Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Building Recovery Based Systems and Programs Mark Ragins, MD Medical Director MHA Village Integrated Service Agency Mental Health America of Greater Los Angeles www.mhavillage.org [email protected] The Recovery Revolution True revolutions in social services are rare. They involve changes in our values, practices, relationships, cultures, systems, and communities. The main revolutions in our era have been: • • • • 12 step recovery Deinstitutionalization Hospice Mainstreaming special education kids …and now Recovery with serious mental illnesses Top 10 Reasons to Use Recovery Based Practice 1. When people don’t believe they have a mental illness and you want to help anyway 2. When people don’t do what you tell them to do 3. When people can’t be cured and have to live with significant symptoms 4. When the illness has swallowed them up and become their identity and their whole life 5. When substance abuse is a major issue and you want to integrate substance abuse and mental health services Top 10 Reasons to Use Recovery Based Practice 6. When their culture leads to a different understanding of mental illness and their use of services than you have 7. When trauma is a major issue and you want to help without retraumatizing them 8. When hopelessness and passivity have taken over 9. When people have significant strengths and want to take on more self responsibility 10. When people want to go on with their life in the “real world” DOMAINS OF TRANSFORMATION INSIDE OUTSIDE I VALUES EMOTIONS BEHAVIORS PRACTICE WE CULTURE MISSION SYSTEM PROGRAMS DOMAINS OF RECOVERY PROGRAMS I WE INSIDE OUTSIDE HOPE, GROWTH, and RESPECT ENGAGEMENT, EMPOWERMENT, REHABILITATION, SHARED RESPONSIBILITY, and TEACHING WELCOMING, HEALING, RECOVERY, and COMMUNITY INTEGRATION INDIVIDUALIZATION, INTEGRATED SERVICES, FLOW PROMOTION, and RELATIONSHIP BASED SERVICES Fundamental Recovery Concepts • Recovery is not the same as cure • Recovery is person centered, not illness centered • Recovery is from the crippling not the illness • Recovery is goal directed • Recovery is strengths based building resiliency Treating Acute Illnesses • Professionals as experts diagnosing illnesses and ordering treatment • Patient provides history and complies with treatment • Life is put on hold while in treatment • Short term professional-patient relationships We treat almost only chronic mental illnesses • Mission of public mental health to focus on chronic illnesses • Because of stigma people don’t come into treatment until waiting has been ineffective • Mental illnesses are particularly disabling, difficult to rehabilitate and adapt to • Mental illnesses are often associated with hopelessness • Mental illnesses impact self image rapidly and powerfully Treatment Implications • Emphasize patient education, collaboration, and selfhelp • Focus on hope • Try to keep people in their lives • Incorporate rehabilitation and adaptation • Focus on impact on self image • Promote long term, more personal doctor-patient relationships Mental illness creates special challenges in all these areas Recovery Implications • For acute illnesses recovery results from symptom elimination and cure • For chronic illnesses recovery results from: – – – – Achieving self-management of the illness Maintaining hope and self-image Carrying on with life through rehabilitation and adaptation Replacing professional supports with natural supports For acute illnesses recovery is illness-based For chronic illnesses recovery is person-based ILLNESS CENTERED friends (social support network) housing (treatment setting) illness vocational class (therapeutic activity) family PERSON CENTERED employment housing (home) illness (a part of me) person friends family PERSON CENTERED ILLNESS CENTERED The relationship is the foundation The diagnosis is the foundation Begin with welcoming – outreach and engagement Begin with illness assessment Services are based on personal suffering and help needed Services are based on diagnosis and treatment needed Services work towards quality of life goals Services work towards illness reduction goals Treatment and rehabilitation are goal driven Treatment is symptom driven and rehabilitation is disability driven Personal recovery is central from beginning to end Recovery from the illness sometimes results after the illness and then the disability are taken care of Track personal progress towards recovery Track illness progress towards symptom reduction and cure Use techniques that promote personal growth and self responsibility Use techniques that promote illness control and reduction of risk of damage from the illness Services end when the person manages their own life and attains meaningful roles Services end when the illness is cured The relationship may change and grow throughout and continue even after services end The relationship only exists to treat the illness and must be carefully restricted throughout keeping it professional Person Centered Recovery • Recovery with Chronic Illnesses must be person centered not illness centered. • Illnesses don’t recover, people do. Recovery is from the crippling, not the injury. Recovery is from the destruction, not the illness Person Centered Treatment The foundation of a good treatment is a good relationship, not a good diagnosis. The purpose of mental health treatment, including medication, is not just to treat mental illnesses. It’s to help people with mental illnesses have better lives. Medications should be quality of life goal directed instead of symptom relief directed Recovery is the approach that can make the dream of deinstitutionalization a successful reality. • Focus on building lives, not just treating illnesses • Emphasize opportunities for growth and recovery • Integrate substance abuse • Focus on Transitional Age Youth • Focus on highly problematic people • Hire large numbers of people with experiences with mental illnesses MEDICAL MODEL symptoms illness decrease symptoms return to life REHABILITATION MODEL illness functional impairment improved function return to life RECOVERY MODEL worker illness father church goer husband illness person Lakers fan 1. 2. 3. 4. HOPE EMPOWERMENT SELF-RESPONSIBILITY MEANINGFUL ROLES RECOVERY 1. Hope – believing the future can be better 2. Empowerment – believing you can make the future better 3. Self-Responsibility – taking actions to make the future better 4. Achieving Meaningful Roles – building a life in the community of your choice Hospice is the most successful person centered service system we have Hospice lessons: • People recover not from their illnesses, but from the destruction, the “crippling,” caused by their illnesses • The patients with the most destruction need recovery the most • “Caring not curing” • The recovery model is less frustrating and more inclusive than the medical model because it’s goals are more obtainable • “Live with dignity” RECOVERY-BASED SERVICES: Welcoming / Engagement Charity Treatment Rehabilitation Advocacy / Community Development Graduation Three Types of Services and Supports 1. Direct mental illness treatments 2. Coping with mental illnesses and destructive emotions 3. Rebuilding lives. In the last twenty years we’ve made far more progress in the last two types than in the first type of service. RECOVERY-BASED SYSTEM DESIGN Stages 1. “unengaged” 2. “engaged but not self-coordinating” 3. “self responsibility” 0. “unidentified” D. “discharged” RECOVERY-BASED TREATMENT PLANNING Stages 1. “unengaged” – needs engagement 2. “engaged but poorly self-coordinating” – needs to build skills and supports 3. “self responsibility” – needs to build self sufficiency and community supports Stage of Recovery Unengaged Engaged, but poorly self-coordinating Self responsible Care taking services Growth oriented services • Forced treatment • Protection • Benefits establishment • Acute stabilization • Outreach and engagement • Peer bridging • Concrete quality of life goals • Relationship building • Structure • Making decisions for people • Case management • Chronic stabilization • Supportive services • Skill building • Personal service coordination • Collaboration building • Benefits retention • Maintenance therapy and medication • Community integration • Self-help • Peer support • Wellness activities • Growth promoting therapy Unengaged – Tasks • • • • • • • • • Help them connect with staff Help them connect with program and peers Get them IDs and documentation Get them money to live on Try to begin a psychiatric and medical assessment and treatment Help secure safe and stable housing Get to know their families Try to keep the community from kicking them out – usually to jail and/or psychiatric hospitals Try to keep them from badly harming themselves and others Unengaged – Time to move on • Engaged with the community • Engaged with us, or someone else, to get help • Engagement with their goals consistent with our mission and values Engaged, but poorly self-coordinating – Get a Life • • • • • • • • • • • • Money Home Education Employment Managing Mental Illnesses Emotional growth and relationships Physical health Managing alcohol and drugs Sex and intimacy Pregnancy and parenting Family relationships Law abiding Engaged, but poorly self- coordinating – Skill Building Focus The point isn’t to get things for them, but to teach them how to get the next one themselves. Don’t do it for them. Have them do it while you sit next to them guiding them. They have to learn things the hard way, by making mistakes, but don’t waste their suffering. Help them learn the life lesson. Help them expand their world. Expose them to new possibilities. Help them discover their own abilities. Engaged, but poorly self- coordinating – Time to move on Some people continue to need this level of services and support and remain at the Village or other FSP. Some people have built enough skills and supports to graduate to a lower level of care – standard outpatient or wellness center. Some people will be ready to move towards self-sufficiency and community integration to leave the public mental health system (even if they still need meds or treatment). Self Responsible - Tasks • Develop self-sufficiency: economic, housing, personal empowerment and self-responsibility, wellness, coping skills • Develop community identity, roles, and supports to achieve community integration • Develop self paid professional treatment, if needed Community development and advocacy are key staff tools Self Responsible – Time to move on Graduation is crucial. Many members have never successfully completed anything before. The high profile presence of graduation decreases “drop outs”. Gradually relationships change – not really “termination” – may remain “friends” or “extended family” or “mentors” May give back to program inspiring other members. Some chose to work in mental health. Need to celebrate and continue to follow their success stories for both remaining members and staff Employment Services • Unengaged: day labor, “work for a day – house for a day” • Engaged, but poorly self-coordinating: agency businesses, supported employment including job development and coaching, group placements, supported mental health employment • Self responsible: non-disclosure competitive employment job development, employment with accommodations, competitive mental health employment Medication Services • Unengaged: accessibility, build relationship, “try it” samples, build “usefulness” • Engaged, but poorly self-coordinating: learn about medications together, education and choices, medication management, “patient driven” • Self responsible: self-management with “consultation,” finding community resources, becoming “ex-doctor” Incorporating Recovery Values It’s not just what you do that changes as people progress, or even why you do it. It’s also important how you do it. You shouldn’t be doing things the same way throughout someone’s course of recovery. The relationship changes as you move along. Extreme Risk - Values • • • • • Harm reduction and protection “Trauma sensitive” services Use coercion reluctantly Don’t waste their suffering Welcome them back Unengaged - Values • There’s “no wrong door” • Everyone is welcoming • A good treatment is built on a good relationship Engaged, but poorly self-coordinating Values • • • • • Support, don’t care-take Services are mobile Services are accessible Integrate services into a “one-stop shop” Be a “no fail” program Self Responsible - Values • • • • Create natural, community supports and roles Encourage people to “give back” Encourage mental health advocacy Create “graduation” rituals and services Why Should We Integrate Services? It’s much easier to do one kind of service very well than lots of services, but almost everyone needs lots of services, and if they’re not in one place, they won’t use them. “Do whatever it takes” doesn’t just mean to go beyond normal service limits, being dedicated, accessible, flexible, and creative. It also means “Do whatever service it takes.” “Meet them where they’re at” doesn’t just mean be good at welcoming, charity, housing first, and harm reduction. It also means being able to support an array of goals for people at a range of places in their recovery. Integrated Service Agencies • Unengaged: Outreach and engagement, drop-in centers • Engaged, but poorly self-coordinating: ACT teams, case management, club house • Self Responsible: Appointment based clinic, wellness center, private care Person-Centered Levels of Service (Recovery Based Spectrum of Care) Extreme risk Locked setting 1:1 supervision Legal interventions Community protection Acute treatment Engagement Unengaged Engaged, but not self coordinating Outreach Drop- Intensive and in case engagement center management (ACT) Welcoming Charity Evaluation and triage Documentation Benefits assistance Accessible medications Drop-in services Case management Team and Clubhouse Case management Integrated services Accessible medications Supportive services Direct subsidies Rehabilitation Self responsible Appointment based clinic Wellness center Appointment based therapy “Medications only” Wellness activities (WRAP) Self-help Peer support Community integration Where’s therapy? • • • • • • • “Corrective emotional experience” Engagement – relationship building Adapted into “therapist – case manager role” “In vivo” skill building Creating healing environment – “therapeutic milieu” Group therapy without walls Carl Rogers – empathy, authenticity, caring “1 step Recovery” Step 1: Take your meds and do what you’re told. Being “compliant” and leaving it to your doctor to prescribe meds to cure you hardly ever works. What else are you going to do?…and how are you going to get help to do it? “12 roads to recovery” 1. Talk to other people instead of isolating 2. Actually feel feelings and emotions instead of deadening them, medicating them, avoiding them, or getting high. 3. Learn some emotional coping skills 4. Learn to “use” medications instead of just “taking” medications 5. Take responsibility for your own life and make some changes in yourself 6. Go to work even when you’re not feeling well. Program Adaptations Form an integrated services program by providing a variety of services (established and created individually) to help people recover 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. What stage is this service best suited to? How does it promote quality of life goals? How does it promote progress in recovery? How can it be connected to self-help and peer support? How can it be connected to the community? How will you handle its relationships with other services in the program? “12 roads to recovery” 7. Get roles outside of mental illness and the mental health system 8. Improve physical health and wellness 9. Love other people – family, partners, kids 10. Work on acceptance and forgiveness instead of blaming and vengeance 11. Give back by helping others 12. Find meaning and blessings in suffering and reconnect with God and spirituality. Recovery Based Services 1. Engagement and welcoming 2. Shared decision making and building selfresponsibility 3. Rehabilitation – building skills and supports 4. Integration of services – including consumer provided services 5. Recovery based medication services 6. Integrating therapy and healing throughout services 7. Community integration and advocacy 8. Graduation and self-reliance 9. Providers living recovery values Recovery Oriented Administration Staff should be treated by administration the way we want them to treat their clients. Staff routinely complain that administrators don’t “practice what they preach”. Some of this is feeling administrators are too distant from daily work with clients and some is feeling that administration isn’t done with the same values as expected from line staff. CREATING RECOVERY-BASED CULTURES: RECOVERY-ORIENTED LEADERSHIP 1. 2. 3. 4. Hope Authority Healing Community Integration What is recovery-oriented supervision? Culture is Subjective The culture of a program may be very different from the program leaders’, the line staff’s and the consumers’ perspectives. Recovery is the consumers subjective experience of the process of rebuilding including their treatment and rehabilitation. Sources of Program Culture • • • • • • Mission / Vision Administrative “metaculture” Leader Habits / Traditions Consumers Degenerative Culture and Paperwork • Strong culture is said to exist where staff respond to stimulus because of their alignment to organizational values. • Conversely, there is weak culture where there is little alignment with organizational values and control must be exercised through extensive procedures and bureaucracy. My Seven Key Dimensions of a Recovery Based Culture 1. 2. 3. 4. Welcoming and Accessibility Growth orientation Consumer inclusion Emotionally healing relationships and environments 5. Quality of life focus 6. Community integration 7. Staff recovery Tracking Building Recovery Culture Exploring Welcoming and Accessibility Growth Orientation Consumer Inclusion Emotional Healing Quality of Life Focus Community Integration Staff Morale and Recovery Emerging Maturing Excelling Building and Sustaining Cultures • • • • • Artifacts and symbols Stories, histories, heroes, legends, jokes Rituals, rites, ceremonies, celebrations Beliefs, assumptions and mental models Rules, norms, ethical codes, values Learning Cultures: Expectations of Line Staff • Understand the “big picture” top-down vision and purpose and incorporate “administrative concerns” • Generate bottom-up concrete plans • Support bottom-up leaders • Generate time and motivation to implement plans • Spend time in groups evaluating impact and making changes in plans • Sustain process beyond leaders’ initial enthusiasm Program recovery based culture and psychiatrists The stronger the program’s recovery based culture the easier it will be to for the psychiatrists to become recovery based. Psychiatrists can be leaders in their program’s overall transformation. Overall, its best to include psychiatrists in overall transformation efforts, learning and growing, making changes and taking risks together with everyone else. Choices of Psychiatrists’ Roles in Recovery • • • • Ignore it Refer when “indicated” Actively collaborate with recovery providers Integrate into a recovery based program Stages of Recovery Based Careers • Student / Intern: Relationship skills, Understanding impact of illnesses, Usefulness in goals, Poverty services • Early Career: Collaborative medication, Trauma effects, Strengths based, Team work, Shared responsibility with clients • Mid Career: Collect stories from “practice”, Develop “art” of treatment, Emotional engagement with stability • Late Career: Numerous long term relationships / stories, Experience / patience, Mentoring Common challenges 1. Changing hiring patterns and roles – including consumer volunteers and staff 2. Increased attention to ethics and safety with lower walls and barriers 3. Avoiding permanent crisis mode 4. Billing for recovery services 5. Creating team work 6. Integrating services Common benefits 1. Decreased drop-outs even with challenging subpopulations 2. Integration of services 3. Enhanced dual diagnosis services 4. Enhanced quality of life outcomes 5. Decreased power struggles with clients 6. Decreased staff burnout 7. Increased flow through and graduation from services 8. Increased community involvement