|
Tap 17 — TAPs <<<Documents<<<Home
This page contains links to external Web sites. The Treatment Improvement Exchange has no control over their content or availability.
A Case Management Model Utilizing In-Home Treatment Services for Rural AODA
Clients: The Family and Children's Center Model
Kathleen M. Adams, M.S., C.A.D.C. III Colin C. Ward, M.S., C.A.D.C. III Family
and Children's Center La Crosse, Wisconsin
Abstract Traditional
alcohol and other drug abuse (AODA) treatment paradigms not only overutilize and
poorly manage AODA intervention services, but fail to meet the unique needs of
rural Americans. This paper describes an alternative AODA treatment model
developed to meet the needs of a rural clientele. By developing a broad
continuum of outpatient and in-home service options, the needs of rural
Americans who have AODA concerns can be better met by means of an intensive case
management model, treatment rather than diagnostic assessments, and quality
assurance procedures. Chemical abuse and mental health care providers need to
recognize that chemical abuse problems are complex and that they exist on a wide
spectrum of intensity. In-home intervention services are often the most
effective mode of addressing AODA issues with rural populations. |
This paper describes the alternative alcohol and other drug abuse (AODA)
treatment model developed at the Family and Children's Center in La Crosse,
Wisconsin. This model grew out of the crucible of change created when we were
challenged to create a better way of assessing needs and of developing and
delivering services specific to the unique AODA needs of a rural clientele.
Content Area
Family and Children's Center (FCC) is a regional, private, not-for-profit
mental health care agency that has served the needs of La Crosse and surrounding
rural communities for more than 100 years. As part of a large continuum of
programs designed to keep families together and promote individual well-being,
FCC provides outpatient and in-home mental health and chemical abuse treatment
services, as shown in figure 1.
Funding for services is broad based and includes the United Way, medical
assistance, donations, private pay, and health insurance. In the mid-1980s, FCC
began contracting with insurance companies to provide comprehensive managed
mental health care services. Through selected affiliation with other mental
health and medical services, we complemented our own already broad continuum of
care. The components of this expanded continuum of care are shown in figure 2.
The move into managed mental health care in the mid-1980s created a crucible
of change for us. In addition to requiring extended affiliations, managed
health care demanded:
- Prospective and retroactive utilization review
- Quality assurance procedures
- Assumption of financial risk
Utilization review and quality assurance discussions quickly began
challenging many of our assumptions about chemical dependency treatment. We
discovered that traditional 28-day inpatient programs were overutilized and that
criteria for inpatient admission were unclear and imprecise. Assessments that
determined the presence and progression of "disease" were often done
only after inpatient admission. The subsequent treatment plans were often
rigid, with little if any consideration given to cost effectiveness.
Hospital-based treatment programs failed to provide the accessibility needed to
appropriately meet the demands of a rural clientele. Both distance and their
daily commitment to farming activities made traditional AODA treatment services
an ineffective match for the needs of rural clients.
As our traditional assumptions were being challenged, we explored the
literature and progressive program trends, and our own philosophy of chemical
dependency treatment began to evolve. We began developing an alternative model
of treatment.
This alternative model of treatment was based on the assumptions that:
- The complex interaction of psychological, social, and biochemical
factors leads to chemical abuse.
- Patterns of chemical abuse often begin as coping responses developed to
manage emotional distress or trauma.
- Chemical abuse is a complex issue that seldom, if ever, exists independent
of other psychosocial stresses.
- Chemical abuse problems vary greatly in their intensity.
- Chemical abuse problems are not necessarily progressive in nature.
Watching the needs of our rural and other clientele go unmet, it became
clear that treatment interventions needed to be matched closely to each
individual's needs. We focused on creating a service delivery model
emphasizing:
- Accessibility of assessment and treatment
- Assessment focused on determining treatment recommendations rather than
diagnosis
- Highly individualized treatment in the least restrictive environment
- Utilization of a broad continuum of medical and mental health services
- Aggressive case management
Methods
Managers of mental health care benefits are often viewed as "gatekeepers,"
whose function is to authorize and limit services. We developed a differing
philosophy: that benefits management is a matter of quality assurance and
preutilization review, not gatekeeping. Quality treatment, in the least
restrictive environment, should be provided before insurance benefits are
exhausted.
Case Management
In the context of this philosophy, the challenge was to provide quality
clinical case management that was client centered and emphasized aggressively
managed individualized treatment plans.
- The case manager is someone who can initiate and maintain a process
that can help substance abusers identify and access the right interventions at
the right time. The assumption of case management is that most people with
substance abuse problems can best be served by access to a range of resources,
rather than by a single counselor/case manager trying to provide direct help
with all the person's problems.
Bois and Graham 1993
In their 1993 article, Bois and Graham described the basic principles of the
case management approach. We have adapted them as follows:
- Empowerment: The client is involved in identifying his or
her own needs and is actively involved in the entire process of assessment and
treatment.
- Individualization: Because each client's strengths and needs are
unique, each assessment and treatment plan is client centered and different.
- Adaptability: As the client and his or her environment changes,
the case manager must reevaluate the client's treatment plan.
- Least restrictive: Assessments and interventions that work with
the structures of the client's life will be most effective.
- Professional expertise: The case manager should have advanced
training and professional expertise.
- Transformational: The case management model functions as a change
agent both for the individual AODA client and for the AODA treatment system as a
whole.
We created a model that utilizes existing rural support networks and medical
services, combined with the added development of specialized AODA services. The
additional services include outpatient detoxification services and home-based
counseling services focused on AODA treatment. In emphasizing aggressively
managed individualized treatment plans that utilize a broad continuum of
services, we were freed to develop treatment options specific to the needs of
our rural clients. This clinical case management approach soon demonstrated its
clinical and fiscal value. The advantages of this approach were made available
to all clients, regardless of funding source.
Assessment
Effective assessment is a process of exploration that empowers the client
and effects change. Our experience was that an assessment process focused on
diagnosis was of minimal value, often reducing the individual's level of
motivation and promoting rigidity. Additionally, the diagnostically focused
assessments seldom took into consideration the psychosocial stresses unique to
rural clients.
Assuming that chemical use functions within the broader context of any
individual's lifestyle, we developed a treatment-focused assessment process.
This process is designed to develop a dynamic treatment plan individualized for
each client. Diagnosis is secondary, and each client is actively involved in
developing a treatment plan specific to his or her needs.
These comprehensive assessments are provided by a clinical case manager who
has AODA certification at the highest level by the State of Wisconsin (Certified
Alcohol Drug Counselor III) and more than 3,000 hours of supervised clinical
experience beyond the master's degree. Comprehensive assessment is possible
because assessments are done by a clinical case manager with solid mental health
expertise in addition to chemical dependency training. In addition to exploring
the history and pattern of substance abuse (amount, duration, and frequency of
use), the case manager explores the following other essential areas with the
client:
Physical health
- Assess for physical complications related to chemical use
- Explore withdrawal history
- Explore any chronic pain patterns related to chemical use history
- Refer to family physician for physical examination if the client has had no
recent physical examination
Polydrug use
- Assess for use of multiple types of chemicals and use patterns
- Analyze the psychosocial component of problematic use
Self-medication
- Assess how chemical use facilitates the client's management of
emotional and social discomfort
Stress management
- Assess the stresses, both internal and external, that appear to be
alleviated by chemical use
High-risk situations
- Explore the individual's awareness of high-risk situationssituations
specific to the individual in which that person's risk of abusing chemicals is
high
Critical shift point
- Explore how the individual experienced the critical shift pointthat
point at which individuals become aware that their chemical use is a problem for
themselves or others
Stated use goal
- Explore the individual's use goalabstinence, occasional use,
regular controlled use, etc.
- Understand and assess the language the individual uses to describe urges or
moments of craving for chemicalsa source of valuable information about the
function of the individual's chemical use. (Traditional thought interprets
urges and cravings as statements of failure or as a first step toward relapse.
We believe that urges can best be interpreted as statements expressing the
individual's struggle to soothe unmet physical, psychological, social, and
spiritual needs.)
Mental health
- Assess the client's mental health. In addition to the clinical
interview, there are many excellent tools available for assessment of clinical
depression and other mental health issues.
Social and family history
- Assess for trauma history and explore ways that chemical use may be
functioning as a survival response
Availability for treatment
- Assess family, vocational, and travel dynamics that impact the
individual's availability for differing treatment options
In-Home Individual and Family-Focused Services
Many rural clients experience problems of isolation and inaccessibility to
treatment. A model of service delivery that emphasizes in-home treatment
addresses these problems. In addition, home-based services facilitate the
initial first step of accessing mental health services, a step that is
often difficult for rural clients because of fears about social stigma or the
scheduling demands of a farming lifestyle.
The FCC case manager is able to integrate any combination of the following
in-home services into any treatment plan:
- Intense systemic AODA assessment to determine both emergent care
issues and ongoing individual and family treatment needs
- Individual and/or family counseling
- Family support services focused on support or crisis intervention
- In-home detoxification, including home nursing care and ongoing medical
monitoring by a registered nurse
Outpatient/In-Home Detoxification Program
The factors that determine a client's appropriateness for outpatient/in-home
detoxification are:
- Physical condition
- Support system
- History of and intensity of withdrawal symptoms
- Accuracy of self-report information
- Client's comfort level
If it is determined that the client is appropriate for outpatient/in-home
detoxification, the clinical case manager refers him or her to a physician for
an immediate medical evaluation. A number of physicians have agreed to be on
call for such circumstances. If the client has a primary care physician and
wants this doctor to handle all medical services, the client's wishes are
supported.
In consultation with the physician, the clinical case manager arranges an
immediate schedule of home visits by a registered nurse. The home health care
nurse will consult regularly with the physician and will provide ongoing
monitoring of:
- Blood pressure
- Respiration
- Temperature
- Medication management
- Progression of withdrawal
Inpatient medical treatment is available at any time deemed necessary by the
consulting physician.
The clinical case manager continues to provide ongoing coordination of
services, therapeutic support, AODA and mental health assessment, and daily
review with the home health care nurse. Additionally, all outpatient/in-home
detoxification cases are contemporaneously reviewed by a psychiatrist.
Additional services, available outside the home, are typically coordinated
with the in-home services. These outside services include:
- Individual, family, or group outpatient psychotherapy
- Psychiatric or psychological evaluation and medication management
- Intensively structured outpatient group treatment
- Intensive day treatment
- Residential treatment
- Treatment foster care services
- Inpatient medical treatment
- Support groups
The following case review demonstrates this case management model in action.
Case Review
A 9-year-old male was brought in to the emergency room by both of his
parents, who were seeking to have him hospitalized for escalating behavioral
problems and for threatening to harm himself and others. The hospital social
worker did an initial assessment and telephoned the clinical case manager who
was on call with the following information:
- The family had never accessed either inpatient or outpatient mental
health services in the past.
- The father had a significant problem with alcohol abuse.
- The parents were divorced and shared custody and placement.
- There was one younger sibling.
- The mother had an unresolved history of childhood sexual trauma and
clinical depression.
- There was significant conflict between the parents.
Additionally, the 9-year-old had recently been diagnosed with Attention
Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder by his primary care physician, who had prescribed
a medication intervention of methylphenidate hydrochloride (Ritalin). Because
of perceived social stigma, the parents had been reluctant to follow through
with medication management and had not administered the methylphenidate
hydrochloride.
As the local hospitals do not have a psychiatric facility for children,
hospital staff were eager to explore solutions other than the following limited
options they were initially faced with:
- Admit the child to the adult psychiatric unit
- Refer the child to the State mental health institute 2-1/2 hours away
- Refer the child to the police and a secured juvenile detention facility
In consultation with the social worker and emergency room physician, the
clinical case manager determined that the child needed:
- Stabilization in a secure environment
- Psychological evaluation
- Consultation with the family physician who had prescribed the
methylphenidate hydrochloride
- Assessment of individual and family struggles with AODA and depression, and
the impact of these on the current crisis
It was determined that these needs could be met in a less structured
environment than the hospital, secured detention, or the State hospital. The
following recommendations concerning assessment and treatment of the boy were
made and followed:
- One week of stabilization and evaluation of the child in a licensed
treatment foster home
- A psychological evaluation within 24 hours
- Consultation with the family physician
- In-home, family-focused assessment of the family dynamics, AODA, and other
factors that enabled the crisis to develop
- Home-based family therapy upon the child's discharge from the treatment
foster home; this family therapy would be designed to facilitate reintegration
of the child into the family and to preclude future destabilization
- Outpatient psychotherapy recommended for the parents to address the
father's chemical abuse patterns and the mother's maladaptive coping patterns
The treatment foster parents picked up the child in the emergency room and
he remained in their home for 1 week. Exit interviews with the providers and
the parents confirmed that this intensive, family-focused intervention of
counseling and treatment foster care services was successful in stabilizing the
patient and in providing psychological evaluation of individual and family
issues. Secondarily, the funding saved was estimated to be at least $3,000 to
$4,000. Home-based services and outpatient psychological and psychotherapy
services were subsequently provided to the family.
Findings/Conclusions
The unique needs of rural AODA clients are best met by a broad continuum of
services that emphasize outpatient and in-home service options.
Psychotherapists and family physicians can utilize case-managed intensive
outpatient and in-home services for both crisis intervention and ongoing AODA
treatment. Structured quality assurance and utilization review (QAUR)
procedures ensure that the Family and Children's Center maintains its commitment
to excellence in clinical service. QAUR procedures also provide FCC with
regular feedback, which is immediately integrated into the dynamic case
management process.
Recommendations
The disease paradigm, and the consequent reliance on inpatient treatment,
functioned to move chemical abuse problems out of the moral arena and into the
medical arena. Looking to the future, it is important to recognize that
chemical abuse problems are very complex, that they exist on a wide spectrum of
intensity, and that the treatment arena must therefore include a wide spectrum
of creative service responses. In rural America, and elsewhere, where the
impact of chemical abuse is hard felt in the home, treatment services should be
available in the home.
Reference
Bois, C., and Graham, K. Assessment, case management and treatment
planning. In: Howard, B.M.; Harrison, S.; Carver, V.; and Lightfoot, L., eds.
Alcohol and Drug Problems: A Practical Guide for Counselors. Toronto,
Ontario: Addictions Research Foundation, 1993. pp. 87-102.
Previous |
Table of Contents |
Next Top of Page

Last Updated 11-7-02
|