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TIPS & TOPICS from David Mee-Lee, M.D.
Volume 4, No.1
April 2006
Copyright
2006 DML Training & Consulting | 4228 Boxelder Place | Davis |
CA | 95616
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In this issue
-- SAVVY and STUMP THE SHRINK
--SKILLS
-- SOUL
-- Until Next Time
Thank you for joining me in the April edition of TIPS and TOPICS.
I appreciate the positive comments I receive either by e-mail or onsite
when I am training. I’m not planning a formal survey, but if
you are moved to express appreciation, this helps me to know what
works with TIPS & TOPICS. If you write me, just say briefly what
works for you, and what you find useful in general about this newsletter.
SAVVY and STUMP THE SHRINK
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A recent workshop participant asked for more clarification on a table
in one of my handouts; it concerned matching a client’s stage
of change with services and level of care. So here is a combination
of SAVVY and STUMP THE SHRINK in answering the question/issues this
person raised.
Tips:
A client
in an early stage of change thinks he/she has a ‘people, places
and things’ problem, not a substance use problem. They need
“discovery” work not “recovery” work. As such,
motivational enhancement treatment should occur in a level of care
which allows them to face the real world. If this person is in intensive
levels of care and residential settings, it protects them from doing
the research that will help them internalize their awareness of loss
of control. Outpatient levels of care allow the client to face friends
who still use, or face situations that challenge their over-optimistic
belief that quitting or cutting back will be easy.
Of course
if some unstable situation exists which creates imminent danger to
the client, then a more intensive level of care may be necessary to
stabilize the crisis and then prepare the client for outpatient treatment
in the community. Here is the table to which the reader referred:
| Stage
of Change |
Service
Track |
Treatment
Processes |
Used
Level of Care |
| Pre-
Contemplation |
Discovery
Track |
Consciousness-Raising, Social Liberation |
Early
Intervention, OP |
| Contemplation |
Discovery
Track |
As
above, plus Emotional Arousal, Self-Evaluation |
OP
|
| Preparation |
Mix
of Discovery & Recovery Tracks |
Emotional Arousal, Self-Evaluation, Commitment |
OP
through Partial Hospital Services |
| Action |
Recovery
Track |
Commitment, Reward, Countering, Environmental Control, Helping
Relationships |
OP
through Partial Hospital Services |
Relapse, Recycling |
Relapse Track |
Based on assessed Stage of Change to which client has regressed
or recycled |
OP
through Hospital Services |
Question:
Hi Dr. Mee-Lee,
I
was at a training that you did recently and enjoyed it very much.
I have a question about the Readiness to Change Assessment and Matching
grid in the handout. As I read the Level of Care column, it looks
like your thinking is that precontemplation, contemplation, preparation
and action clients would best be served in Outpatient or Intensive
Outpatient. This is very different from our current practice, and
the current thinking of our addiction treatment residential providers.
The current consensus among providers would be that clients in the
earlier stages of readiness need residential in order to remove them
from their using routine and environment. I can follow that placing
precontemplation and contemplation clients in abstinence based programs
can be a set up for failure (clients use, and get kicked out), and
therefore a waste of money. Could you elaborate on your thoughts about
preparation and action clients? Are you thinking that working on the
problem in the client's natural environment is the most effective
approach?
Thanks,
LMSW ACSW
Note:
For those of you unfamiliar with Prochaska and DiClemente’s
Transtheoretical Model of Change and their stages of change, you can
read some tips on this in the June 2003 edition of TIPS and TOPICS,
Vol. 1. No.3 .http://www.dmlmd.com/2003.06.ezine.html.
Also the first reference book below is easy to read, written for the
lay public and suitable for recommending to your clients.
If you
are unfamiliar with the Patient Placement Criteria of the American
Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM PPC), you can see more in the
March 2004 edition, Volume 1, No.11. http://www.dmlmd.com/2004.03.ezine.html
My
response:
Firstly,
you are correct about working on the problem in the client's natural
environment for those in the Preparation and Action stages of change.
They know they have an addiction problem, and really want to develop
a new drug-free lifestyle and change their life. Education, new skill-building,
integration into self-help and mutual help recovery groups can and
should happen as close to home, in their local community, as soon
as possible. Some people have already embraced recovery without even
entering through the professional addiction treatment door.
In Preparation
and Action stages, treatment can be done in a variety of outpatient
settings. This depends on the severity of relapse cravings or stress
in the environment. If a person needs to be separated from their environment
because they cannot cope with the stress, this could be done in an
ASAM Level III.1 level of care bundled with an appropriate level of
OP intensity to assist in coping skills. ASAM Level III.1 is a 24
hour structured supportive living environment, not a full residential
level of care with all the 24 hour clinical services and costs. If
some immediate problems need to be stabilized, then a stabilization
period in a 24 hour treatment setting may be necessary.
As you
know, treatment and recovery is an ongoing process, not an event.
So if there are no acute crises, treatment can proceed as close to
the client’s natural environment as is safe and effective. That
is why the chart emphasized the outpatient continuum of care.
Those
in Precontemplation and Contemplation don’t even think they
have an addiction problem, and are not interested yet in recovery.
You have the best chance of engaging people in treatment if done in
outpatient settings, unless there are clinical or environmental issues
that put the person in some imminent danger. For those, a period of
residential treatment may be necessary for stabilization and safety.
In outpatient
settings we can develop a treatment plan that allows the person to
“do the research” and test out their “I-can-control-it-cutting-back-
drinking,” treatment plan. Or to try: “I can do this with
willpower and exercise and don’t need those meetings and groups.”
I know this is different from how we have thought in the past about
using residential treatment. If we remove people from their using
routine and environment before they even think they have an addiction
problem, this increases the likelihood of resistance, negative interactions
and dropping out of treatment. As you said, the likelihood of a failure
experience is high because they have little interest to work on abstinence
and recovery.
When
it comes to those in Relapse or Recycling stage, the full continuum
of care may be necessary. The relapse may have resulted in such heavy
drinking or drugging that detoxification is now needed. Or intoxication
may be exacerbating depression with suicidal behavior or substance-induced
psychosis. Outpatient levels of care may not be intense enough to
contain the relapse. However, sometimes a slip or a relapse can be
arrested by resuming AA attendance and reconnecting with supportive
friends. Low intensity outpatient support and/or returning to recovering
peers may be all that is needed to get back on track. A relapse does
not automatically require intensive and 24 hour treatment settings.
Yes-
to increase the chance for clients to incorporate changes as close
to the real world as possible, I am suggesting that more intensive
levels of care be reserved for times when things become unsafe or
ineffective in the client’s community. When you allow a person
to test out peer refusal skills, form new recovery networks, practice
non- drug ways to cope with stress, this solidifies recovery. It minimizes
relapse issues which can occur with re-entry into the community from
a safe, protected environment. Obviously with any dimension, if there
is lack of safety or instability, a more intensive level will be necessary
for whatever period of stabilization is needed.
The ASAM
continuum of care is about increasing access to care; it’s about
being good stewards of resources so we can give people as much care
as is necessary to improve outcomes. All the levels of care are needed-
from outpatient to residential to hospital. They should be included
in insurance benefit plans, and funded by insurance and managed care.
If we match clients to stage of change and multidimensional needs,
we can preserve funds to give people more intensive treatment when
needed. This will allow for much more outpatient treatment, case management
and recovery support services in our communities.
References
Prochaska, JO; Norcross, JC; DiClemente, CC (1994): “Changing
For Good” Avon Books, New York.
DiClemente,
CC (2003): “Addiction and Change – How Addictions Develop
and Addicted People Recover” The Guilford Press, NY.
Treatment
Improvement Protocol (1999). “Enhancing Motivation for Change
in Substance Abuse Treatment" The recommendations of a consensus
panel. Chair: William R. Miller TIP No.35. DHHS Publication No. (SMA)
99-3354 Center for Substance Abuse Treatment, Rockville, MD.
Mee-Lee
D, Shulman GD, Fishman M, Gastfriend DR, and Griffith JH, eds. (2001).
ASAM Patient Placement Criteria for the Treatment of Substance-Related
Disorders, Second Edition-Revised (ASAM PPC-2R). Chevy Chase, MD:
American Society of Addiction Medicine, Inc.
SKILLS
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Over the past month I either directly interviewed or consulted about
a number of clients who raised challenging therapy questions. Below
I highlight some issues raised and offer clinical tips. (Of course
the identity and details have been changed to protect confidentiality).
Tips:
That
may sound like a far-fetched claim from someone you may think has
lost touch with clinical reality – especially after you read
this vignette presented by a treatment team that declared her “Not
ready for treatment”.
Inmate
Jane Doe is a 23 year old, Caucasian, female, serving a sentence for
Possession of Methamphetamine with attempt to Deliver. She is pregnant
with her second child, due date August 28. She gave her first child
up for adoption after his birth three years ago. She entered residential
treatment on March 9. Date of last use of methamphetamine and marijuana
was February 1.
Her
only motive for entering the residential substance abuse program is
to meet the requirements to enter the nursery program and have her
child remain in the prison with her after its birth. She states she
will sign out of the residential treatment program if she is not allowed
to be in the nursery program. Jane denies that she has an addiction
problem; she states she has been using recreationally and does not
see a problem with it. She states she will use after she gets out
of prison. Jane has a long history of abusive relationships. Admits
that her current partner is physically abusive to her but is unwilling
to consider paroling to any place other than his residence.
Before
you dismiss any client as “Not ready for treatment” or
“Not treatment ready”, reframe this in your own mind and
how you engage her into treatment. Jane is not ready yet for treatment
of what we think and know she needs to work on. But she is at action
for getting admitted to the nursery program and keeping her new baby.
She is ready for treatment to reach that goal, not the goals we think
she should want. She is not “recovery ready”. But if she
didn’t want treatment/professional help, she wouldn’t
be sitting in your office. And remember she will leave, she says,
if we aren’t going to help her keep her baby. What would be
wrong with helping her work to keep her baby?
In that
treatment and motivational enhancement process, she undoubtedly will
bump up against the issues of substance use and who she lives with.
Treatment will focus on helping her discover the connection between
keeping her baby and drugs and partners. But if we stay close to the
client’s goal, Jane will be ready for the kind of treatment
that helps her decide she needs to change her life and choices if
she is to achieve her goal- i.e. succeed in keeping her baby. Or she
will discover that her drugs and partner are more important to her.
Either way, she is ready for treatment.
Joshua
is a 48 year old, African American, never married, unemployed homeless
cocaine-using man with schizophrenic disorder. He was evicted from
his apartment and wants housing. He denies a cocaine problem, but
does show up for daily medication so long as he gets his $10 payment.
The team has developed this plan to incentivize his adherence to medication.
The treatment
team questions: Should they be helping him get housing when he only
comes for medication to get money which he sometimes uses to buy drugs?
Should they help him when he only attends groups to obtain shopping
coupons from his disability income? In addition his random urine drug
screens are often positive even though he denies using.
Assisting
him to get (and keep) some housing will only have a chance of sustained
success if Joshua can maintain mental health and substance use stability.
So I reassured the team they were on the right track. They were correct
in linking medication adherence, group involvement and drug screen
monitoring to assistance in getting housing.
Joshua
wants freedom and independence, and the team is helping him to achieve
that. However, if the goal is not freedom and independence but rather
shelter and caretaking, then there is a place for providing housing
that does not expect the client to work on mental health and addiction
stability. “Wet” and “damp” shelters have
their place in such a continuum of care.
Wendy
is a 37 year old, Caucasian, divorced, unemployed, single parent of
two children, both of whom have been diagnosed with Bipolar Disorder.
The psychiatric, addiction and social history of this client is long
and complicated: it encompasses sexual abuse in her teens, rape as
an adult, physical abuse, Child Protective Services, chronic pain
with overuse of narcotic analgesics, seven prior detoxification treatments,
and notoriously poor adherence to appointments, medication and therapy.
When
I interviewed Wendy, it was so easy to understand the frustration
the team experienced. They struggled to get Wendy to comply with appropriate
doses of pain medication, consistent parenting skills, alcohol abstinence,
disruptive relationships with parents and her ex-husband etc. Her
case was so involved: rich with psychodynamics, complicated systems
and family issues, and addiction treatment interventions. There were
enough significant clinical and case management issues to keep this
team occupied for many years to come.
The process
with Wendy is likely to be a long and volatile one. However we must
continue to balance nurturance with responsibility. How do we give
her enough support to satisfy deep longings for nurturance; at the
same time, how do we expect enough accountability which maintains
safe boundaries, and allays Wendy's fears of rejection and abandonment?
"
I will hang in with you, but I can't do it by myself." "
I will work hard to help you with your depression but I can't do that
if you are not showing up for appointments." Nurturance
and accountability all in the one sentence.
Clients
like Wendy easily have a new crisis each session - if they even make
the appointment! They can often say such things like: “I want
to keep seeing you and I feel comfortable with you.” They forget
they are also quite comfortable yelling at you and blaming you when
things are not going well. Be cautious of offering what I once heard
from an inexperienced clinician: “You can call anytime. We are
here for you anytime.” Our job is to empower our client to be
as independent as possible, and to make us obsolete - as soon as possible.
It is better to say something like:
“That’s
great that you find our work together helpful. What is the most important
thing for me to help you with? What feelings and needs do you get
filled in treatment with me? I want to help you identify those needs,
and get them met in more than one place, not just in therapy with
me. I will hang in with you, but I can’t be your main or only
support.”
SOUL
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I recently conducted a 2-day workshop for people working with mandated
clients in corrections settings. Those of you who have heard me speak
know I highlight engaging clients to “do treatment, not do time.”
This is not just about techniques of Motivational Interviewing and
using the Stages of Change. To me, it’s about inspiring our
clients to see that they have choices, power over their own lives;
to help them see they are not victims of people, places or things
(including judges, courts or drugs.) I understand the pressures that
exist to get people to comply with treatment, and to take responsibility
and “complete the program”. We hear their sad, complicated
stories. Their lives seem so out of control that we quickly accept
the pressure of others to get our clients to behave and comply.
At the recent workshop, the Director of the Nebraska Department of
Correctional Services gave a brief presentation. My ears perked up
with one phrase Director Robert Houston said. That one little phrase
captured for me what I had been trying to communicate all day. “Our
work” he said, “is about freeing people, not turning
them loose.” That one- liner said it all for me. I didn’t
have time to process with Director Houston the implications of that
phrase for him. I do know what that phrase inspired for me- not just
in corrections populations, but in all our work with people.
It is
about helping people to be truly free of the tyranny of substance
use and mental disorders. We are not just putting people through programs,
and then turning them loose if they comply and complete the program.
Our clients -often mandated to attend treatment- may see their involvement
with us as merely waiting to be turned loose, and to get us and others
off their back. We feed into that sentiment when we say things like:
“Well since you have to be here, you might as well get something
out of the program.” Imagine if we could align with them to
work on being free. Let’s thank our clients for exercising their
freedom of choice to come to treatment, to be free of incarceration.
Convey to them our commitment to help them live so positively that
they never have to be locked up again; and to figure out how to do
that now and forever.
Who doesn’t
want freedom? Our work is about freeing people, not turning them loose.
Until
Next Time
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See you next month.
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
|