You have the right ideas and clinical practice
@Fan_of_Meehl.
Anyone else interested in turning this forum into a virtual meeting like once or twice a month for an hour? I'm picturing a quasi-AA type deal for being a current/former VA mental health professional.
If the focus could be on psychotherapists in the system openly discussing issues (that are never discussed) and sharing positive strategies to proactively address these problems (and reduce burnout), it might be something I could agree to do. There are realities that are
never openly discussed (and that never will be) that--once acknowledged and openly discussed--actually can lead to
really effective changes in perspective/approaches of a therapist trying to survive and stay sane in the system. There are realities that just simply
aren't ALLOWED to be true by the system and those who administer over it. Case in point, once I re-conceptualized my job as mainly one of accurately addressing the manifold species of
active lack of engagement in the psychotherapy process that about 80% of my caseload was throwing at me and responding accordingly, I kind of made a breakthrough of sorts and developed my own developmental model of engagement and that has been
really personally helpful. I've tried to share this model (and its success) but, so far, I haven't gotten any traction because I don't think that it is consistent with the lie (from the 'system') that almost no (if any) veterans have any issues with engagement in the therapy process, all the providers must just suck or be lazy, lol--which is a set of preconceived notions that just pervade the VA system (and even the journal articles on 'rolling out' the EBP's). Most of those articles just assess/examine things like therapist attitudes and institutional factors but completely ignore/downplay what I refer to as 'client-side' barriers to EBP uptake/engagement. I sit there in my office with my mouth open reading paragraphs of the experts talk about how there really aren't any client variables that relate to lack of EBP agreement/engagement and I just...can't...believe what I just read. I wish I could have a camera crew follow me around and record everything. My experience is that 99-100% of 'lack of engagement' in EBP protocols (that are, literally, offered to
everyone in my caseload...multiple times per year, at least) is coming from the 'client-side' barriers. Meanwhile, in meeting after meeting, supervisors bemoan the low percentages of people doing EBP protocols in clinics, frowning and wagging fingers at us like we are misbehaving children who simply refuse to do our chores...and they either don't have a clue or are pretending not to.
It was a real moment of clarity recently when I was asking myself, 'why isn't my supervisor enthusiastic about these data that I just shared with them that--over the past year--I have 'handled' around 100 cases in my outpatient clinics (successfully) and maintained 100% weekly/biweekly sessions in my clinic and haven't gotten 'backed up' or 'behind' on cases? And the answer became so clear. They aren't
actually interested in solving the access issues. They are just interested in maintaining the status quo, frowning/wagging fingers at us in meetings of how we fail to do our jobs, and going about their business. A real bummer...but strangely liberating at the same time.
So, even though they aren't going to say, 'wow...good work...maybe we could teach this to others and try to structure people's clinics to help enable them to see people weekly (episodes of care),' they also aren't fighting me on what I am doing in my clinics to reconceptualize/ evolve my approach to dealing with the issues of lack of engagement, either. They're not promoting my ideas/innovations...but they aren't (yet) 'fighting' me on them, either.
In the days before the American Revolution, people submitted papers to the local newspapers under pseudonyms (e.g., 'Seneca') rather than using their real names--that's how we got
The Federalist and Anti-Federalist Papers. Maybe we could start an anonymous journal or something. Call it "
Dr. StrangeHate: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the No-Show." Make it really funny and lighthearted (some articles) but also full of very practical tips that actually work (even if they aren't consistent with VA schemas about therapists that the system harbors) and make our jobs easier as therapists.