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TIPS & TOPICS from David Mee-Lee, M.D.
Volume 3, No.9
February 2006
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In this issue
-- SAVVY, SKILLS and STUMP THE SHRINK all in one
-- SOUL
-- SHAMELESS SELLING
-- Until Next Time
Thanks for joining us for the February edition of TIPS and TOPICS.
This month’s edition has a few twists and turns. Firstly,
it is arriving well and truly before the end of the month rather
than my usual last minute deal. The reason is I am training
in the UK and Germany in February-March, and aiming to complete
my “to do” list before I depart.
Secondly,
I am beginning this month with a reader’s reactions and
responses prompted by the January edition. I felt “Another
Frustrated Substance Dependency Counselor” really articulated
well the sentiments and frustrations I hear often around the
country as I travel and train.
So
this edition is a mix of SAVVY, SKILLS and STUMP THE SHRINK
all in one. “Not sure I'll have any magic answers--- I
wrote her, “---but these feelings and issues need to be
articulated and raised, so thanks for facilitating that.”
She responded: “Dr. Mee-Lee, I'm not expecting any fixes.
As I said, I think it's important to just trust the process.
Peace.”
I
would like that: Trust and Peace. See what you think and feel
about all this.
Dr.
Mee-Lee,
I just can't pass up the opportunity to comment on the irony
of reading your assertions about the importance of client-counselor
alliance and your commentary about the frenetic pace of life.
Why do I say irony? Primarily because the agency that recommended
we read your newsletter is the same agency that, for our area,
holds the purse strings to provide care to people struggling
with substance dependency. That agency seems, to many counselors
and clients, to be the mother source for a load of paperwork
requirements and hoops that make it ever more difficult to build
relationships with the people we serve.
I
try to put myself in the shoes of someone seeking help. When
making the call to simply schedule an appointment, the client
is questioned about income, any involvement with CPS (Child
Protective Services), and drug use. Does the client already
begin to associate our agency with feelings of shame and, thereby,
self-protection? When the client arrives for the first session
we hand him/her a pack of paperwork that would send me running
- streams of records about records, requirements about requirements,
and forms about rights. Signing and signing some more is followed
up by a computerized assessment, the idea of which terrifies
those with computer phobia. Questions about psych. history,
employment, substance use, medical, legal, and family history
– and "I'm supposed to answer all these questions
honestly to something that isn't even alive and that's going
to do...what with my information?”
A
client might wonder: "Was there anything in that rights
brochure regarding the right to have someone take time to really
find out what I care about or need or will invest in? What about
the right to keep a little information to myself until I feel
safe enough to share?" (I think we can all relate to the
feeling that comes with having shared more than we wanted to.
It's kind of like being robbed and it isn't something you really
want to experience again next week.)
By
the time the client finishes with the hour and a half of paperwork
he/she gets a few minutes to see the counselor maybe still thinking
there'll be a chance to share what's important. But now-reviewing
the paperwork, a little more paperwork, a couple more signatures,
and then...what do you want to accomplish in counseling? (Counselor
thinking: I've got to get to this treatment plan.) At this moment,
if I'm the client, I'm not thinking I'm going to get much at
all out of this process-it's obviously about them trying to
get information and me trying to protect a little of my privacy
and dignity.
My
point here isn't only to vent-though that's part of it I admit.
My point is also to connect with you around your feelings about
the need for us to slow down. I'm saying, "Yes, I feel
that pain." I make an effort in my everyday life to cultivate
space. Our culture continues to undervalue the process in the
search for greater efficiency, immediately measurable outcomes,
a quick buck that lacks integrity. Day in day out, we begin
to lose sight of real relationship, of quality, of the value
of investing in people in a way that honors their process and,
thereby, fosters lasting change. Counselors and administrators
alike fall prey to the same cravings for immediate gratification
that so many of our substance- dependent clients struggle to
overcome. (You mentioned the term "non-compliant".
Isn't this how we label the client who isn't giving us what
we want as quickly as we want it?) Of course, counselors feel
particular pressure about outcomes because of the managed care
system and its expectations for the instant miracle?
So
again, what the heck is my message? I'm responding to say, you
can chalk up one more person who sees a need for SOUL in what
we do, in how we live, in how we work with people who want to
know there is hope. Hope? Meaning...maybe that's a better way
to say it. It's no wonder people are going crazy from meaninglessness.
Where's the meaning in those forms? Where's the really deep
meaning, the SOUL, in that computer assessment? "I came
to your office looking for hope and you gave me this? Things
look even more hopeless than before."
To
honestly address these issues of meaning and quality and relationship
in our work, however, we have to be willing to honestly address
the issue within our deepest selves - to take a searching inventory
so to speak. If the activities and relationships in our personal
lives lack depth, we'll be more likely to tolerate “surfacy”
relationships and activities in our work and, perhaps, even
to ask others to sell out.
I
can be overly cynical. (You'd never guess I'm quite an optimist.)
Truth is, in the midst of all the hoops and paperwork requirements
we still manage to convey A LOT of concern to people and to
do some really good work. But the system that should serve to
keep services running is running the services and seems to eventually
suck the soul out of things. It gets more and more difficult
to survive without having to sell your SOUL (the soul of the
agency, of the staff, and of the clients). We all know the burnout
rate of counselors isn't just due to the fact that chemical
dependency is a "highly relapse prone disease".
My
response here is, in some small way, how I am taking responsibility.
By attempting to fuel, in a constructive way, I hope for a continuing
exploration about the mess we're in and how we can begin to
take our lives and the SOUL of our work back.
Thanks
for indulging me.
With
best intentions,
Another
Frustrated Substance Dependency Counselor
SAVVY,
SKILLS and STUMP THE SHRINK all in one
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Here are some TIPS and TOPICS prompted by the sentiments expressed
above:
TIP 1:
- Develop
a quality improvement team effort to reorient all paperwork
towards “peoplework.”
Documentation
will not disappear. Healthcare involves many stakeholders from
clients and patients to clinicians, case managers, funders,
regulators, accreditors and family members. All have an interest
in accurate records. You would not want to go to a doctor who
kept generic records and could not remember the specific diagnosis
and medical care s/he had prescribed for you. You wouldn’t
pay for a long and expensive list of automobile repairs without
careful documentation that the work was needed and then completed.
And the next time you fly on a plane, I bet you and your family
would like to know and believe that regulatory agencies are
making sure the mechanics thoroughly checked all nuts and bolts,
and that the pilots are well-rested and sober.
But
it is true that too often well-intended assessment processes
and documentation standards have worked against engaging and
caring for the people we serve. It is time to make paperwork
work for the people we seek to help. It will not change overnight,
but with a unified interdisciplinary approach, we can start
on making documentation a living, dynamic process.
Here
are some beginning suggestions:
-->
Eliminate any duplication of information in all the assessment
instruments and data gathering tools and forms.
Place all your forms and data collection instruments on the
floor. With a highlighting pen, identify all places where you
see a duplication of data. The goal is to identify assessment
and treatment planning data which can be consolidated or eliminated.
-->Prioritize
assessment data. First evaluate high risk areas which need immediate
care.
In five minutes or less, you can rule in or rule out any acute
intoxication or withdrawal dangers, any pressing physical or
mental health needs, any dangerous relapse or continued use
emergencies, plus any actively toxic and unsupportive living
environment factors. In the first session it is not necessary
to know a client’s military history, age of first use,
or how old his siblings are. On your data- gathering tool or
form, asterisk only the most critical information you should
assess in the first session, and do only that. The remaining
data can be gathered later on once you have engaged the client
in treatment.
-->Use
a variety of colored forms to “house” sections of
the assessment information.
Often several team members ask the same substance use history
and record that on their specific intake or social work or medical
assessment form. You could have one green form for example,
where any substance use history is documented. If another team
member needs to check or update the substance use history, they
can go to that particular form, read it and add to it. If new
information is gathered a bit later, then buried in a Progress
Note or another form, it is too easily missed and becomes non-useful.
A colored form concept can mean a client does not have to be
asked all the very same questions again by yet another team
member.
Any
psychosocial data could go on the yellow form, and medical or
nursing information on the blue form etc. The rainbow forms
can provide efficient data collection in a manner that shields
the client from repetitive questioning. Even better would be
to have this information follow the client to their next level
of care instead of harassing the client with all the same questions
from a new set of clinicians. I have even seen new assessments
done on the same client in the same agency when they have just
been transferred from intensive outpatient to outpatient care.
Paperwork
can be designed both to meet documentation requirements, and
also be friendly to the peoplework we do.
TIP
2:
-
Share the paperwork load with clients: Integrate
documentation more into the therapeutic process.
The
person who should know his/her treatment plan best is the client!
He/she only has their one chart to worry about while you may
have ten or twenty client records you are documenting in. Find
ways to involve the client more in the assessment process, ongoing
treatment planning and progress documentation. Here are some
ideas:
-->
Use the first five to ten minutes to focus on what the client
is a “customer” for.
If the client shows up for an appointment, we know they are
motivated and want something. They are at action for something
that they perceive you have to offer, otherwise they would not
be in your office chair. Identify what they want and why now.
This sets the stage for assessment and treatment planning with
them. Read more on "What, Why, How, Where and When"
in the May 2004 issue.
http://www.dmlmd.com/2004.05.ezine.html
-->
Focus the assessment process around that primary concern which
prompted the client to show up.
You can still ask all the same assessment questions, but do
so in the service of building the alliance around what the client
is a “customer” for. For example, “If
you want help with depression, do you find yourself trying to
cope by drinking or drugging; and what substances do you use?”
If
there are a number of questions that don’t easily link
to their presenting concern, alert the client to this, then
bracket a series of questions by saying: “To make
sure I have all the information we need to collect, I’m
going to ask you a number of questions that may not seem important
to what you want to work on. But hang in with me and we’ll
get through them as quickly as possible.”
If
your agency uses self-administered assessment software or forms,
you might say: “Now that I’m clear on what is
most important to you that brought you here today, I’d
like you to tell me more about yourself so we can do a comprehensive
assessment. We do not want to miss any of your needs or strengths
that would be important in helping you to get what you want.”
--> Bring documentation into the treatment groups.
There is no reason all the treatment planning paperwork has
to be done by you in the last 30 minutes or hour of your day
when you are tired and rushing to get home. That’s the
reason you scribble in every client’s chart a Progress
Note that sounds like: “Attended group. Gave positive
feedback to others. Gaining insight into his disease. Continue
current treatment objectives.”
How
about-----
You
could have a “What Do I Want?” treatment group?
Or a “Why Am I Here?” treatment group which is designed
to have each participant focus on what is driving their treatment
process.
Clients
could write their own progress note and share it with group
members for constructive feedback. The client ought to know
what they want to get out of group to advance their treatment
plan. Let the client actually do the documentation: Write out
their wants and goals under your guidance; note down whether
they followed through, adding notes on whether it worked or
not.
For
example, they could document: “I forgot to get feedback
from two sober AA members as to what’s wrong with hanging
out with my old friends. I am willing to do it and will report
back next week.” As the clinician, if you find their
documentation true and accurate, you could countersign it. Imagine
if the same client wrote: “This is the best program
I have ever been in and I am sick and tired of being sick and
tired and want to surrender and take one day at a time”
and then shared that in group. I suspect there would probably
be one peer who might challenge such a glowing progress note,
especially if the client was overheard in the parking lot discussing
how to get some stuff smuggled in. Positive peer feedback.
You
can add to this list. Brainstorm with your team on ways to make
paperwork a living document.
TIP
3:
-
It is time for administrators, accreditors, regulators,
funders and clinicians to address spiraling paperwork demands
that are bad for clients, care- givers and workforce development.
All
regulations have been person-made and can be person-changed.
Many current auditing procedures and quality assurance activities
create a compliance- and-fear mentality which saps both clinicians
and administrators’ energy.
The
time has come for more creative methods focusing on client outcomes,
not process compliance. For example it seems reasonable to be
assured that clients will give informed consent and understand
the medications they are prescribed. It seems reasonable then
to have a standard that requires that all patients sign a consent
form indicating that the medication and its risks and benefits
have been explained. It also seems reasonable to audit charts
to see if such a signed consent is present.
So
an agency could scurry around ensuring every chart has a signed
consent form. They might even receive 100% compliance rates
on the next audit. However, consider a different, new and improved
audit process. What would it be like if 5 clients were selected
at random and asked to explain their medication and side effects?
This might reveal a different story. Would they actually be
able to say the name of their medication, what it is supposed
to do, and describe the risks and benefits? This new audit process
would focus on whether clients are informed consumers, not just
passive compliers signing a form hurriedly explained to them.
Much
more dialogue is needed at a large systems level, beyond the
scope of what we can do in this Tips & Topics forum. However
we are not victims of some oppressive paperwork machine as though
inflicted from outer space. Provider organizations, counselor
associations, State Directors, managed care organizations, professional
organizations and government entities must find a way to quicken
the pace of reform, and reengineer paperwork procedures and
process.
Could
we dare to dream that there is a way to meet the realities for
documentation, quality review and risk management while maintaining
the SOUL of our work?
SOUL
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I heard a while ago someone say: “I’ve had a lot
of worries in my lifetime---and one or two of them even came
true”. A few years ago, I started tracking situations
I worried about and then noticed what actually happened. I even
wrote some of them down thinking that one day I could do a statistical
analysis on what percentage of wasted worry-energy I had expended.
I was reminded of this as I was worrying we had missed out on
free tickets to London using some mileage points. By waiting
a day to make a decision on an available ticket, we lost the
seats. However in talking to another travel agent to check for
departures from other cities, we snagged a non-stop from Los
Angeles to London. Not only was this a better itinerary, it
fit in with visiting the kids in Southern California for July
4---a plan we would not have thought of had we taken the first
option.
Then
just the other day, when I checked into my hotel, they could
not find my reservation. Looking more carefully at my internet
reservation confirmation, I noticed I had booked it for the
wrong check-in date, and for one night only when I needed two.
I started imagining having to find another hotel, and berating
myself for such a silly mistake. (It’s not like I book
a hotel once a year!) Not to worry. There was indeed a room
available for the two nights I needed. And when I noticed the
price the front desk agent gave it for, the rate was $10 less
per night than the guaranteed lowest price reservation I had
booked on the internet.
I’ve
had a lot of worries in my lifetime---the return on investment
of worry energy is very low. Don't Worry-- - Be Happy!
SHAMELESS
SELLING
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There are groundless worries and there are real concerns. My
son recently introduced me to what might be seen as an insurance
policy for when you need a lawyer. I agreed mainly to help him
out in his new venture. When would I need a lawyer? But I was
surprised that in the first few months, I have actually called
them a couple of times to ask about a speeding ticket and a
legal question about real estate. The Identity Theft Shield
additional service is a worry buster too. They send you your
credit rating and monitor any credit activity to alert you if
someone has tried to access your credit. That certainly is a
worry-buster.
You
might find it useful too if you are a worrier like me. Take
a look if you want. Contact my son. He’s not hard sell,
so don’t worry. To watch two short 3 minute videos introducing
the legal plans and identity theft protection, go to http://www.prepaidlegal.com/hub/taylormeelee
. If afterwards you would like more information, feel free to
email him at taylormeelee@gmail.com
If
you want to get something free from Taylor, enjoy some of his
songs at http://www.taylormeelee.com
Until
Next Time
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Thanks to all who send along words of appreciation. Send me
any Success Stories you want to share with others. See you in
March.
David
Contact Information
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
email: info@dmlmd.com
phone: 530-753-4300
web: http://www.dmlmd.com
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Copyright
2006 DML Training & Consulting | 4228 Boxelder Place | Davis
| CA | 95616
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