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Case Management

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Title: Case Management


1
Case Management
  • Carla Wilhite
  • Occupational Therapist R/L
  • Oklahoma AgrAbility Project
  • Oklahoma State University

2
Principles of Service Delivery
  • Informed choice.
  • Confidentiality
  • Client centered planning

3
Ethical principles to follow
  • Beneficence.
  • Do good.
  • First, do no harm.

4
Coordination of Case Management Service Delivery
  • Assessment
  • Planning
  • Implementing
  • Coordinating, again and again
  • Monitoring
  • Re-evaluation
  • Revise plan or discharge

5
Assessment
  • Intake Preliminary information used to determine
    eligibility for services or referral to others
    for service.
  • Assessment Observing and analyzing the barriers
    the person is facing in the farm or ranch
    operation. May involve just an interview or
    specific functional tests, measurements, etc.

6
Intake
  • Must be farming or wanting to farm.
  • Must have a disability.
  • Must need accommodations

7
Definition of farming
  • Broadly defined as cultivating, operating, or
    managing a farm for profit. A farm can include
    raising stock for food or fiber, dairy, poultry,
    fish, fruit, produce, orchards, providing range
    or pasturage, growing and harvesting forages,
    crops, grains, and ag-horticultural products.

8
Farmers
  • A farmer is defined as a person who is
  • Actively engaging in farming
  • Deriving income from such activity
  • Or retired from farming.
  • For AgrAbility purposes includes people who want
    to work in agriculture and family members of
    farmers.

9
Definition of disability
  • A disability is identified as a physical or
    mental impairment that substantially limits a
    major life activity. A substantial impairment
    is one that significantly limits or restricts a
    major life activity such as hearing, seeing,
    performing tasks, walking, caring for oneself,
    learning, or working.

10
Accommodations
  • Modifications to the work environment
  • Accessibility issues
  • Job re-structuring
  • Modified work schedule
  • Modified equipment
  • Assistive technologies or adaptive devices.

11
Assessment
  • Styles of assessment
  • Interview
  • Observations
  • Testing and measurement
  • Eclectic (elements of all three)

12
Assessment OT Style
  • OT Bag
  • Blood-pressure cuff and stethoscope
  • Pulse-oximeter
  • Strain gauge
  • Dynamometer
  • Goniometer
  • Disc-criminator
  • 9-hole peg board
  • Tuning forks
  • Heat/cold tubes
  • Tape measure
  • Digital camera
  • Gait belt
  • Resuscitation mask

13
Assessment OT Style
  • Functional assessment
  • Health history, previous level of function,
    pulse, respiration rate, O2 sat, blood pressure,
    medications.
  • Manual muscle testing (upper and lower)
  • Hand function (prehension, fine motor, gross
    motor)

14
Functional assessment cont.
  • Sensory evaluation (vision, hearing, touch,
    smell, taste)
  • Posture and postural deviations
  • Gait and balance
  • Pain scale

15
OT assessment cont.
  • Activities of daily living self-care, work,
    communication, driving status, leisure, etc.
  • Home safety trip hazards, clutter, bathroom
    safety equipment, electrical cords and plug-ins,
    fire alarms, fire extinguishers, emergency
    egress, etc.

16
OT assessment cont.
  • Psycho-Social assessment
  • Adjustment grief, anger, acceptance
  • Depression, anxiety, suicidality
  • Adaptability flexible vs. rigid
  • Evidence of motivation
  • Financial position or stressors
  • Social support
  • Community participation

17
OT assessment cont.
  • Work-site
  • Environmental conditions
  • Building access
  • Workbenches
  • Equipment access
  • Seating in agricultural machinery
  • Terrain
  • Fences/gates
  • Tools

18
OT assessment cont.
  • Miscellaneous
  • Cognitive assessment
  • Visual-perceptual assessment
  • Use of time worksheets
  • Depression scale
  • Other assessment tests as needed

19
Reporting
  • Report should be ability focused, not deficit
    focused.
  • Organized in an understandable format Intro,
    assessment, findings, recommendations, plan

20
Reporting
  • Uses of the report
  • For goal-setting.
  • For making referrals.
  • For staying focused on the plan.
  • For persuasion of third party payers or funding
    sources.

21
Planning Goal-setting and prioritization of goals
  • Goal-setting
  • Client-centered goals/functional goals
  • Versus
  • Organizational goals
  • All goals should be RUMBA
  • Relevant,Understandable,Behavioral,and
  • Achievable

22
Client- centered goal
  • Goal Farmer John will demonstrate the ability to
    safely drive a tractor with hand control
    modifications.

23
  • Objectives
  • John will verbalize understanding the types of
    hand control adaptations available for
    agricultural machinery.
  • John will acknowledge the pros and cons of
    commercial adaptations vs. local fabrication of
    controls.
  • John will choose the hand control modifications
    needed for his tractor.
  • John will select a strategy for financing hand
    controls.
  • John will arrange for installation of devices to
    control the tractor.
  • John will seek appropriate guidance or teaching
    for using hand controls to operate his tractor.

24
  • Activities
  • Provide John with information on hand controls
    for operating tractors.
  • Provide John with information on liability,
    pros/cons of locally fabricated solutions.
  • Discover possible sources for local fabrication
    and commercial fabrication.
  • Discuss financial resources for paying costs of
    hand controls (self-pay, DRS, combination of
    sources)
  • Provide examples of a standard of safe operation
    of tractor.
  • Driving instruction?

25
Implementing the Plan
  • Assisting the client as they enter vast
    bureaucratic systems and making sure they come
    out alive on the other end.
  • Providing reliable information on which to make
    decisions.
  • Assist in putting together the right array of
    resources.

26
Know your resources
  • Continuous and ongoing activity to locate and be
    able to refer people to the right agencies,
    services, etc.

27
Coordinating
  • Phone calls
  • Checking in
  • Facilitating decision-making
  • Advocating
  • Tasking others

28
Monitoring
  • How is it going as changes are implemented?
  • Tweak, tweak, tweak as needed

29
Re-evaluation
  • Are the goals met? If not, why?
  • Are new needs identified?
  • Or is it time for closure?
  • Send satisfaction survey or conduct interview?
  • Document outcomes.

30
Two Best Practice Tips
  • Become a master of observation
  • Verbal and non-verbal communiction
  • Function, function, function
  • Focus on what the individual wants and needs
    (client-centered), not on what you see they need
    (expert-centered).

31
  • Recognition
  • This material is partially based on the training
    module in Case Management developed by Mary Beck,
    National AgrAbility Staff
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