- Joined
- Sep 12, 2017
- Messages
- 330
- Reaction score
- 274
Arguably, this is one of the hardest parts of our job. Specifically, right now I'm talking about not following parts of the treatment plan such as timing of follow up and getting labs such as drug levels.
I'd like to know what other people do, because I've sought supervision in my residency about this, but the almost unilateral answer our medical director has is "have them sign a treatment plan." That tends to go over like a lead balloon, as it's hard for people not to see that as punitive or a precursor to getting fired as a patient. I've had success having people sign treatment plans in telling them that it goes back to the amount of liability the *institution* will allow me to accept, but what if the institution doesn't have a position on the matter, or there is no institution because you're it (in private practice)?
Some resolutions I've made for when I start my first attending job:
1. Have people sign a treatment contract when I first meet them, based on institutional policies on treatment adherence (if any), as well as my own comfort level.
2. Start discussions about potential barriers to adherence and how to deal with them early in the course of my work with someone.
If patients still don't do their part, I've been advised to do the following. Tell them that if they don't do x by y date, you will not be able to provide them with meds, and then follow through. Indicate that it's not safe and not good care to keep prescribing if they don't do the thing.
But I have an ethical problem with that. I mean, let's say someone is on Lithium, you're prescribing to them, and they go toxic - that's your fault, especially if you're not enforcing proper follow up and lab monitoring. On the other hand, let's say you stop prescribing to them because they won't come into clinic/get labs despite multiple reminders and they go manic - that's your fault too, arguably, because you made the decision to stop the meds. It's a catch-22, though legally the second one is more defensible because the patient was first to not uphold their end of treatment plan.
And then I'm also likely to have the Axis II's of world yelling at me and telling me that it's not good care to stop meds, and that I am being insensitive to their complicated life circumstances. And technically there would be truth to that.
---------------
PS: I don't think accepting only the highly motivated, highly resourced patients in cash only private practice is a solution. A good psychiatrist, I think, is able to do the right thing when the bio, the psycho, and the social pieces of things are going to ****, and vetting your patients to those who are highly motivated, not personality disordered, physically healthy enough to make it to appointments/labs/etc and can solve problems with money is just avoiding the issue. And even a highly motivated patient can change to being willful and care-rejecting.
I'd like to know what other people do, because I've sought supervision in my residency about this, but the almost unilateral answer our medical director has is "have them sign a treatment plan." That tends to go over like a lead balloon, as it's hard for people not to see that as punitive or a precursor to getting fired as a patient. I've had success having people sign treatment plans in telling them that it goes back to the amount of liability the *institution* will allow me to accept, but what if the institution doesn't have a position on the matter, or there is no institution because you're it (in private practice)?
Some resolutions I've made for when I start my first attending job:
1. Have people sign a treatment contract when I first meet them, based on institutional policies on treatment adherence (if any), as well as my own comfort level.
2. Start discussions about potential barriers to adherence and how to deal with them early in the course of my work with someone.
If patients still don't do their part, I've been advised to do the following. Tell them that if they don't do x by y date, you will not be able to provide them with meds, and then follow through. Indicate that it's not safe and not good care to keep prescribing if they don't do the thing.
But I have an ethical problem with that. I mean, let's say someone is on Lithium, you're prescribing to them, and they go toxic - that's your fault, especially if you're not enforcing proper follow up and lab monitoring. On the other hand, let's say you stop prescribing to them because they won't come into clinic/get labs despite multiple reminders and they go manic - that's your fault too, arguably, because you made the decision to stop the meds. It's a catch-22, though legally the second one is more defensible because the patient was first to not uphold their end of treatment plan.
And then I'm also likely to have the Axis II's of world yelling at me and telling me that it's not good care to stop meds, and that I am being insensitive to their complicated life circumstances. And technically there would be truth to that.
---------------
PS: I don't think accepting only the highly motivated, highly resourced patients in cash only private practice is a solution. A good psychiatrist, I think, is able to do the right thing when the bio, the psycho, and the social pieces of things are going to ****, and vetting your patients to those who are highly motivated, not personality disordered, physically healthy enough to make it to appointments/labs/etc and can solve problems with money is just avoiding the issue. And even a highly motivated patient can change to being willful and care-rejecting.
Last edited: