arrest and no high school diploma due to an
overabundance of partying and a probation
violation due to alcohol. It was all a big
misunderstanding, he said. So, I trotted out
the treatment plan idea that we could work
on a goal of proving us all wrong about him
and his alcohol use and his eyes just lit
up and said that I understood perfectly. I
know that it may not flow that way again but
it felt like a good moment. Thanks again."
Joan Bilinkoff, LICSW,
MPH Program Director,
People Incorporated,
St. Paul, Minnesota
So the goal was to work together to gather
the "so-called", "no-problem",
"squeaky-clean" data that would
prove everyone wrong about his alcohol use.
Undoubtedly there would be some interesting
discussion when hitting up against the discrepant
data of past arrests, partying, and failure
to complete high school.
#2 This is sort of a success story.
It was a nice follow up to the Soul section
of the last edition of TIPS and TOPICS. (If
you missed it, follow the link on the homepage
for previous editions. Go to www.DMLMD.com).
"I loved your "5 s" advice. In my son's
first year of college he also fell asleep
at the wheel while driving home to Connecticut
following an anti-war rally in NYC. Fortunately,
he too had at least made use of one's seatbelt
an introject. Too bad we can't add a sixth
"S": Skin, yours will be with you for life,
as will any tattoos you embellish it with."
Sam Segal
Connecticut
Actually, adding "Skin" would not only be
good to alert our kids to consider the permanence
of tattoos, but also to remember the power
of the sun. Before lying out for hours acquiring
a tan, "S" for Skin or "S" for Sun would remind
them of the hazards of skin cancer.
SHAMELESS
SELLING......
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A
year ago, I excitedly received my allotment
of a new book "Maintain Balance in an Unsteady
World." My chapter is called "What Do You
Want? - The Not-So-Simple-Question". With
nearly all sold, we checked with our editor
and he is shipping another smaller supply
of books. So on the anniversary of this book,
we are having a sale! You might get some early
holiday shopping done in one swift click of
your mouse.
Have
you ever contemplated changing your job, where
you live, or who you live with? How do you
decide if you're making the right decision?
If you'd like guidance with these tough, life-changing
questions, read the "What Do You Want?"
chapter. It is not such a simple question-
nor answer!
Sale
Price with Free Shipping till Oct 15. Request
if you want it personalized, and to whom.
Click
here to buy your sale book!
Until next time......
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Well
that's it for now. I hope you found something
in this edition to get you thinking about
how we can serve people better.
Talk
to you next month.
David
Contact Information
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email: info@dmlmd.com
voice: 530-753-4300
web: http://www.dmlmd.com
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