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TIPS
& TOPICS from David Mee-Lee, M.D.
Volume
2, No. 7
November
2004
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In
this issue
-- SAVVY
-- SKILLS
-- SOUL
-- Until Next Time
Welcome readers!
Since this is Thanksgiving time (at
least for USA readers), I give thanks
to you for reading TIPS and TOPICS, and
to the many of you who have told me how
much you appreciate receiving it. It is
gratifying to me to know that TIPS and
TOPICS has had a positive influence on
many, and the ideas help improve treatment
for the people we serve.
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SAVVY
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I usually try not to depend so heavily
on any one resource in the SAVVY tips. However
I was impressed by the work of the Network
for Improvement of Addiction Treatment (NIATx).
I wanted to be sure you heard about their
results as well. Recently I read of what
the NIATx was doing in their process-improvement
project involving about 30 treatment organizations.
I was intrigued to see how programs can
prosper financially by doing good and by
providing excellent service. Good customer
service is not only possible in behavioral
health services, it can also be profitable.
I quote from the News Feature I read
by Bob Curley, November 12, 2004 "Seeing
Clients as Customers Can Improve Care,
Bottom Line", adding my comments. You
can read more of this work in the links
and references I have noted.
Tips:
- Promote a customer-focused culture
in your treatment program or practice.
It can cut time to assessment and treatment,
and increase patient retention dramatically.
"Using customer-focused business
practices, a research collaborative has
succeeded in reducing wait times and no-show
rates and increasing admissions and continuation
in treatment, according to David Gustafson,
Ph.D., director of the Network
for Improvement of Addiction Treatment
(NIATx).
Programs that received technical
assistance from the NIATx process-improvement
project -- which uses peer networking
and education to promote a customer-focused
culture in treatment programs -- achieved
some eye-opening results. Among participating
programs, the average time to assessment
was cut 72 percent, time to treatment
was cut in half, and patient retention
(through four sessions) increased 123
percent, for example."
For many of us trained in the healthcare
and medical field where we think of patients
and clients, it may seem a bit of a turnoff
to sound like a business selling widgets,
thinking of "customers". After all, aren't
we into healing, not selling; saving lives,
not saving money? Have you ever been frustrated
waiting for your doctor who's running
an hour late? Imagine if you were treated
as a customer, not a patient? What if
obtaining an airline booking was as difficult
as getting an initial addiction or mental
health appointment? The airlines would
be even more bankrupt than they already
are, and certainly out of business.
When we treat people as wanted and
welcomed customers whose needs we wish
to understand and address as fast as possible,
that qualifies as good care. A customer
approach is more likely to engage the
client and cement the relationship. Research
reminds us that these are the single most
important predictors of treatment outcome
anyway.
- Develop more flexible services.
Streamline operations to be more responsive
to people's needs for reassurance, access
and attention. It can increase profits
and capacity to treat more people.
"Gustafson said that programs should
not be afraid to make rapid process changes,
even if there are some initial bumps or
pain at first.
For example, he said, Acadia Hospital
in Bangor, Maine, decided to get anyone
who called into treatment by 7:30 the
next morning. "Initially, this was difficult,
but whenever this center makes a change
like this, they take a senior manager
and put him side-by-side with workers
being asked to make the big change," said
Gustafson. "The first day, it didn't work
well. The staff was a little angry, but
the senior manager was right there to
troubleshoot and adjust. He worked with
them full time for that first week so
he could personally experience what the
staff went through, and they succeeded."
Building on that initial decision,
the organization re- thought what intensive
outpatient was all about, said Gustafson,
moving from a rigorous sequential process
to a more flexible configuration of groups
and modalities. "That one change has contributed
$1.2 million a year to their margin,"
he said. "They went from 26 patients a
month and a chronic 'not enough slots'
condition to admitting 91 patients a month.""
Is your agency program-driven and ideology-driven,
or person-centered and customer-driven?
Could your services be characterized as
plugging people into programs, where it
is the clients' job to comply with and
fit into your program? Conversely, are
we focused on creating services to match
people's needs? Advances have been made
with the expansion of Assertive Community
Treatment (ACT) teams, home visits and
intensive case management in mental health.
Addiction treatment systems have increased
services for women with children, and
have expanded the array of supportive
living environments.
But we still have a long way to go.
Behavioral health services do not jump
to mind when thinking of who is most responsive
to addressing and meeting people's needs.
Fast-food restaurants, despite all of
their 'supersizing' controversies, are
much more focused on access, convenience,
engagement and retention than the usual
treatment agency.
Reference:
This article was published by Join
Together (http://www.joint
ogether.org) - a national resource
for communities working to reduce substance
abuse and gun violence, based at the Boston
University School of Public Health.
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SKILLS
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When you view your agency or clinical
practice from a customer's perspective,
this will affect not only how you structure
services, but how you conduct client appointments,
treatment planning and documentation.
Tips:
- Whether building a private practice
or a treatment program, think of the
3 A's. A successful practitioner told
me many years ago about the 3 A's -
Availability, Access and Attitude
"I've never seen a field take to
process improvement like the addiction
treatment field does," said Gustafson,
who also founded the Center
for Health Systems Research and Analysis
at the University of Wisconsin at Madison.
"The results they're getting just blow
me away."
Gustafson's personal interaction
with the treatment system illustrates
that there's a lot of room for improvement
when it comes to treating clients like
a for-profit business would serve its
customers. Acknowledging at the outset
of the NIATx project that he knew little
about the addiction field, Gustafson --
who does not have a drug problem -- got
himself admitted to treatment for heroin
addiction.
"I called up and said I needed help,"
he recalled. "They said, 'You can come
in in 4 days for an intake.' They spent
two hours asking me about my disease,
then concluded that yes, you need treatment,
but at the moment we don't have a bed
for you, so call us in a week if you still
want treatment."
Gustafson called back a week later,
and got an answering machine that said
to leave a message. "That's all the machine
said for six straight weeks in a row,"
he said. "Seven weeks later, they called
and said they had a bed. If I'd been a
real heroin addict, I'd never have made
it into treatment."
When Gustafson showed up at a meeting
to be assigned to a treatment program,
the intake coordinator who interviewed
him weeks before wasn't there, and the
admissions staff was working off of a
half-page of written notes about his case.
"What happened to the two hours of information
I provided at intake?" he asked.
Gustafson didn't blame the staff,
which he described as being paid less
than workers at Home Depot, often in recovery
themselves, and deeply committed to helping
those who need treatment. "Between the
patient and care lies a canyon of paperwork
and burdensome diseases that get in the
way," he said.
It is not enough for us to say we have
too many clients, too few staff who are
admittedly paid too little. It explains
why we might not be invested in customer
service, but doesn't excuse it. Most who
enter the behavioral health field do it
not for the big bucks, but for the satisfaction
of helping people (though some big bucks
would also be nice). So this is what being
customer-centric is all about. It is about
helping better. It is about getting clients
into treatment sooner. It is about engaging
them and having them hang in with treatment
long enough to make some changes.
It is about being:
-->available to meet their needs
-->accessible to encourage their showing
up for care
-->accepting with an attitude of service
and respect
- Make treatment planning and
documentation people-work not paper-
work.
One too common practice I've seen goes
something like this:
The client is asked to sign on the "Client
Signature" line to approve a treatment
plan in which they have scarcely had any
input, have barely read, and will rarely
read again since it is tucked into a section
of the chart never to be seen again. Or
a client is asked to sign a permission
to treat form, or acknowledgement of medication
side effects. However ask the client the
next day what they remember about their
medication side effects, and you'll likely
be met with blank stares. You did the
paperwork, but not the people-work.
One suggestion about improving access
to care:
Create a half hour group orientation slot
which is open each morning and afternoon.
When a person calls for an appointment,
they are never far enough from a face-to-face
encounter than three or four hours. At
that non-confidential session, people
are introduced to services available and
given standard forms to review and consider.
A variation if you don't like the group
aspect of that:
Set up one counselor/ therapist who is
available for two hour blocks for brief
orientation and engagement sessions for
all new enquiries. If there are no clients,
then paperwork can be caught up with.
Isn't that better than giving a client
an appointment three days or three weeks
in the future, with the high likelihood
of a wasted appointment time when often
the person doesn't show up, or never calls
to cancel?
For those who work in group treatment
settings:
What if clients developed their treatment
plans with peer input in a group setting?
This could save documentation time. It
would also model to others with similar
issues how their particular treatment
plan might look. It increases efficiency
and effectiveness. If it is a meaningful
treatment plan that was collaborative
and participatory, the client could even
write their own progress notes. If the
progress note is valid and addresses the
treatment plan strategies, the counselor
can then countersign it.
For example:
"I used on my way to group today because
I went by my old neighborhood and saw
my drug dealer. I plan to avoid my neighborhood
completely this week and attend at least
one NA meeting". This could be a progress
note for a problem stated as: "Persistent
daily cravings to use heroin especially
when with drug using friends" and a goal
of: "Identify any thoughts or behaviors
that increase or decease cravings to use".
This "customer" may not even be all that
interested in serenity or sobriety. But
he is a customer for not getting arrested
again for drug dealing, or for staying
out of jail. Now that he is in treatment,
he can explore whether going by his neighborhood
will increase or decrease his chances
of going to jail or being arrested again.
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SOUL
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This past week, I had my first colonoscopy
(no symptoms, just a screening). I was sort
of scared about having it - not just the
bowel preparation you have to do and then
the actual procedure - but what if they
find something? I was the customer in a
healthcare setting- a setting not foreign
at all to me. I thought about sharing what
that was like -an appropriate focus for
this "Soul" section. But I decided against
pushing the customer thing any more in case
you are customerized-out.
So to another topical focus - the holiday
season! Here are a few tips for the holidays:
*** If you are organized enough to
send an end-of- year, newsy, form-letter
greeting to friends and relatives updating
them of the year's activities and experiences,
keep it to one page, and preferably bullet-type
news. Long, narrative, detailed, journal-
type paragraphs are for your very small,
intimate one or two friends or loved ones.
Most others (as Jerry Seinfeld said about
weddings) don't really care that much.
Don't get me wrong, I enjoy catching
up and hearing what has happened to family
and friends. Give them the summary. If
they care enough, they will want to know
more and call you. A number of friends
tell us they look forward to our annual
one-pager, as each family member writes
his/her own few sentences. It is fun to
hear what people are up to - but not too
much information.
*** My sister talks about the 80% rule
- eat 80% of what would make you feel
full and you will probably be eating the
right amount. If that is too monastic
for the holidays, you could do what I
heard on CNN. After eating the holiday
meal, "destroy your plate". They didn't
mean throw it over your shoulder like
in a Greek restaurant. But pour lots of
salt or pepper on your plate so you are
not tempted to sit and pick at more food.
Of course you could get up from the table
and clear the dishes, which would be good
exercise and help with clean up too.
*** In Japan, you might have seen deep
frozen mandarins which make a cool healthy
snack. Something similar: I enjoy pulling
seedless grapes from their stems and freezing
them. When you're hungry for a snack,
each hard frozen grape is a yummy, mini
fruit icicle, healthier than a slab of
chocolate or a candy. They're good on
cereal as well.
That's my holiday tips. I have to go
and weave my holiday wreaths now!!
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Until
Next Time
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Until the December edition of TIPS
and TOPICS, reflect with me on what you
have to be thankful for - even if Thanksgiving
is not a holiday where you live.
David
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Contact Information
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phone: 530-753-4300
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