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Patient Confidentiality

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Title: Patient Confidentiality


1
Patient Confidentiality Documentation
  • Clinical and Legal Issues for Ethical
    Documentation
  • By Michael G. Conner, Psy.D

2
Presenter Background
  • Community Crisis
  • Residential Psychiatric
  • Inpatient Medical
  • Emergency Room
  • Outpatient Mental Health (HMO)
  • Primary Medical Care
  • Health Education
  • Private Group Practice
  • Private Practice
  • Airline Critical Incidents
  • 911
  • Police Department
  • Educational Consulting
  • Internet Mental Health

3
The Purpose of Documentation
  • Historical record for subsequent care
  • Source of treatment orders, treatment
    directives and treatment activities
  • Record of the quality of care
  • Consultation support
  • Supervision monitoring progress
  • Training
  • Involving the client

4
Documentation Requirements Are Different Across
Professions
  • Licensed
  • Child, Marriage Family Therapists
  • Professional Counselors
  • Clinical Social Workers
  • Psychologists
  • Psychiatrists
  • Psychiatric Nurse Practitioners
  • Non-Licensed
  • School psychologists
  • Counselors
  • Therapists
  • Third party review
  • Utilization review
  • Quality assurance

5
Documentation Requirements Are Different Across
Practices
  • Specialized
  • Addictions
  • Sex Offenders
  • Crisis Intervention
  • High Risk
  • Dangerousness
  • Suicide Self-Harm
  • Acute Emergent
  • Borderline Narcissism
  • Narrow Practice Focus
  • Pain management
  • Stress Symptom Reduction
  • Broad Practice
  • Psychotherapy
  • Hypnosis
  • Uncomplicated
  • Health education

6
Examine Your Resistance
  • No time or place
  • Unclear purpose
  • No clear standard of care and behavior
  • Not sure what to document
  • Dont want to make a mistake (liability,
    complaints)
  • Threatens confidence and self-esteem

7
Arguments For Documentation
  • Articulation and reflection can enhance skill and
    quality of service
  • Effective liability and risk management
  • Courts and licensing boards view failure to
    document as a failure to provide service

8
Arguments Against Documentation
  • Difficulty providing full informed consent
  • Insurance Waiver
  • Civil Actions (Defendant or Plaintiff)
  • Criminal prosecution and defense
  • Inability to control subsequent breaches
  • Creates an artificial quality and pressure
  • Emphasis on behavior and not the relationship
  • Diminished dignity to the process and relationship

9
Laws
  • Federal Law
  • Statutory Law
  • Case Law
  • Administrative Rules

10
Standards of Care Behavior
  • Mandatory behavior is established by federal,
    statutory law and case law as well as
    administrative rules.
  • Standards of care and behavior are established by
    professionals
  • Standards of care and behavior in a court are
    established by an expert
  • The standard of care and behavior for an expert
    or specialist is higher than a general
    practitioner.

11
Law Confidentiality
  • Non-Disclosure. Cannot release unless there is an
    exception, limit reached or waived
  • Privilege. Cannot reveal information in court
    without waiver or due process
  • Duty. Must take steps to warn or protect that may
    include a limited breach of confidentiality

12
Clinical Effectiveness
  • Services from any school of thought can be
    documented in a measurable manner and behavioral
    terms
  • Clinical effectiveness is defined as the
    alleviation of mental health impairments that may
    be affecting individual functioning in a
    reasonable period of time.

13
Medical Necessity
  • A term used primarily to exclude problems from
    treatment
  • Definition. The need for professional services
    due to the existence of a mental disorder that
    results in a significant functional impairment
  • Operational Definition. A DSM or ISCD diagnosis
    that is supported by functional impairments,
    behavioral evidence or physical evidence.

14
Functional Impairments
  • Problems in daily living including social,
    occupational, academic, marital.
  • Behavior is the basis of documenting problems
  • Behaviors are thoughts, emotions, cognitions,
    perceptions, events descriptions

15
Malpractice
  • 4 Ds (Dereliction of Duty Directly Led to
    Damage)
  • The practitioner owed a duty to the client based
    on an established therapeutic relationship
  • The quality of care fell below the expected
    standard of practice
  • The patient suffered or caused harm
  • Practitioner dereliction of duty was the direct
    cause of harm or injury

16
Elements Of A Record
  • Informed consent
  • Contract
  • Screening/Assessment
  • Treatment Plan
  • Progress Notes
  • Termination Summary
  • Ancillary Information

17
Detail Extensiveness of Documentation
  • 3 Approaches
  • Document extensively and in great detail
  • Document only that which is relevant to a
  • Diagnosis
  • Treatment
  • Goals
  • Document as little as possible

18
Informed Consent
  • Treatment is optional and not required
  • Treatment methods Used
  • Time commitments
  • Risk of life changes
  • Limits of confidentiality
  • Fees and method of payment
  • Record keeping
  • Qualifications
  • Consent of minors
  • How you document
  • Access to files by others

19
Screening, Assessment, Treatment Plan Progress
Notes
  • Your assessment of your screening should generate
    a treatment plan and a diagnosis
  • Progress notes are based on the treatment plan
    and diagnosis
  • Progress notes document further diagnostic
    information and reflect progress toward the goals
    of the treatment plan

20
Diagnosis (Dx)
  • When must a diagnosis be valid?
  • Valid Diagnosis. After an intake, interviews or
    initial sessions that is timely and sufficiently
    comprehensive as well as consistent with a
    reasonable standard of care and behavior
  • Valid Working Diagnosis (DSM Provisional or
    Reason for Visit). When a useful diagnosis can
    be made based on data in accordance with a
    reasonable standard of care and behavior.

21
Diagnosis (Dx)
  • When is a diagnosis potentially negligent?
  • Experts would all agree on a different diagnosis
  • The diagnosis could have been accurate or certain
    at the time the assessment and treatment plan was
    generated
  • A reasonable standard of care and behavior was
    not followed

22
Treatment Plan (TxPlan)
  • The TxPlan is based on your assessment of your
    screening
  • Intake
  • Interview
  • Initial sessions
  • Most TxPlans can be generated in 1 to 3 sessions
    (1 to 3 hours)
  • The TxPlan and changes in the TxPlan can be
    documented in the progress notes

23
Elements Of A Treatment Plan
  • Diagnosis
  • Patient identified and described problems
  • Practitioner identified and described problems
  • Treatment modality
  • Treatment activities
  • Frequency and duration of treatment
  • Anticipated time frame of treatment
  • Measures of progress
  • Criteria for completion

24
Treatment (Tx)
  • Modality
  • Individual
  • Group
  • Family
  • Couples
  • Phone
  • Con-joint
  • Etc
  • Therapeutic Activities
  • Interpersonal therapy
  • Hypnosis EMDR
  • Education
  • Stress inoculation
  • Escape avoidance prevention
  • Counseling Guidance

25
Measures of Progress
  • Self-assessment
  • Opinion of others
  • Assessment by others
  • Subjective Units of
  • Distress (SUDs)
  • Improvement (SUIs)
  • Progress (SUPs)
  • Goal attainment
  • Report of symptom (Sx) increase or reduction
  • Task accomplished
  • Questionnaire
  • Standardized
  • Non-Standardized

26
Documentation Evidence
  • Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence
  • Documentation of what happened is evidence that
    it happened
  • Documentation of what did not happen is evidence
    that is did not happen (up to a point)
  • Absence of documentation is not evidence that it
    did not happen unless you routinely document at
    the level of information

27
Soap Progress Notes
  • S.O.A.P.
  • Subjective
  • Objective
  • Assessment
  • Plan
  • Based on a medical model where patient reports
    symptoms, there are physical findings, a
    physicians diagnosis and a plan (Orders)

28
SOAP Example
  • Jim Doe
  • Aug 30, 01 Ind 1430 to 1550
  • S/O Im doing better but I was really ticked at
    my wife all week. Reports more arguments but
    fewer explosive episodes. SUD5. Discussed
    family of origin for patterns similar to this.
    Examined automatic thoughts. Taught thought
    detection and thought selection. Restless and
    interrupted me through out session.
  • A Pt remaining focused on Tx Plan. Improvement
    over last session SUD2. Errors in thinking
    contribute to low frustration tolerance, over
    reaction and anger.
  • P Remain on Tx plan issues with wife.

29
Generic Progress Notes
  • Generic
  • Description of contact (when, who)
  • Modality
  • Treatment activities
  • Progress or lack of progress
  • Observable data (related to continued need or
    prognosis)
  • Significant focus or events in therapy
  • Based on a model of psychotherapy services

30
Generic Example
  • Jim Doe
  • Aug 30, 01 Indiv office 1430 to 1550
  • Cognitive therapy examining automatic self
    defeating thoughts.
  • Education Taught and practiced thought
    detection and thought selection.
  • Client successfully examined, selected and
    developed alternatives based on healthy
    alternative thoughts.
  • Increased confidence evidenced by relaxation
    responses and self-assessment
  • Focused on communication and interaction patterns
    with wife and children that lead to conflict and
    increased anger. Examined similar patterns in
    family of origin.

31
Problem Oriented Progress Notes
  • Problem Oriented
  • Data (what is said, observed or happens)
  • Problems (Issues reported, identified, dealt
    with)
  • Treatment (Modality and activities)
  • Evaluation (progress and evidence of progress)
  • Follow-up (patient home work and further Tx)
  • A charting procedure that is favored in the
    medical field.

32
Problem Oriented Progress Note
  • Jim Doe
  • Aug 30, 01 Indiv office 1430 to 1550
  • Data Im doing better but I was really ticked
    at my wife all week. Reports more arguments but
    fewer explosive episodes. Discussed family of
    origin for patterns similar to this. Pt.
  • Problems Focused on communication and
    interaction patterns with wife and children that
    lead to conflict and increased anger. Examined
    automatic self defeating thoughts.
  • Treatment Cognitive therapy. Education Taught
    thought detection and thought selection.
  • Evaluation Self assessment SUD5 and 2 at end
    of session. Client successfully examined,
    selected and developed alternatives based on
    healthy alternative thoughts. Increased
    confidence evidenced by relaxation responses and
    self-assessment
  • Follow-up Remain on Tx plan issues with wife.
    Practice what he learned outside Tx. Review
    progress next session

33
Documentation
  • Include
  • Directives of supervisors superiors impacting
    Tx
  • Content pertinent to Tx
  • Consultations
  • Evidence of failure to
  • Comply or take action
  • Follow through
  • Pt complaints about Tx
  • Possibly include
  • Significant phone contacts
  • Late, failed or canceled appointment
  • Supervisors signature for students

34
Documentation
  • Exclude
  • Information that can easily be misinterpreted
  • Information that has no impact or is irrelevant
    to Dx or Tx
  • Past criminal behavior if not relevant to Tx or
    risk
  • Sexual behavior if not relevant to Tx or risk
  • Your personal comments, opinions or process notes
  • Remarks about 3rd parties unless important to Tx
  • Client writings and journals

35
Groups, Families Couples
  • Problems
  • Confidentiality is threatened by co-participants
  • Divorces
  • Child custody
  • Law suites
  • Blended records are difficult to separate
  • Requests for records
  • Court Orders
  • Testimony in court

36
Groups, Families Couples
  • Recommendations
  • Keep a separate file if you answer yes to any of
    the following
  • Would I want a member of a group, family or
    couple to read this?
  • Can I predict or be certain what will happen to
    these records?
  • Exclude
  • Names of people not treated
  • Information that would allow a member to be
    identified

37
Self-Harm, Suicide, Destructiveness and Violence
  • There is a wide gap between the laws, ethics,
    standards of care and behavior and ethical and
    moral imperatives.
  • Informed consent based on a professional ethic
    and personal moral position is a private practice
    option since a treatment relationship is based on
    a case by case agreement that is not a public
    right.
  • Informed consent based on public or
    organizational policy may not allow for a
    professional and personal position since a
    contractual responsibility and public right to
    services already exists.

38
Three Positions
  • Individual Position The therapist may breach
    confidentiality as reasonably necessary to
    protect property, the health and life of an
    individual or the safety of society. (personal
    conscience)
  • Professional Position The therapist may breach
    confidentiality as reasonably necessary in
    accordance with State law and professional
    standards of care and behavior.
    (social-professional responsibility)
  • Organizational and Public Servant Position The
    therapist must follow explicit and implicit
    policy and procedures. (social-organizational
    responsibility)

39
Danger To Self Or Self-Harm
  • Direct statement of intent or consideration
  • Self-harming or suicidal thought content, process
    behavior
  • Hx of previous attempts
  • Contributing risk factors
  • Purpose
  • Family Hx of attempts
  • Therapeutic intervention to reduce risk
  • No-harm agreement
  • Acute risk plan
  • Follow-up appointments
  • Cooperation reaction to plan
  • Consultation plan
  • Contacts to prevent

40
Risk Of Violence Or Destructiveness
  • Direct statement of intent or consideration
  • Aggressive and violent thought content, process
    behavior
  • Hx of previous violence
  • Contributing risk factors
  • Purpose
  • Therapeutic intervention to reduce risk
  • No-harm agreement
  • Acute risk plan
  • Follow-up appointments
  • Cooperation and reaction to plan
  • Consultation plan
  • Consultation
  • Contacts to prevent

41
Suicide Risk
  • Duty
  • Document attempts to involve appropriate others
    designated by the client to support, monitor and
    reduce the risk
  • Document any failure or refusal to take steps to
    reduce the risk
  • Release only that information necessary to
    protect the client and others

42
Violence Risk
  • Duty
  • Laws and standards of practice in Oregon are not
    well established.
  • Attempt to warn the victim with the client
    present (if safe)
  • Document that you attempted to contact the victim
    at regular intervals
  • Give the warning to necessary others if actions
    fail to protect the victim
  • Release only that information necessary to
    protect the victim and the client
  • Cannot hold or may not be able to admit a
    patient unless there is a causal disorder that
    requires treatment
  • Take some reasonable action that could protect
    victims.

43
Termination Note
  • Is essentially a progress note.
  • Should be a separate page that could be sent
    rather than entire record
  • Involves
  • Treatment dates
  • Modalities
  • Treatment Activities
  • Diagnosis or Problem
  • Tx Plan Overview
  • Progress, problems, accomplished
  • Prognosis
  • Follow-up

44
Patient Information Disclosures Under HIPPA
  • Applies to all information whether oral, paper or
    electronic
  • Applies to Private Practitioners, Hospitals,
    Health Insurer, Health Plans, and business
    associated
  • Does not apply to Health Insurance or Workers
    Compensation companies

45
Release of Information Under HIPPA
  • Professionals must obtain a release from each
    patient for all communication with 3rd party
    payers
  • One release may be used for all routine
    disclosures (treatment, payment, health plan
    operations)
  • Minimum necessary medical information can be
    disclosed to another provider for purposes of
    treatment

46
Psychotherapy Notes Under HIPPA
  • So far, Psychotherapy Notes are not considered
    part of the patients chart/health record for
    purposes of routine disclosure (logical
    interpretation)
  • Psychotherapists can release the following (read
    minimum necessary) without special authorization
    from the patient because they document only the
    analysis of content and conversations. The
    following are not considered psychotherapy notes
    (read minimum necessary).
  • Diagnosis, functional status, Tx plan, symptoms,
    prognosis, progress, medical prescription
    monitoring, session start and stop times,
    modality, frequency of Tx, results of clinical
    tests
  • Content, conversations and everything else are
    psychotherapy notes (read more than minimum
    necessary).

47
Information Released to 3rd Party Payer Under
HIPPA
  • Screening/Assessment
  • Symptoms (DSM glossary of terms)
  • Results of clinical tests (Standardized
    questionnaires/tests)
  • Diagnosis DSM , /or Reason for coming
  • Tx Plan
  • Session start stop times (log of appointments)
  • Frequency of Tx times per week , month and
    duration
  • Modality (individual, group, couples, family,
    phone, etc..)
  • Tx Activity (process, techniques, etc..)
  • Medical prescription monitoring (Rx,
    evaluations, re-evaluations)
  • Progress routine, nominal improvement
  • Prognosis (Poor, fair, good, excellent, guarded)

48
Information Released to 3rd Party Payer Under
HIPPA - Example
  • Screening/Assessment
  • Symptoms insomnia, loss of appetite, low energy,
    loss of usual interest, agitation, low
    self-esteem, guilt, worry
  • Results of clinical tests Depression,
    internalizing, severe
  • Functional Status DSM Axis IV GAF 60 (current)
  • Diagnosis DSM Axis I 296.2, Axis II No diagnosis
    Axis III No reported problems
  • Tx Plan
  • Session start stop times (see log of
    appointments)
  • Frequency of Tx one appointment weekly, 12
    sessions, re-evaluate monthly
  • Modality Individual and referral to depression
    education class
  • Tx Activity Interpersonal health education
  • Medical prescription monitoring Medication
    evaluation if no progress by 8th session
  • Progress routine, nominal improvement
  • Prognosis Good with continued treatment
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