Title: Case Management
1Case Management
- Lecture 17, November 4, 1998
- Wrap-up Assessment
2Review Categorical Ordering of Major Counseling
Dynamics...
- ...that Occur Throughout Levers Recursive Stages
- Stage 1
- professional disclosure
- client role induction
- establishing trust
- data collection
- identifying problems-identifying purpose
- conceptualizing the case
- initiating the working alliance
3cont.
- Stage 2
- developing the working alliance
- refining case conceptualization/diagnosing
- setting goals-marking purpose
- planning interventions
- meaning-making
- checking progress
4cont.
- Stage 3
- facilitating client-acquisition of therapeutic
gain - determining an end point
- planning termination
- potential referrals for additional or ongoing
services - termination
- Sequential progression through stages is always
recursive
5R R Rehabilitation Counselors Vocational
Counseling
- Rehabilitation counselors need to be skilled in
vocational counseling - Create experiences that allow a person to
explore self within the context of work - Knowledge of self, educational options,
vocational possibilities enhance outcomes - Persons with disabilities job satisfaction was
strongly related to appropriate interest match
with specific vocational area
6Review Assessment
- Levels of Assessment
- Global level
- Basis of service plans
- Specific level
- Strategies in response to encountered barriers
- More specific level
- Moment-by-moment interactions, e.g., determining
an appropriate verbal response in a given context
that will produce an intended response or outcome
7Review Cronbachs Conceptualization (1990)
- Maximum performance
- Used to predict best performance
- ability, aptitude, achievement
- Typical performance
- How an individual might typically behave in
various situations - interests, values, personality characteristics
8Reliability Validity
- Reliability
- Degree to which scores are free from errors of
measurement - Consistency of scores obtained by the same
persons when reexamined on different occasionsor
under other variable conditions - Validity
- What the test measures, and how well it does so
- Tells us what can be inferred from scores
9Standardization
- Established normative sample
- Carefully specified procedure for administration
and scoring of each member of the normative
sample - Standardized administration of the test to others
can be scored and results compared to the
normative sample
10Assessment Methods
- Interviews
- Standardized Tests and Inventories
- Simulations of Work and Living Tasks
- Simulated and Real Environments
- Functional Assessment
- Systemic approach to describing skill, current
behavior, or both - Integration of interviews, observation,
self-report, examinations
11Interpretation and Synthesis of Assessment
Information
- Interpretation Degrees of Inference
- Lowest Samples of behavior in their own right
- Next higher level Bits of information are
interrelated in search of consistencies and
generalizations - Next higher level A hypothetical construct
(e.g. depression) may be used to describe the
essence of the consistencies or generalizations
identified
12Note
- Interpretation can often be far removed from the
original data source - Keep this in mind when consuming and interpreting
data
13Organization of Assessment Information
- Assets
- Limitations
- Preferences
- Information that addresses the individual AND the
environment
14Synthesis of Information
- Comprehensive working model of the individual
- Begins with INDUCTIVE reasoning
- inferences are drawn about individual bits of
information and apparent consistencies between
them - ...then DEDUCTIVE reasoning is used...
- formulate and test hypotheses regarding the
usefulness of the working model (accounting for
already available info as well as predictions
15Working Model revisions
- To the extent that the model does not account for
or predict relevant information, the model is
revised based upon new data gathered
16Danger! Bias in Interpretation and Synthesis
- Nezu Nezu, 1993
- Availability heuristic
- Readily recalled past experience exerts undue
influence, fail to consider other explanations - Representativeness heuristic
- Belief about individuals who share one feature
will likely share another (stereotypes) - Anchoring heuristic
- Initial impressions that are resistant to change
17Final Phase of Assessment Clinical and Service
Decisions
- Common to RC practice (detail in chapter)
- Selection for service
- Establishment of vocational objectives
- Identification of needed interventions
- Formulation of case service plan
- Disability determination
- Make use of the working model of the individual
to make predictions corresponding to the above
areas
18Future Perspectives
- Number of assessment tools available is
ever-increasing - Tests in Print IV (1994) indicated over 3,000
commercially available - Work sample/related systems 18 (Brown et al.,
1994) - Job Search software systems 12 (Berven, 1997)
- These numbers will likely increase dramatically
in the years ahead
19Computerized Assessment
- Burkhead and Sampson (1985) reviewed applications
in rehab counseling - Recent advances include the use of Adaptive
Testing for tests like the GRE, Marriage and
Family Therapy Board Exam, and even State Drivers
License Bureaus - Adaptive testing decreases the number of items
administered, and bases each subsequently
administered item upon the response to the former
20Systematic Practice Case and Caseload Management
- Cassell, Mulkey, Engen, in Maki Riggar, Ch 14
- Roessler Rubin, Ch 10
- November 5, 1997
21Systematic Practice
- Counseling
- The recursive dynamic chapter (11)
- Management
- Working in synergy
- balance principle
22Management Skills
- Cassell Mulkey(1985)
- it is evident that even the most
counseling-oriented rehabilitation practitioner
cannot survive without implementation of a t
least minimal skills in management (p. xiv) - Greenwood (1992)
- Caseload management emanates from a managing role
23Rehabilitation Caseload Management (CLM)
- Five point model
- 1. boundary definitions
- defines actions, micromanagement, macromanagement
- 2. skill clusters
- planning, organizing, coordinating, directing,
controlling - 3. personal control
- drives the system
24cont.
- 4. action decisions
- set objectives, proactive, outcome focus
- 5. systems approach
- politico-mandated
- These five points affect case load management
skills
25The Paradigm
- Know the definitions that guide your performance
- Develop the necessary management skills
- Use time management skills to manage
responsibilities - Setting objectives and making good decisions
- Systems approach to managing complex information
261. Boundary Definitions
- Personal and professional definitions of identity
and purpose (scope of practice) - ...a systematic process which assists persons
with physical, mental, developmental, cognitive,
and emotional disabilities to achieve their
personal, career, and independent living goals in
the most integrated setting possible through the
application of the counseling process. The
counseling process involves communication, goal
setting, and beneficial growth or change through
self-advocacy, psychological, vocational, social,
and behavioral interventions
27Styles of Management
- Proactive
- Anticipate problems before they happen or become
a crisis. Assertive, in charge, risk taker,
problem preventer (not just problem solver). - Reactive
- Low initiative, nonanticipatory, low personal
control over various aspects of management tasks.
28Certified Case Manager (CCM)
- Introduced in 1993, sponsored by the
Certification of Insurance Rehabilitation
Specialists Commission (CIRSC), now the
Certification of Disability Management
Specialists Commission (CDMSC). - CIRSC had a CIRS credential, which was renamed
the Certified Disability Management Specialist
(CDMS).
29CCM Certification Guide
- Case management is not a profession in itself,
but an area of practice within one's profession.
Its underlying premise is that when an individual
reached the optimum level of wellness and
functional capability, everyone benefits the
individual being served, the support systems, the
health care delivery systems, and the various
reimbursement sources. Case management serves as
a means for
30- achieving client wellness and autonomy through
advocacy, communication, education,
identification, of services resources, and
service facilitation. The case manager helps
identify appropriate providers and facilities
throughout the continuum of services, while
ensuring that available resources are being used
in a timely and cost-effective manner in order to
obtain optimum value for both the client
31- and the reimbursement source. Case management
services are best offered in a climate that
allows direct communication between the case
manger, the client, and appropriate service
personnel, in order to optimize the outcome for
all concerned. Certification determines that the
case manager possesses the education, skills, and
experience required to render appropriate
services based on sound principles of practice.
32Case Management
- a collaborative process which assesses, plans,
implements, coordinates, monitors, and evaluates
the options and services to meet an individuals
health needs, using communication and available
resources to promote quality, cost-effective
outcomes.
33Case management process
- Case identification and selection
- Identifying clients who will benefit from case
management - Objective assessment
- Develop a plan of care
- Implement the plan
- Monitor and reevaluate plan
- Evaluation of outcome re goals
34Caseload management (CLM)
- how to work with more than one case at a time,
how to select which case to work with, how to
move from one case to another, how to establish a
system to insure movement of all cases, and how
to meet the objectives one has established, in
terms of numbers served.
35Caseload versus Case Management
- CM is the process, CLM is the gestalt
- CLM is Macromanagement
- Large scale or system management
- CM is Micromanagement
- Managing smallest of details
362. Skill Clusters
- Planning
- Taking obscure or incomplete information and
making good predictions on outcome - Use a calendar
- Use anticipatory decision making
- Make planning a part of each day
- Use strategic planning
- Successive plans, one building upon the other
37Organizing
- Set ABC priorities
- Learn to ICE problems
- Insulate (be selectively unavailable)
- Concentrate (Block out times to concentrate on
the A category things) - Eliminate (avoid nonessential activities)
- Use a tickler system
- Helps you to jog your memory (planner, calendar,
etc.)
38Coordinating
- Counselor AND Coordinator
- Continuity
- bring together assessed needs, develop
interventions - Concatenation
- focus on linking elements (entities that are cost
effective) - Power Communication
- Contacting organizational leadership effectively
39Directing
- Keeping the consumer perspective in mind
- Assertiveness Ability to say no
- Do it now! Overcoming action inertia
- Five levels of initiative
- Must transfer initiative to the consumer (p. 228)
- Waiting to be told what to do
- Asking what next?
- Recommending a course of action, then acting
- Taking action independently, reporting
immediately - Independence, report routinely
40Controlling (last of skill cluster)
- Pulls together the other skill clusters to work
as a functional whole. - Tickler system (p. 229-230)
- 1. Prioritize cases
- 2. Set up weekly cycle for entire caseload
- 3. Initiate the tickler system on your planner
- 4. Keep the cycle going (use good notes, p. 230)
- Youll need a system in order to be successful!
413. Personal Control
- The fuel that drives the skill cluster
- Internal vs. external control orientation
- Internal take charge, take risks, manage time
appropriately, respond assertively, and apply
self-motivation and rewards for outcomes - External confusion over priorities,
procrastinates, not a risk taker, easily
manipulated by assertive or aggressive people,
unable to establish systematic approach to case
management
42Action Decisions
- Apex of decision making initial choice to act
or not act - Procrastination is the greatest threat to any
action decision - Action decision solution
- Need accurate, adequate information
- Set objectives compromise is an important part
- Specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, time-
specific (SMART) - Be proactive Select your action decisions
- Maintain outcome focus
434. Systems Approach
- You must have a self-constructed system of
operations in place to be effective - Systematic weighing and judging of competing
demands - Consistency and effectiveness are key!
44Roessler Rubin Chapter
- Systematic Caseload Management
- Planning for effective allocation of counselor
functions and tasks - Managing the implementation of the plan
- Evaluating the effectiveness of the plan and
implementation
45Planning
- R R list 9 aspects of planning in case
management - These issues were reviewed earlier
46Managing Time Allocations
- Intake Interviewing
- Rapid follow-up for new referrals in prompt
fashion - Counseling Planning
- At least hour process time for assessment
information and minimum of hour of face-to face
counseling depending on the needs of the client.
47Managing time allocations cont.
- Arranging, Coordinating, and Purchasing Services
- Make time allotment for arrangement after the
intake interview (example 30 minutues after the
initial interview to make arrangements). - Devote time to processing client information to
develop other possibilities for the client to
consider. - Interaction with community service providers
- Purchase of rehabilitation services
48Managing time allocations cont.
- Placement and Follow-up Services
- Monitoring and Problem Solving
- Business Management
- Budget management, funds reallocated to more
pressing needs. - Case recording or reporting insurance agency,
community service providers
49Time Management Principles
- R R provide a nice description of specific
instances in a state-federal VR setting where the
principles reviewed earlier are operationalized
50Evaluation Monitoring, Judging, and Changing
- Evaluation of case management takes the form of
- Monitoring Time map
- Judging Analyze unmet goals, re-prioritize
- Changing Determine what should be done to
accomplish goals
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