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TIPS & TOPICS from David Mee-Lee, M.D.
Volume 5, No.11
March 2008
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In this issue
-- SAVVY
-- SKILLS
-- SOUL
-- SHAMELESS SELLING
--
As a RESULT of your FEEDBACK
-- Until Next Time
Welcome
to March's Tips and Topics (TNT), especially to
the many new subscribers. As usual we are running
late, so this March edition will likely get to you
in early April. It is after all, free, so I guess
you get what you pay for!
SAVVY
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Glossary of abbreviations
ASAM
PPC or ASAM Criteria = Patient Placement
Criteria of the American Society of Addiction Medicine
ASAM = American Society of Addiction Medicine
MDA = Multidimensional Assessment
OP = Outpatient
IOP = Intensive Outpatient
MCO = Managed Care Organization
It
has been a year since a TNT edition covered the
ASAM PPC. In the meantime I often receive questions
about these criteria - criteria used in about 30
US States, the Department of Defense addiction services
around the world, plus many managed care organizations
and providers.
Perhaps
you have asked one of these questions below. The
answers emerge from over 20 years of work on placement
criteria.
Question
1: How does the ASAM PPC help with
managed care?
Answer
1: The Criteria are useful for both care
providers and care managers in a MCO. The 6 ASAM
assessment dimensions organize a client's biopsychosocial
data in a common language; this optimizes communication
between a clinician and utilization reviewer, or
between provider and payer. The MDA helps identify
treatment needs, strengths and priorities. The ASAM
Criteria provide guidelines as to who is best admitted
to a level of care, who stays, and who is discharged
or transferred.
Question
2: But will the ASAM PPC help me get
our 28 day residential program authorized, because
now managed care only gives us a week at most, if
that?
Answer
2: The ASAM PPC supports care which is
clinically-driven and client-driven, rather than
diagnosis-driven or program-driven. What does this
mean? A client should only stay at any one level
of care depending on how mild to severe his/her
illness is, what level he/she is functioning at,
plus how fast and how well he/she responds to treatment.
There are no recommended fixed lengths of stay in
the ASAM PPC. The criteria emphasizes giving people
all the care they need in a broad, seamless
continuum of care - not more, not less. "More"
care than needed wastes resources. It ties up space/slots
for others who really need treatment in a specific
level of care, therefore access to the best care
is blocked because the slot is now occupied by another.
"Less" care than needed may result in
a worsening illness. A client can then end up needing
more acute services (like detoxification, medical
or psychiatric care.)
Question
3: When do you do treatment plan reviews?
Answer
3: The ASAM PPC does not prescribe specific
time intervals for reviews. What influences treatment
plan reviews is how volatile or stable a client
is. If your client is severely ill and unstable,
she will need a more intensive level of care; that
is the only safe place that can meet her needs.
In high-intensity levels, reviews are done more
frequently; in low-intensity levels they can safely
be spaced out more.
Before
I give some general recommendations, here are the
qualifiers:
.ASAM PPC does not dictate the time a review should
take place.
.Also different clinicians might have varying opinions
on the timing of reviews.
So-----
For
OP services --> About every six sessions is a
general principle.
Say your client is in Level 1, and they come once
a week. If they are stable, and there are no rapid
changes in functioning, you would review the treatment
plan about every six weeks. However if your client
needs Intensive Outpatient three days a week, then
a treatment review would be every two weeks.
Clients
in a Level III.5, Clinically Managed High Intensity
Residential service (such as a therapeutic community)
--> reviews may be done weekly.
If
a client is severe enough to need 24 hour nursing
care with physician availability --> clearly
you review much more frequently.
In fact, with 24 hour nursing, the client will be
reviewed every shift (day, evening & night).
In
Detox levels --> reviews range from several times
a day to once a day. Clients in detox fluctuate
more quickly. It's likely that detox cases will
be looked at each day to see if someone can move
to a less intensive level of detox. Conversely if
things deteriorate, someone might have to move to
a more intensive level of care. For example, in
a Level IV-D detox (Medically Managed Intensive
Detoxification), each change of shift again will
likely conduct a review.
A
review of the ASAM MDA does not have to be tedious-
a long form re-asking every question of the initial
assessment. The continual question to ask is: What
has changed (or not) in any of the dimensions?
Reference:
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.
To
purchase the ASAM PPC: American Society of Addiction
Medicine - 4601 Nth. Park Ave., Arcade Suite 101,
Chevy Chase, MD 20815. (301) 656-3920; Fax: (301)
656-3815; To order ASAM PPC-2R online: www.asam.org
or call: (800) 844- 8948.
For
more tidbits on the ASAM Criteria, refer to previous
editions:
April 2003: in Savvy & Skills
June 2003: in Savvy & Skills
September 2003: in Stump the Shrink
November 2003: in Skills
January 2004: in Stump the Shrink
March 2004: in Savvy & Skills
October 2004: in Savvy
December 2005: in Savvy, Skills & Stump the
Shrink
October-November 2006: in Savvy & Skills
March 2007: in Savvy & Skills
SHAMELESS
SELLING
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Here
are some proprietary resources to help implement
the ASAM Patient Placement Criteria:
For
Assessment Instruments
1. Level of Care Index (LOCI-2R): Checklist tool
listing ASAM PPC-2R Criteria to aid in decision-making
and documentation of placement.
2.
Dimensional Assessment for Patient Placement Engagement
and Recovery (DAPPER): Severity ratings within each
of the six ASAM PPC-2R dimensions.
To
order: The Change Companies at 888-889-8866, www.changecompanies.net
For
clinical questions or statistical information about
the instruments, contact Norman Hoffmann, Ph.D.
at 828-454-9960 in Waynesville, North Carolina;
or by e- mail at evinceassessment@aol.com
For
Home Study and Online Courses
1.
"ASAM 101: Basics on Understanding and Using
ASAM Patient Placement Criteria, Revised Second
Edition (ASAM PPC-2R)"
A
3-hour course that will introduce students to key
concepts and issues of the ASAM Patient Placement
Criteria. Clinicians involved in planning and managing
care often lack a common language and systematic
assessment and treatment approach that allows for
effective, individualized services. The Patient
Placement Criteria of the American Society of Addiction
Medicine (ASAM) first published in 1991, provided
common language to help the field develop a broader
continuum of care. They were updated and the second
edition (ASAM PPC-2) was published in April 1996.
A revised second edition was published in April
2001.
The
Distance Learning Center for Addiction Studies (DLCAS)
is an internet based educational service that provides
comprehensive training and information in the field
of addiction studies. It is a joint presentation
of the Betty Ford Center and the Distance
Learning Center, LLC. Toll-free phone: 866 471-1742.
Website: Distance Learning Center
Course Name: ASAM 101 - Basics on Understanding
and Using ASAM Patient Placement Criteria, Revised
Second Edition- by David Mee-Lee, M.D.
2. Hazelden's Clinical Innovators
Series "Applying ASAM Placement Criteria"
DVD and 104 page Manual with more detail based on
the DVD with Continuing Education test (10 CE hrs),
75 minute DVD David Mee-Lee (DVD) and Kathyleen
M. Tomlin (DVD manual) You can order from www.Hazelden.org