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Providing Needed Treatment Options in the Face of Managed Care
Jim Lohmeyer, M. Div. Program Director/Chaplain Family Recovery
Center Clara Barton Hospital Hoisington, Kansas
Abstract This paper
describes a treatment program structure and staffing pattern which we have found
to be effective in the face of managed care. Family Recovery Center in
Hoisington, Kansas made the decision to develop two outpatient day treatment
programs with an inpatient program at the heart of both programs. This would
require only one team of three full-time counseling staff plus nursing staff,
totaling 7.2 full-time equivalent positions, with flexibility downward in the
nursing staff and flexibility of responsibilities in the counseling staff. The
result is a team that can cover a continuum of services from
inpatient/intermediate treatment to outpatient day treatment, continuing care,
and Family Focus Week. This approach has been welcomed by managed care
coordinators and State funding sources alike. We recommend this approach to
rural and other small markets as a way to provide the continuum of care locally,
while allowing support for patients and staff throughout the continuum. |
The purpose of this paper is to describe the approach taken by one treatment
center to gain needed flexibility within the current treatment market: a market
that faces providers with limited resources and with outside funding sources
that dictate at what level our patients will be treated. We developed this
staffing pattern prior to the advent of managed care. But we found this
approach helped us to make the transition to managed care rather easily, while
others around us struggled with putting an outpatient program in place.
Background of the Approach: Changing To Survive
If necessity is the mother of invention, then survival is its midwife. In
1986, the Family Recovery Center at Clara Barton Hospital in Hoisington, Kansas
faced a crisis of survival. We had just watched our nationwide chemical
dependency management corporation leave us for greener pastures. We were faced
with the stiff competition of a couple of aggressive hospitals in the area that
were vying with us for patients in our largely rural counties of western and
central Kansas.
We looked at our situation and asked what services we could provide that
would be both unique to the area and yet effective. An outpatient day treatment
program to complement the inpatient program seemed to be a natural. Such a
program provides several advantages:
- Outpatient day treatment is more affordable than inpatient treatment.
- It provides the structure that many patients need and still allows them to
maintain commitments to work and family.
- It also requires the patients to begin practicing the principles of
recovery from the first day of treatment, because they continue to function in
the world where they will need to stay sober after treatment.
There was, however, no money for extra staff. The solution was to use
existing staff.
The Program Plan
Family Recovery Center made the decision to develop two outpatient day
treatment programs with the inpatient program at the heart of both programs. We
started this approach by looking at the inpatient program's day schedule; we
noted that there were two basic treatment activity times. One lay at the heart
of the day, from 9:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. The second was
early evening.
The Family Recovery Center had a program director, a day counselor whose
work began at 8:00 a.m., and an evening counselor who began the work day at 1:00
p.m. With some slight modification of the inpatient program, we could develop
an outpatient day program for unemployed patients and night workers on the
daytime schedule and could develop a second program for day workers from 6:00
p.m. to 10:00 p.m. Monday through Friday evenings.
Our subsequent experience is that some schedule modifications have to be
made from time to time to meet an individual's employment and commuting needs.
For example, patients who go to work before 3:00 p.m. may need an 8:00 a.m. to
noon schedule. But generally, these are workable schedules for most patients.
Implementing the Program
We began with some very flexible criteria for admission to each program.
Persons considered to be a good risk for outpatient day treatment were those who
were either a first-time patient or had had a period of quality sobriety,
especially recently. If the person was a daily drug user with poor structure in
his or her life, we might begin treatment in the inpatient program for 10 days
to 2 weeks before transferring the person to outpatient day treatment.
This approacha shortened inpatient period followed by outpatient day
treatmentwas a novel approach that became very useful in dealing with
managed care programs. Obviously, this new approach also brought more specific
and defined criteria for admission and continued care in each level.
The New Era of Managed Care
Shortly after we instituted the new approach, managed care came into the
rural medical treatment market with the health maintenance organization (HMO);
managed care has now been instituted in the practice of most third-party payers.
The goal of managed care is to reduce the expense of medical care by funding
the least extensive (and expensive) therapy necessary for the patient.
Impact of Managed Care on Treatment Providers
For chemical dependency treatment providers, this meant that the
tried-and-tested practice of inpatient treatment (usually providing 3 to 6 weeks
of inpatient treatment) was being challenged. The challenge came because of a
study which stated that patients in outpatient treatment had results comparable
to those receiving inpatient treatment. In order to meet these demands for
outpatient treatment, some rural programs added an outpatient program while
continuing to maintain their inpatient program. For instance, one 16-bed
treatment program in our area added two more counselors to run their outpatient
program side-by-side with their inpatient program. Within months, both
modalities were closed. The cost of added staff brought an end to many
treatment programs in our area.
In the "good old days" before managed care, western Kansas (west
of Highway 81 and excluding Wichita) had at least 11 inpatient treatment
programs, most of them hospital-based. Some had histories going back almost 20
years; some were filling unused beds in rural hospitals. In the same area
today, there are only four inpatient treatment programs, including Larned State
Hospital. Those that remain have drastically reduced their level of service or
have received State funding.
Advantages of an Outpatient Day Program
In the beginning, Family Recovery Center regularly sent 50 to 75 applicants
away annually because they were not able to pay for treatment. In 1988, our
Center was helped when we sought to expand our income and service base by
offering services to the State of Kansas Alcohol and Drug Abuse Services (ADAS).
ADAS agreed to partially fund Family Recovery Center, primarily because of the
outpatient day treatment program, which could also provide a component of up to
10 days of intermediate treatment. Intermediate treatment is nonmedical
residential care.
The advantage of such an outpatient day schedule is that when managed care
emptied our beds, we were prepared with an alternate program. Like most
inpatient units, our inpatient admissions have gone down drastically since the
advent of managed care. Inpatient treatment dropped from 813 to 333 days during
the same period in which the number of outpatient day sessions provided climbed
from 749 to 1,623. Figure 1 shows the evolving pattern in utilization of
outpatient, inpatient, and intermediate care days between 1987 and 1993, with
ADAS support beginning in 1988.
Figure 1. Evolving pattern in utilization of outpatient, inpatient, and
intermediate care days [Not currently available]
We have reduced inpatient length of stay from about 15 days in 1987 to just
over 4 in 1993 (see figure 2). Our experience has shown that, when correctly
referred, patients who complete outpatient day treatment have about the same
level of recovery as inpatient treatment patients, but there are definitely
times when treatment in a residential program is important. The added structure
is often necessary, whether it is because of relapse in the outpatient programs,
for health reasons, emotional stabilization, or the need to separate from a "less
than supportive" support system.
Figure 2. Length of stay [Not currently available]
Moving Patients Among Treatment Modalities
Because Family Recovery Center is able to maintain the
inpatient/intermediate treatment modalities, we do not have to refer those
patients who are not able to remain chemical-free in the outpatient program.
History has shown us that when we refer patients out of the facilityunless
there is a big legal hammer hanging over their heads or they are otherwise
highly motivatedwe lose a larger percentage than if we are able to move
these patients to inpatient care for stabilization and then return them to
outpatient treatment. All our staff members work with all our patients, and
many patients from the various modalities work in groups, sharing lectures and
the family program with one another. This shared experience of staff and
patients improves the development of trust levels for transferred patients.
In addition to outpatient day and inpatient/intermediate treatment programs,
Family Recovery Center offers a continuing care program and a Family Focus Week.
Continuing care consists of weekly support groups for alumni led by a counselor
or counselor trainee. The monthly Family Focus Week consists of 20 hours of
support for the patient and family members.
Handling Staff Levels and Costs
Family Recovery Center has been able to maintain the two outpatient day
treatment programs and inpatient/intermediate treatment, plus a continuing care
program and a Family Focus Week using 7.2 full-time equivalents (FTE) of direct
care staff. (Full-time equivalents are the equivalent staff needed to staff the
program in a given week.) This staff includes a program director, a day
counselor, and an evening counselor, plus a registered nurse and nurse's aides.
Since we are housed in a hospital, we usually share 1.4 FTEs with nighttime
nursing staff on the medical wing, which has a physical view of the facility
from the nurse's station.
We have been able to endure many changes in patient load and in the
treatment climate without being overwhelmed by staff costs or staff cuts. We
are able to continue to provide inpatient treatment, a needed service for some,
without having the expense of maintaining the inpatient treatment center cost us
out of business.
We share indirect salary costs with the hospital, such as meals and laundry,
administration, and housekeeping; this affords further staff cost savings. The
number of admissions to all programs averages 94 patients per year or 9.8 per
month, although in the real world nothing is average. Monthly admissions have
been as few as 2 and as many as 20. We can find ourselves sitting around
wondering when the next referral source is going to call, or we can find
ourselves checking in four patients in a day with assessments, treatment plans,
and discharge summaries to do.
Flexibility of Staff
One of the reasons Family Recovery Center is able to maintain these programs
along with two sessions of Continuing Care and a monthly Family Focus Week is
because of the willingness of the staff members to wear more than one hat and to
be flexible in scheduling. For instance, the program director and the evening
counselor have both worked with families and, depending on needs, can easily
cover the Family Focus Week program. Both counselors can take care of afternoon
groups, depending on patient load. The program director is in a position to
cover administrative needs, as well as to cover clinical needs when the staff
and patient load require it.
Patients find this flexibility helpful as well, because even though we may
have only one patient in our inpatient/intermediate program, he or she is not
stuck in a group of one. Patients work together with other patients.
Outpatients can be supportive of the inpatients. Inpatients can lend insight to
outpatients, who are sometimes caught up in the dailiness of their lives.
Findings and Recommendations
While outpatient treatment has become the modality of choice in the days of
managed care, there remains a need for inpatient treatment. In order to
maintain an inpatient program while serving our patients with an outpatient day
treatment modality, Family Recovery Center has been able to combine all
modalities and use one team to staff these modalities. Such an approach
requires a talented, multifaceted team with a willingness to be flexible to
program needs and supportive of one another. While this may seem
counterproductive to staff stability, the same team members worked together from
the development of this concept until the untimely death of the program director
last year. Today, one of the team members has moved into the program director's
position and another has come to fill his place.
Our treatment team would wholeheartedly recommend our approach to those with
existing programs who wish to expand their continuum of services or to initiate
program services in a rural area. It has been a supportive approach for the
patients, who can maintain trust while moving from modality to modality in the
continuum of care and can work together in groups of workable sizes. Our
approach has also been supportive for staff, providing the flexibility of a
shared team approach.
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Last Updated 11-7-02
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