Documentation for Peer Support Following Medicaid Rules

 
DOCUMENTING
PEER SUPPORT
 
FOLLOWING MEDICAID RULES
 
THEORY AND PRACTICE
 
This section will outline a simple way to think about writing
notes
We’ll look at the Golden Thread (or “Goal-den” Thread)
We’ll see how Medicaid and states’ Administrative Codes impact
our notes
We’ll see how to use a simple format that includes all required
elements
And we’ll have time for questions
 
PEER SUPPORT VS. CLINICAL NOTES
 
Use the language of ordinary
human experience
Focus on recovery and
resiliency
Include the person’s strengths
Use the person’s goals for
recovery
Are all about the person!
 
Use the language of diagnoses,
symptoms, medications
Focus on symptom management
and compliance
Include the problems
Use the provider’s goals for
compliance
Are often about compliance
 
P
EER
 S
UPPORT
 N
OTES
 
C
LINICAL
 R
ECORDS
THINKING ABOUT WRITING
 
Each person’s life is a story. If they’re lucky, it’s a long
story. If someone wrote about their life, it would be a
biography or autobiography—in other words, a story
.
 
The fact that the person has come to your
agency means their story is moving from one of
despair and hopelessness . . .
 
To a story of hope, resiliency, and recovery.
WRITING THE RECOVERY STORY
 
The record of a person’s time with your agency is the
pivotal 
chapter
 in their life story. It’s the transitional
chapter, the one that moves it from despair to hope.
Each note is a 
paragraph
 in that chapter.
 
Every paragraph must fit within the chapter.
Every chapter must fit with the whole story.
All pieces have to hang together and make
sense.
 
STRUCTURE
 
Just like a good story, the “chapter” of
this person’s life story, seeking services,
starts with a problem
This is the “presenting problem” in the
initial assessment
Service (or treatment) plans outline goals
or strategies to help the person overcome
the problem(s)
Every note thereafter shows steps taken
toward the resolution of the problem
 
 
This Photo
 by Unknown Author is licensed
under 
CC BY-NC
 
GOLDEN THREAD
 
Also sometimes described as the “Goal-den Thread.”
Required by Medicaid.
Connects the individual’s recovery goals to every
service offered by your agency
Auditors will look for you to connect the goal to each
service; make it easy for them to find
The “Goal-den Thread” concept is the same as the
concept of narrative thread in writing a story
HOW WOULD YOU KNOW . . .
How can you make your
paragraph (note) match
the rest of the chapter
(full medical record)
unless you know what’s
in it?
 
THE GOLDEN THREAD IN STRUCTURE
 
Assessment (Problem)
 
 
Service (Treatment) Plan (Goals)
 
 
Notes (tied to service plan and goals)
IMAGINE YOU ARE AN AUDITOR
Here is what you’re looking for.
Why I’m here
What I need from you
What you are doing to
help me get what I need
The more this is
written like a cohesive
story, the easier it will
be for the auditor to
find required elements
This Photo
 by Unknown Author is licensed under 
CC BY
 
I’M HERE BECAUSE . . . (SAMPLE)
 
Presenting Problem: “I can’t seem to stop crying. Ever
since I got laid off from my job, I’ve had trouble getting
out of bed. I can’t bring myself to cook meals or help the
children with homework. My husband is losing patience
with me and we fight all the time. I’ve lost hope that my
life will ever be normal. Sometimes I think my family
would be better off without me because I’m just
worthless.”
 
Why is this person at your agency?
 
MY GOALS (FROM THE INTAKE)
 
I want to stop crying every day
I want to find hope that I can get a job again and be a
participating member of my family
I want to learn how to communicate better with my husband so
we don’t fight all the time
 
Can you build a service plan out of these stated goals?
Notice that the “presenting problem” is NOT THE DIAGNOSIS!
 
NEXT ELEMENTS OF THE NARRATIVE
 
For every service you document after that, the
story should continue:
“I’m here because . . . “
“I want to get/learn/accomplish this while I’m
here.”
“Here’s what I’m doing today to reach that
goal.”
Keep the focus on peer support and recovery
Don’t forget to show what 
you
 did with the
person (the “intervention”)
 
UNDERSTANDING THE RULES
 
WHAT THEY ARE AND HOW TO FIND THEM
 
 
GUIDANCE FROM RULES: MEDICAID
 
What Medicaid pays for with peer support codes:
 
Medicaid pays for peer support services as long
as the individual served is making 
concrete
steps 
toward a 
measurable rehabilitation goal
 
GUIDANCE FROM RULES: STATE
ADMINISTRATIVE CODES
 
States with a Medicaid waiver for peer support typically
define the role of peer support in the administrative
codes
Some common peer support tasks include support for
community living skills, self-advocacy, developing
natural supports, independent living, preparing for
work, supported housing, and social skills
These basic tasks can cover a wide range of activities
 
HOW DOES THIS APPLY TO PEERS?
 
When we understand the Medicaid rules and our state’s
administrative codes, we can remember to document our work
in a way that reflects (a) 
steps toward recovery goals 
(or
difficulty making such steps), and (b) one or more of the tasks
assigned to us in our state.
 
But there’s another consideration: we’re peer support workers,
not clinicians. We have unique qualifications and a unique role.
We 
aren’t qualified
 to evaluate success with symptom
management, med compliance, or other clinical measures in our
documentation.
 
PEER SUPPORT WORKERS . . .
 
We 
are qualified 
to evaluate progress
toward recovery goals
Important for documenting individual
and group services of all kinds
Let’s look at a standard note-writing
format
 
DAP: A COMMON FORMAT
 
D = DATA
A = ASSESSMENT
P = PLAN
 
FIRST ELEMENT: D
 
D: Data: What happened today
If this is a group, what’s the topic?
What did you talk about during the group/appointment?
Do you have quotes from the participant?
What did you notice about the participant?
Did the group or participant make any discoveries?
This section should 
not
 include any judgments or evaluations
All statements should be backed up by evidence
Be sure to include what you did with the participant. This is
known as the “intervention.” Don’t forget to use recovery language!
 
NEXT ELEMENT: A
 
A
: Assessment. Your evaluation
Remember that peers are 
not qualified
 to
evaluate symptom management, recovery, or
other clinical measurements
Peers 
are
 qualified to assess 
progress toward
recovery goals
Therefore, assessments should refer
specifically to at least one goal and indicate if
the individual is making any progress toward
that goal—or not
 
NEXT ELEMENT: P
 
P: Plan. What’s going to happen next
This section shows what the individual plans to do next to
pursue the recovery goal
It might indicate the next appointment with you or other
providers, or continuing in a group
Remember to identify strengths that can support action
You may also write what 
you
 plan to do before you see the
person next. No judgments or evaluations in this section.
 
Do you read previous notes before you begin work with a
person? Why or why not?
 
EXAMPLE OF A FULL NOTE
 
LENGTH OF NOTE
 
How long should your note be?
The previous slide’s note might cover a 45-60 minute
appointment or group. Interactions that take less time will
require a shorter note
If you spend more than an hour with someone, your note should
reflect the additional time spent. Two lines will not be
considered adequate for a 3-4 hour event with a peer.
You don’t have to write everything, but you do have to cover the
main things, progress toward recovery goals, use of strengths,
what you did, and plans for next steps
 
IF YOU WRITE THE SERVICE PLAN
 
Be sure to read the Intake Assessment first (for the “presenting
problem”)
While you want the participant to take the lead in setting goals,
all goals must relate to the reason for services (presenting
problem) and focus on recovery and resiliency
The service plan must also clearly spell out your planned
interventions, including the use of peer support services
Don’t forget “frequency, duration, and expected outcome” of
services. These must all be documented in the plan
 
SMART GOALS
 
A QUALITY OBJECTIVE
Person’s
Name
Action
Word
What
When
How
Measured
Objective
Susan
Will
Manage
Anxiety
By using
the
coping
skill of
yoga
breathing
Once
daily in
response
to
anxiety
for six
months
As reported
by herself in
her weekly
Recovery 101
group
Objective
 
GOOD TO KNOW
 
MORE THINGS TO CONSIDER
 
WHO CAN SEE RECORDS?
 
Know your state’s law regarding a person’s right to view their
medical records, in their entirety or selectively
Be sure your note is not judgmental, not inaccurate, not
deceptive, not dishonest—expect that the person will read it
An accurate and timely note is your best protection against
grievances and lawsuits—and audit problems
What does timely mean? 
In most cases, within 24 hours of
the service.
 
TIMELY
 
There are exceptions to the 24-hour rule in timeliness.
Your agency may use a different standard (some prefer that you
document the same day as services were offered)
Some peers work in the community and do not have access to
an electronic health record (EHR) every day
If you cannot document within 24 hours, ask your supervisor
what is expected and document reasons for any delay
Be sure to follow the guidance of your employer
 
INVOLVING THE PERSON IN WRITING
NOTES
 
One way to involve peers in note-
writing, especially in groups, is to ask
them
: what should I say happened
today?
Parts of the note are yours alone, but
remembering that this is 
their story
helps us remember to 
ask them
 how
to describe or frame the visit or
activity.
 
QUESTIONS ABOUT DOCUMENTATION
 
THANK YOU!
 
Ann Rider, MSW
Whole Human Consulting
wholehuman17@gmail.com
253.882.7635
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Learn about the Golden Thread approach, Medicaid rules impact on notes, and the difference between peer support and clinical records. Explore the importance of storytelling in writing recovery notes and how each note fits into the individual's recovery story.

  • Documentation
  • Peer Support
  • Medicaid Rules
  • Recovery Story
  • Golden Thread

Uploaded on Jul 30, 2024 | 0 Views


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  1. DOCUMENTING PEER SUPPORT FOLLOWING MEDICAID RULES

  2. THEORY AND PRACTICE This section will outline a simple way to think about writing notes We ll look at the Golden Thread (or Goal-den Thread) We ll see how Medicaid and states Administrative Codes impact our notes We ll see how to use a simple format that includes all required elements And we ll have time for questions

  3. PEER SUPPORT VS. CLINICAL NOTES PEER SUPPORT NOTES CLINICAL RECORDS Use the language of ordinary human experience Focus on recovery and resiliency Include the person s strengths Use the person s goals for recovery Are all about the person! Use the language of diagnoses, symptoms, medications Focus on symptom management and compliance Include the problems Use the provider s goals for compliance Are often about compliance

  4. THINKING ABOUT WRITING Each person s life is a story. If they re lucky, it s a long story. If someone wrote about their life, it would be a biography or autobiography in other words, a story. The fact that the person has come to your agency means their story is moving from one of despair and hopelessness . . . To a story of hope, resiliency, and recovery.

  5. WRITING THE RECOVERY STORY The record of a person s time with your agency is the pivotal chapterin their life story. It s the transitional chapter, the one that moves it from despair to hope. Each note is a paragraph in that chapter. Every paragraph must fit within the chapter. Every chapter must fit with the whole story. All pieces have to hang together and make sense.

  6. STRUCTURE Just like a good story, the chapter of this person s life story, seeking services, starts with a problem This is the presenting problem in the initial assessment Service (or treatment) plans outline goals or strategies to help the person overcome the problem(s) Every note thereafter shows steps taken toward the resolution of the problem This Photo by Unknown Author is licensed under CC BY-NC

  7. GOLDEN THREAD Also sometimes described as the Goal-den Thread. Required by Medicaid. Connects the individual s recovery goals to every service offered by your agency Auditors will look for you to connect the goal to each service; make it easy for them to find The Goal-den Thread concept is the same as the concept of narrative thread in writing a story

  8. HOW WOULD YOU KNOW . . . How can you make your paragraph (note) match the rest of the chapter (full medical record) unless you know what s in it?

  9. THE GOLDEN THREAD IN STRUCTURE Assessment (Problem) Service (Treatment) Plan (Goals) Notes (tied to service plan and goals)

  10. IMAGINE YOU ARE AN AUDITOR Here is what you re looking for. Why I m here What I need from you This Photo by Unknown Author is licensed under CC BY The more this is written like a cohesive story, the easier it will be for the auditor to find required elements What you are doing to help me get what I need

  11. IM HERE BECAUSE . . . (SAMPLE) Presenting Problem: I can t seem to stop crying. Ever since I got laid off from my job, I ve had trouble getting out of bed. I can t bring myself to cook meals or help the children with homework. My husband is losing patience with me and we fight all the time. I ve lost hope that my life will ever be normal. Sometimes I think my family would be better off without me because I m just worthless. Why is this person at your agency?

  12. MY GOALS (FROM THE INTAKE) I want to stop crying every day I want to find hope that I can get a job again and be a participating member of my family I want to learn how to communicate better with my husband so we don t fight all the time Can you build a service plan out of these stated goals? Notice that the presenting problem is NOT THE DIAGNOSIS!

  13. NEXT ELEMENTS OF THE NARRATIVE For every service you document after that, the story should continue: I m here because . . . I want to get/learn/accomplish this while I m here. Here s what I m doing today to reach that goal. Keep the focus on peer support and recovery Don t forget to show what you did with the person (the intervention )

  14. UNDERSTANDING THE RULES WHAT THEY ARE AND HOW TO FIND THEM

  15. GUIDANCE FROM RULES: MEDICAID What Medicaid pays for with peer support codes: Medicaid pays for peer support services as long as the individual served is making concrete steps toward a measurable rehabilitation goal

  16. GUIDANCE FROM RULES: STATE ADMINISTRATIVE CODES States with a Medicaid waiver for peer support typically define the role of peer support in the administrative codes Some common peer support tasks include support for community living skills, self-advocacy, developing natural supports, independent living, preparing for work, supported housing, and social skills These basic tasks can cover a wide range of activities

  17. HOW DOES THIS APPLY TO PEERS? When we understand the Medicaid rules and our state s administrative codes, we can remember to document our work in a way that reflects (a) steps toward recovery goals (or difficulty making such steps), and (b) one or more of the tasks assigned to us in our state. But there s another consideration: we re peer support workers, not clinicians. We have unique qualifications and a unique role. We aren t qualified to evaluate success with symptom management, med compliance, or other clinical measures in our documentation.

  18. PEER SUPPORT WORKERS . . . We are qualified to evaluate progress toward recovery goals Important for documenting individual and group services of all kinds Let s look at a standard note-writing format

  19. DAP: A COMMON FORMAT D = DATA A = ASSESSMENT P = PLAN D: Data What happened today, what was said (quotes) What you noticed (without judgment) What you did (the intervention ) A: Assessment Refer to one or more goals Describe progress toward goal(s) P: Plan Next steps toward goal May include continuing services

  20. FIRST ELEMENT: D D: Data: What happened today If this is a group, what s the topic? What did you talk about during the group/appointment? Do you have quotes from the participant? What did you notice about the participant? Did the group or participant make any discoveries? This section should not include any judgments or evaluations All statements should be backed up by evidence Be sure to include what you did with the participant. This is known as the intervention. Don t forget to use recovery language!

  21. NEXT ELEMENT: A A: Assessment. Your evaluation Remember that peers are not qualified to evaluate symptom management, recovery, or other clinical measurements Peers are qualified to assess progress toward recovery goals Therefore, assessments should refer specifically to at least one goal and indicate if the individual is making any progress toward that goal or not

  22. NEXT ELEMENT: P P: Plan. What s going to happen next This section shows what the individual plans to do next to pursue the recovery goal It might indicate the next appointment with you or other providers, or continuing in a group Remember to identify strengths that can support action You may also write what you plan to do before you see the person next. No judgments or evaluations in this section. Do you read previous notes before you begin work with a person? Why or why not?

  23. EXAMPLE OF A FULL NOTE D: Susan came in today to talk about her previous week and what she plans to do next. She said, I made dinner for the family one night but couldn t do it the next. She further indicated that she has been getting out of bed roughly every other day. With the CPC, she identified her successes and the strengths she used to accomplish those successes. She thinks she might be ready for the next step, maybe joining a group. She seemed less sad, as evidenced by her occasional smile and even laughter. A: Susan s goal for our work together is to find hope for a more meaningful life, and to find ways to communicate better with her husband. In getting out of bed more often and even cooking dinner, she has made some progress toward those goals. P:Susan plans to see me again in two weeks. In the meantime, she will sign up for the Recovery 101 group and will also consider vocational rehabilitation.

  24. LENGTH OF NOTE How long should your note be? The previous slide s note might cover a 45-60 minute appointment or group. Interactions that take less time will require a shorter note If you spend more than an hour with someone, your note should reflect the additional time spent. Two lines will not be considered adequate for a 3-4 hour event with a peer. You don t have to write everything, but you do have to cover the main things, progress toward recovery goals, use of strengths, what you did, and plans for next steps

  25. IF YOU WRITE THE SERVICE PLAN Be sure to read the Intake Assessment first (for the presenting problem ) While you want the participant to take the lead in setting goals, all goals must relate to the reason for services (presenting problem) and focus on recovery and resiliency The service plan must also clearly spell out your planned interventions, including the use of peer support services Don t forget frequency, duration, and expected outcome of services. These must all be documented in the plan

  26. SMART GOALS S Smart M Measurable A Achievable R Reasonable T Time-Delineated

  27. A QUALITY OBJECTIVE How Measured Person s Name Action Word Objective When What Will Manage Anxiety By using the coping skill of yoga breathing Once daily in response to anxiety for six months As reported by herself in her weekly Recovery 101 group Objective Susan

  28. GOOD TO KNOW MORE THINGS TO CONSIDER

  29. WHO CAN SEE RECORDS? Know your state s law regarding a person s right to view their medical records, in their entirety or selectively Be sure your note is not judgmental, not inaccurate, not deceptive, not dishonest expect that the person will read it An accurate and timely note is your best protection against grievances and lawsuits and audit problems What does timely mean? In most cases, within 24 hours of the service.

  30. TIMELY There are exceptions to the 24-hour rule in timeliness. Your agency may use a different standard (some prefer that you document the same day as services were offered) Some peers work in the community and do not have access to an electronic health record (EHR) every day If you cannot document within 24 hours, ask your supervisor what is expected and document reasons for any delay Be sure to follow the guidance of your employer

  31. INVOLVING THE PERSON IN WRITING NOTES One way to involve peers in note- writing, especially in groups, is to ask them: what should I say happened today? Parts of the note are yours alone, but remembering that this is their story helps us remember to ask them how to describe or frame the visit or activity.

  32. QUESTIONS ABOUT DOCUMENTATION

  33. THANK YOU! Ann Rider, MSW Whole Human Consulting wholehuman17@gmail.com 253.882.7635

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