Mindful Happiness

Anthony Quintiliani, Ph.D, LADC

  • Home
  • Dr. Anthony Quintiliani
    • About
  • Mindful Happiness
  • Mindful Expressions Meditation CD
  • Contact

November 18, 2016 By Admin

“Ignorance” of Documentation Requirement Could End Your Clinical Career

“Ignorance” of Requirements Could End Your Clinical Career

Recently various insurance, Medicaid, and Medicare fraud cases have been in the national headlines. Although these fraud cases grab headlines, the truth is that many clinically licensed helpers still do not understand clinical/legal documentation requirements.  In Buddhism, “ignorance” gets in our way; we never approach true liberation via enlightenment. Practice takes years and years to produce experienced movement from samsara to liberation.  Sometimes our progress is very subtle. In clinical practice “ignorance” gets in our way; it takes years and years to become educated and clinically licensed – all of which may be lost if we appear to practice in fraudulent ways. All those years of learning; all those years of supervised practice; all your own costs to be where you are; and, all those years of  billing for our sacred services.  Yes, your services are sacred in that they reduce human suffering, and may sometimes bring happiness to people. rmindfulhappiness_clinicaldocumentationPsychotherapy SAVES  LIVES!

In audit terms, there are three enemies of clinically appropriate documentation: fraud, waste and/or abuse. I will not make clarifications about these three situations in this post. The standard definition of fraud notes that it involves the clinician receiving something of value via willful misrepresentation. In this post I will simply notes a couple well-known lists of clinical documentation requirements. I am always amazed how graduate training programs and professional associations have not been consistent in how they inform “psychotherapists” about documentation requirements. The main pathway to successful employment is effective clinical skill (alliance and outcomes); the major pathway to getting paid for that good work and staying out of court is following published documentation requirements. One of the major problems with documentation requirements is that they change based on the system paying for the sessions.  Another problem is that any system’s requirements may change without prior notice to providers of clinical services.  Clinicians need to pay attention to what their payments require, both in coding changes and in documentation changes.

The American Psychological Association has recommended the following minimum documentation requirements for clinical records per session.

  1. Date of service
  2. Correct diagnosis
  3. Duration of service event – start and stop times
  4. Types of therapeutic interventions – all evidenced-based
  5. Target symptoms (assessed via interview, DSM, formal assessment, etc.)americanpsychologicalassociation_mindfulhappiness
  6. Progress in achieving treatment (treatment plan) goals – good progress notes about measured outcomes
  7. Very clear documentation of crisis-oriented services (not specified by this source)
  8. Rational for extended sessions

The CMS Comparative Billing Reports suggests the following additional documentation requirements.

  1. All billed services are medically necessary
  2. No excessive use of psychotherapy code – 45 minute session (or other codes)
  3. Documented client/patient interactions with therapist
  4. Patient/client reaction to the session
  5. Changes is symptoms related to prior session
  6. Changes in behavior related to prior session
  7. Very clear documentation of crisis oriented services (not specified by this source)

Disclaimer – I provide this information as it has been provided to me.  I cannot say if it is totally accurate. You are responsible for checking into your own documentation requirements based on what systems pay you for your clinical services.  It is so, so sad that such sacred work requires accounting-like documentation.  I have often commented that psychotherapy records mimic documentation for transporting nuclear waste actress state lines.  So much documentation; so little time to actually DO the psychotherapy. Hope this post shakes you up a bit regarding your current clinical documentation habits.

How did we get into such a bureaucratic way of doing business?  Well, that is it – psychotherapy is now a business. Perhaps our very generous payments to medical staff caused this (other than primary care American medical doctors are some of the world’s highest paid professionals providing such services). When therapists decided to make a living from doing psychotherapy, and when many university programs opened graduate training programs for psychotherapists, education, business and “organic bureaucracy” (my terms) became ONE. Following the old “medical model,” psychotherapy became a way to earn a middle class living, sometimes a very good middle class living.  Behavioral health, however, will never be funded at levels needed to improve the mental health (and addictions health) of the American public.  Pills alone will psychotherapybusiness_mindfulhappinessNOT DO IT! Our problems are NOT simply biological; they are biopsychosocial-spiritual in nature.  How else could we be about 5% of the world’s population consuming about 60-70% of the world’s illicit drug? Are we empty inside? Let’s hope that psychotherapy does not follow
medical practice in hospitals, where well-documented data show that about 100,000 people a year die due to medical errors. Some researchers believe that number is actually higher. Powerful lobbying groups hope to influence the federal government so such data will not be available to the American people. And, there are the added burdens of requiring external “certification” of your program’s comparative quality. The various “commissions” that dictate documentation requirements in behavioral and medical health care systems ADD MORE AND MORE DOCUMENTATION REQUIREMENTS AT HUGE COSTS.  As if documentation alone implies quality. Let’s get rid of the onerous documentation requirements and simplify the system; let’s pay for carefully rationalized clinical outcomes and end the dollar drain of accreditation commission-dictated documentation requirements. Such a rational shift may cause an unemployment crisis in bureaucracy, but it may help preserve the slim margins of funding in behavioral health. The American health care system needs BIG changes, but we lack insightful and courageous leadership to make such big changes. What will the future of behavioral health look like? Better start lobbying for your own interests before you have no profession to lobby for at all.

national_psychologist_logo

For more information refer to your own payment systems, Medicaid, Medicare, private insurance and other documentation requirements. See also Hartman-Srien, P. E. (November-December, 2016). Fraud grabs headlines… The National Psychologist, p. 6.

By Anthony R. Quintiliani, PhD., LADC

From the Eleanor R. Liebman Center for Secular Meditation in Monkton, VermontChiYinYang_EleanorRLiebmanCenter

Author of Mindful Happiness  

Mindful Happiness cover designs.indd

New Edition of Mindful Happiness in Production…Coming soon!

Filed Under: ANTHONY QUINTILIANI, Clinical Practice, Featured, Psychotherapy, Regulations & Qualifications Tagged With: AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION, CLINICAL, DOCUMENTATION REQUIREMENTS, PSYCHOTHERAPY

Twitter

Mindful Happiness -Currently in Production

Mindful Happiness Posts

The Principles of Nature and Natural Healing This is an advanced post on Eastern views of healing. From ancient shamanic traditions all the way to today’s AMA approved procedures in energy medicine, healers have been trying to discover and integrate the foundations of nature into healing. This reality exists from shamanic rituals all the way […]

Advanced Meditation Practices on Perception As the Sutra story goes, the Buddha instructed Ananda to visit the ailing venerable Girimananda, who was very, very ill.  In an effort to help the ailing man, the Buddha told Ananda to guide him in the Ten Meditation on Perceptions (on sensory input and the objects of mind). According […]

Mindfulness Based Contemplations Best to practice both of these contemplations using the lectio divina method, that is each time you contemplate the content of the two messages concentrate a bit more, go a bit deeper into your mind. Concentrate! Concentrate! Concentrate! Go deeper into your mind to discover your answers. Contemplation 1 – Who Am I? If I […]

Buddhist Thought on Joy and Suffering 1) You actually DO have some control over your emotional destiny. 2) The core “conceptual” view of reality is that your inner emotional experience – especially negative afflictive emotional states related to people, places and things you REACT to – are perceived as totally true. 3) In a non-conceptual […]

Insights – Vipassana Mediation There will be future, more advanced vipassana meditations posted on the site. For now, however, we will end this series with a final post about the insights often experienced via vipassana meditation. We learn via experience about impermanence, suffering and its causes, no-self, emptiness and many other things – or, perhaps, […]

The Needs of Traumatized Children – Learning Activity As a means to hone in on your helping behaviors, complete this learning activity. NEEDS     List a Concrete Example for Each Unmet Need. Biological  _______________________________________________ Psychological   ____________________________________________ Social  __________________________________________________ Emotional  _______________________________________________ Educational  ______________________________________________ Spiritual  ________________________________________________ Attachment  ______________________________________________ What can YOU do to help meet […]

Forgiveness Meditation Practice – Mindful Happiness – Dr Anthony Quintiliani Sit comfortably in a meditation posture. Allow your breath to remain natural without any intentional modification.  Allow your body to relax, and allow your mind to be open to and to expect forgiveness.  Focus attention on your heart area deep within your soul, and allow […]

Finding Your Seat with Your Demons and Dragons: Resolutions You may think the creation of the Gestalt-like therapy activity of sitting in different chairs and acting “as if” the you in that personality-chair is the source of your responses is a relatively new psychotherapy intervention.  However, some roots of this process may go back as […]

Help For Therapists: Working with Diversity Clinical interventions, especially strongly evidence-based interventions, impact clients via new skills and practices in mind-body clinical realities. No matter how good (or “good enough” ) a clinical intervention is it requires a highly positive, active therapeutic relationship. As ample research suggests, a strong and positive therapeutic relationship in therapy […]

From The Eleanor R. Liebman Center for Secular Meditation We humans have a unique way of perceiving and processing emotional experiences.  Years ago I developed a formula to understand the perception and  process of emotional experiences: CABS-VAKGO-IS/Rels.  The C stands for cognition; we spend a great deal of time thinking about pretty much everything we […]

  The Tao of Nature I have two interesting stories about nesting robins.  These stories tell of the bonds of birds and their young, and how intelligent these birds can be. The first story happened to me abut 15 years ago. The second story happened today, July 27, 2017. Story 1 I was working in […]

Vipassana Meditation – Emptiness One of the great insights from regular, long-term vipassana practice is the experience of emptiness. The actual knowing of it by the experience of it. This is not your typical conceptual emptiness of the West; it is not total void, negative beings, or nihilistic pit, or suffering in endlessness.  It is […]

Mindful Walking Meditation: How to Walk by Thich Nhat Hanh – A Powerful Short Book of Wisdom In my opinion, Thich Nhat Hanh and The 14th Dalai Lama are the two most important and wise teachers of mindfulness, meditation, compassion, and Buddhism in the 21st century.  Below I will offer my interpretation of Thich Nhat Hanh’s […]

Using Lectio Divina to Enhance Your Happiness Lectio Divina is an ancient Christian (Benedictine) meditation; it is a form of meditative prayer called “sacred  seeing.”   We  will use a modified version of the process here.   Follow the steps noted below. Sit  quietly  in meditative form, calmly abiding yourself here now.   After a […]

Wise Mind and the Neuroscience of Mindfulness Practice What is wise mind? Marsha M. Linehan developed this clinical process in her work on dialectical behavior therapy. Wise mind is the middle way between rational/reasonable mind and emotional mind; it allows us to live with balanced reason and emotion in daily interactions. When practiced regularly, it […]

Mindfulness Training  From The Eleanor R. Liebman Center for Secular Meditation in Monkton,Vermont The Problem:   Many people become stuck in the suffering of their past, and they continue to re-experience an event in the futile hope to better understand it, or to find an escape from it.  Many of the same people become fixated fearfully […]

Pathways for Coping with Loss and Grief Jeanne Cacciatore, a Zen priest and bereavement specialist, offer sound advice on the process of loss and grieving.  In her book, Bearing the Unbearable: Love and the Heart Breaking Path of Grief (2016), she presents the process as a series of contractions and expansions; contractions are the inward path of […]

The Failed “War on Drugs” – Let’s Try Treatment On Demand and Fund It The New York based Drug Policy Alliance (drugpolicy.org) and other sources have provided some important information about our failed drug and alcohol policies. Here are a few astounding facts.  The United Stares has about 5% of the world’s population, but it […]

Taoist Meditation on Healing Colors of Light In Taoist views the four seasons (five if you include “Indian Summer”) are strongly associated with emotional moods and bodily energies. Healing colored light is also part of this viewpoint. For each of the colors we use, follow the process noted below. Sit quietly and breathe calmly. Circle […]

Mindfulness and Concentration –  Experience Differences In this post I will explain some basic differences between mindfulness and concentration, both of which are required for effective meditation practice.  This will be the first of three posts dealing with what mindfulness and concentration are, how to experience them briefly in a body-based activity, and how to […]

Mindful Categories

Mindful Happiness Pages

  • About
  • Contact
  • Dr. Anthony Quintiliani
  • Mindful Expressions Meditation CD
  • Mindful Happiness
  • Site Map

Copyright © 2023 · Mindful Happiness