xxAACP Newsletter, Volume 14, Number 3, Summer 2000 | ||
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AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF COMMUNITY PSYCHIATRISTSPRINCIPLES FOR THE CARE AND TREATMENT OF PERSONS WITH CO-OCCURRING PSYCHIATRIC AND SUBSTANCE DISORDERS (Approved: February 26, 2000) IntroductionPersons with co-occurring psychiatric and substance disorders experience persistent and recurrent difficulties which can interfere with every aspect of their lives. In addition, these persons have a high incidence of medical comorbidity, and their clinical course is associated with higher costs and poorer outcomes.In almost all psychiatric and addiction settings, people with co-occurring disorders appear with sufficient frequency that their presence must be anticipated in every clinical encounter, regardless of level of care or location of service. In many settings, particularly those serving people with serious and persistent mental illness, the majority of people seeking care have co-occurring substance disorders. Nonetheless, these persons are often poorly served in the current service system, in which treatment for co-occurring psychiatric and substance disorders is commonly provided in separate settings, with lack of integration and continuity. The American Association of Community Psychiatrists (AACP) is an organization of psychiatrists dedicated to the provision of highest quality services to persons in the behavioral health delivery system. As such, the AACP has agreed to the following set of principles for the care and management of persons with co-occurring disorders. We recommend that these principles form the basis of a collaborative planning process, in which mental health and substance abuse agencies, payors, providers, consumers and family members work together in every system of care to perform the following functions:
Principles of a Comprehensive, Continuous, Integrated System of CareThe following principles characterize an effective system of care for persons with co-occurring psychiatric and substance disorders. They will be further elaborated in the remainder of this document.
Optimism and RecoveryPessimistic attitudes about people with co-occurring disorders represent major barriers to successful system change and to effective treatment interventions. However, a growing evidence base suggests that persons with co-occurring disorders who receive care based on the principles outlined in this document have positive outcomes and make significant progress in achieving recovery.Recovery is defined as a process by which a person with persistent,
possibly disabling disorders, recovers self-esteem, self-worth, pride,
dignity, and meaning, through increasing his or her ability to maintain
stabilization of the disorders and maximizing functioning within the
constraints of the disorders. As a general principle, every person,
regardless of the severity and disability associated with each disorder,
is entitled to experience the promise and hope of dual recovery, and is
considered to have the potential to achieve dual recovery. AcceptanceIn a consumer/family oriented system for persons with co-occurring disorders, the service goal is to ensure that each clinical contact is welcoming, empathic, hopeful, culturally sensitive, and consumer-centered. Special efforts should be made to engage persons who may be unwilling to accept or participate in recommended services, or who do not fit into available program models.AccessibilityIn an accessible system for persons with co-occurring disorders, 24-hour crisis services are available to provide welcoming and competent assessment and intervention for psychiatric and substance symptomatology in any combination. Arbitrary barriers to immediate evaluation (e.g. alcohol levels below legal intoxication) are eliminated.In an accessible system, at each level of care (outpatient, intensive
outpatient, acute care, residential, inpatient), there are available
programs which: accept persons with co-occurring disorders without
barriers or waiting lists; and do not require such patients to self-define
(as either "psychiatric", "substance abuse" or "dual"); in order to be
accepted for evaluation and treatment. IntegrationThere must be an integrated conceptual framework for designing a comprehensive service system for persons with co-occurring disorders, through implementing the following procedures:
ContinuityPsychiatric and substance disorders, regardless of severity, tend to be persistent and recurrent. Co-occurrence of these disorders occurs with sufficient frequency in both systems that a continuous and integrated approach to assessment and treatment is required, regardless of the location of initial clinical presentation. Persons with co-occurring disorders should be regarded as having two (or more) co-occurring primary disorders, each of which requires specific assessment and diagnosis, and appropriately intensive treatment.For persons with more serious co-occurring disorders, continuity of integrated treatment is significantly associated with better outcome and reduction of more expensive service utilization. Consequently, the service system for persons with co-occurring disorders must develop mechanisms for identifying all such persons with serious symptomatology, and establish a collaborative system of continuous care management for those persons. A goal of the service system is to provide persons with co-occurring disorders early access to continuous integrated treatment relationships which can be maintained over time, through multiple episodes of acute and subacute treatment, and which are independent of any particular setting or locus of care. The co-occurring disorders treatment and recovery process can be divided into similar phases for each disorder. Models based on readiness for treatment and level of engagement exist. The following phasic model is based on treatment intervention:
With all models, the phases of treatment are not necessarily linear or
sequential. With various clients, phases of treatment for psychiatric and
substance disorder often differ, and persons may move in either direction
from one phase of treatment to another. Individualized TreatmentAny psychiatric disorder with any substance use disorder may co-occur in any person, regardless of age, gender, or socio-economic status. Effective responses must be tailored to individual need. The system must be responsive to the needs of the consumer, instead of consumers needing to fit the specifications of the program or system. Integrated continuous treatment relationships should strive to provide each consumer with a balance of 1) appropriate case management and car, and 2) appropriate empathic detachment (and, at times, empathic confrontation). This balanced approach can provide opportunities for meaningful choice and empowerment at each point during the course of treatment. The system should be created utilizing existing services and programs as much as possible, through identifying the role of each program in providing particular types of integrated services within the comprehensive service system, and in accordance with the principles of individualized treatment matching defined above. The design goal is for implementation of a system of care in which all persons with co-occurring disorders have access to integrated, continuous treatment relationships, and to a range of programs which can provide individually matched services according to the above principles.ComprehensivenessPersons with co-occurring disorders have broad primary care and behavioral health treatment and social service needs. Therefore, the shared mission of the system must be the design of a comprehensive, integrated, continuous service system for persons with psychiatric disorders, substance disorders and co-occurring psychiatric and substance disorders.In such a system of care, some programs will be fully integrated, some programs will be primarily psychiatric programs with substance disorder capability or enhancement, and some programs will be primarily substance disorder programs with psychiatric capability or enhancement. Implementation of basic co-occurring disorder capability in these programs may occur via any or all of the following mechanisms:
Emphasis on QualityThe system of care should be designed in accordance with established national standards for serving persons with co-occurring disorders, including the following:
Responsible ImplementationThere must be an implementation plan which identifies priorities for and obstacles to change, defines specific objectives and outcomes for change, and which recommends strategies to overcome obstacles to achieving these objectives. This will include the following target areas:
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