AASC Online Tip:
Be sure to electronically enter consent and confidentiality agreements on AASC Online in addition to getting signatures for the hard files. This keeps your electronic files up to date.
AASC Online Tip:
Be sure to electronically enter consent and confidentiality agreements on AASC Online in addition to getting signatures for the hard files. This keeps your electronic files up to date.
Answer:
Pangea says when this kind of problem happens, we should send them a screen print (push PrtScn on the keyboard). (Then open word, I use Control v, save it, email Pangea, include the screen print as an attachment.) Then, Pangea can look up that incidence and trouble shoot.
Yours,
Karen Baker
Question:
When I enter the time spent in the service log, the time changes and shows as 1 minute or negative 1 minute, when I go to print it. I noticed it, the end of last week. Today, I had to reenter and save a service log to register as 20 minutes, I entered it several times.
Cheryl, Rachel and Brenda had the opportunity to discuss some of the issues that we have heard the service coordinators are encountering that impact our case management procedures. After discussion, we are going to revise our case management procedures as follows:
1) When attempting to offer services to residents/members that are either new or annually, three separate documented attempts without response will constitute a “refusal” of services. This means that you need to attempt three different types of direct contact with the resident/member and document each attempt. Only after that third unsuccessful attempt is it considered a refusal. Seperate direct attempts include telephone messages, notes under the door, or direct mailing. Once these three attempts have been made and the resident/member does not respond to you then you can document that the resident does not want services at this time in your progress notes.
2) The “Non-Participation Form” will ONLY be used when a specific service is offered and declined. The form does not need to be signed by the resident/member when you are simply offering the services of the Service Coordinator, when they are new or annually, and they decline. A specific service would be a service that is specifically being offered to the resident because of a referral from management, the FCRC, or something that the Service Coordinator deems as being an imminent/emergent need that the resident refuses. The specific service being offered can be detailed in the “comments” box. A resident/member can sign a “Non-Participation Form” and still be considered an “active client” of the Service Coordinator, still receiving OTHER services, but refuses a specific service.
3) Group Add Service Logs and Progress Notes are to be completed for ALL residents regardless of client status. Therefore, any resident that attends an educational session will be included on the group add on the Service Logs and Progress Notes.
4) Service Logs should be used on any contact with the resident/member and the Service Coordinator needs to utilize the “subcategory” when identifying the type of service provided. We are asking that all Service Coordinators make a concentrated effort to eliminate “Other” as an option and that you specifically categorize your interactions.
All of these updates go into effect today. Should you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.
AASC Online tip of the day!:
You have the resources your residents/members need at your fingertips. In the upper right-hand corner of your AASC Online Resource Director is the option to Print Agency List. Do it! Then post it on your bulletin board and share it with your residents/members. CSI SCs should bring their FCRC Chairs updates of the Agency list at their monthly meetings for the FCRC Chair to put in their resource binder…..and let your auditor know that you have done this and where the FCRC binder is located. The idea is knowledge is power! Some residents/members would prefer to check out your resource list on their own terms during non-office hours, so make it available. Thanks!
Initial Service Plans are extremely important. They are the global service plan that you create with your resident/member/client. Please be sure to reread the section of the Case Management Procedures that addresses ISPs, plus the Supplemental Notes on how to create an Initial Service Plan. Both are attached.
One way to think about Progress Notes is that they are a recap of your interview with the client (the PNs contain the “why” of what you are doing). They are followed up by your ISP, which contains the goals and actions (the “what”), “who” is responsible for each action, and the timeframe (the “when”).
ISPs are required to be created within the first 30 days of working with a client. If you did not create an ISP, you can write a retroactive ISP. The best practice to follow is to write with a pen on the PN immediately following your assessment, “see ISP on ‘x’ date”. Clearly label the ISP “Initial Service Plan in your PNs, dating it the ‘x’ date you write it (not the date you should have written it). That way you’ll be able to find it in your case file. It helps to also highlight it with a highlighter.
Supplemental Notes on Creating an Initial Service Plan and Updated Service Plan
These notes augment the procedures for the Initial Service Plan and Updated Service Plan contained in sections 5 and 6 of the Service Coordination Case Management Procedures.
For additional guidance on creating a service plan, please refer to the NASW Standards for Case Management found at http://www.socialworkers.org/practice/standards/sw_case_mgmt.asp
Creating an Initial Service Plan
Question: How do I address in my service plan the ADLs that are previously in place? I have several clients whose ADLs are already being met. What should I be doing about them?
Answer: Good question. All ADLs a member/resident has challenges meeting must be addressed in the Initial Service Plan and the Updated Service Plans. Things you can do:
1. Set a goal with the client on how they want to maintain or acheive greater independence in this particular ADLs.
2. Indicate who (or what agency) is previously in place to assist with the ADL, specifically how they will continue to address it, and with what frequency they will continue to assist the client. For example, “Member has challenges with shopping and meal preparation. Member would like to continue to eat daily meals prepared in a Chaldean manner. Son will continue to visit every other day, eating one meal with him and leaving a second meal for him to heat in the microwave the following day.”
3. Indicate that you, the SC, plan to monitor the member/resident monthly to assure the services previously in place continue to meet the needs and expectations of the member/resident to their satisfaction.
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