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Case Management

Case Management. The New Movement in Behavioral Intervention. Topics. Introductions Team & Committee Structures Important Policies & Tools Lessons Learned Best Practices in Case Management Small Group Case Studies. Presenters. Erica Woodley Tulane University, New Orleans, LA

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Case Management

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  1. Case Management The New Movement in Behavioral Intervention

  2. Topics • Introductions • Team & Committee Structures • Important Policies & Tools • Lessons Learned • Best Practices in Case Management • Small Group Case Studies

  3. Presenters Erica Woodley Tulane University, New Orleans, LA Assistant Dean/Case Manager Jennifer D. Van Norman Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO Student Case Management & Referral Coordinator

  4. Team & Committee Structures

  5. Tulane Team/Committee • Behavioral Intervention Team • Assistant Dean of Students/Case Manager • (chair) • Mental Health Professional • Associate Dean of the Undergraduate College • Director of Emergency Preparedness • University Police • University General Counsel • Ad Hoc Members as needed

  6. Tulane Case Management • Position created Summer 2008 • Dual reporting to Vice-President for Students Affairs’ and Provost’s Office • Assist in campus wide crisis management and emergency response • Provide case management to students identified as high risk • Oversee the re-entry process for students on medical leave of absence • Assist students in accessing resources or navigating university systems • Provide formal referrals to both on and off campus resources • Coordinate mandatory medical leave actions • Plan and implement faculty and staff training relative to identifying students at risk • Chair weekly behavioral intervention team meetings • Maintain records of students at risk • Serve as contact point for external constituents on behalf of the Vice-President and Provost’s offices (parents, hospital administrators, community partners)

  7. CSU Student Consultation Team This committee is convened when an incident involving a student occurs that could potentially cause harm to the student, other students, staff, faculty or the community. The team recommends and initiates responses that provide for the well-being, safety, and respect of those involved. • Student Consultation Team: • Dean of Students (chair) • Student Case Management & Referral Coordinator • General Counsel Office • Associate Executive Director of Health/Counseling • Director of Residence Life • Director of Conflict Resolution (Judicial Affairs) • Associate Director of Women’s Programs • CSU Police Detective • EAP Manager • Ad Hoc Members as needed

  8. CSU Case Management • Hired Fall 2007 • Reports to Dean of Students • Works with students in “crisis” • Develop/maintain relationships with campus and community resources • Hospital Liaison (Medical & Mental Health) • Connect students to campus resources • Coordinate transitions from CSU to external community providers • Assist students and families with internal procedures (withdrawal, appeals, etc.)

  9. Important Policies and Tools • Medical Withdrawal Policy • Voluntary • Involuntary • Readmission Policy • Mandated Assessment Policy • Interim Suspension Policy • Threat Assessment Tool

  10. Tulane Process of Care

  11. Colorado State University Student Identified by faculty, staff, student, community or family member and contacts the Division of Student Affairs Dean of Students Behavior of student IS perceived as a direct threat or disruptive to others Behavior of student is NOT perceived as a direct threat or disruptive to others • Student Consultation Team: • Dean of Students • General Counsel Office • Associate Executive Director of • HHS/UCC (Health/Counseling) • Director of Residence Life • Director of CRSCS (Judicial Affairs) • Associate Director of Women’s Programs • CSU Police Detective • Student Case Management & Referral • Coordinator • Information Gathering/Referral from/to collateral agencies/programs on campus that may include: • Other faculty/staff/students • Resources for Disabled Students • Conflict Resolution and Student Conduct Services • Student Case Management & Referral • Office of Women’s Programs and Studies • University Housing • CSU Police Department • Student Plan from recommendations of all involved that may include: • Conflict Resolution and Student Conduct Services • Ongoing case management • Parent/Guardian involvement • University Withdrawal • Alternative living arrangements • Referral to campus or community resources • No action • Other

  12. Lessons Learned “If you build it, they will come.” Not building it does not mean that issues aren’t present. Colorado State Tulane • Total Cases • 08/09 - 261 • 09/10 to date - 142 • Known MH Hospitalizations • 08/09 - 29 • 09/10 to date - 11 • Total Cases • 07/08 - 242 • 08/09 - 335 • 09/10 to date - 357 • Known MH Hospitalizations • 07/08 - 27 • 08/09 - 58 • 09/10 to date - 53

  13. Lessons Learned The success of a case manager can be largely dependent upon who you hire • Dynamic • Establishes Rapport • Listens & Hears • Independent • Recognizes the real issues • Able to discern “need to know” • Ability to recognize, track, and follow a • Student of Concern

  14. Lessons Learned Support of upper level administration is critical The BIT must be ACTION based

  15. Lessons Learned The first year is largely about learning policies, creating consistency among policies, and identifying gaps in current policies

  16. Lessons Learned You must teach an old dog new tricks • Educating Staff/Faculty • Resistive Staff/Faculty • Policy Changes • Academic Integrity & • Money vs. Student & • University Best • Interests

  17. Lessons Learned Expanding Boundaries or Stepping on Toes? Case Management

  18. Lessons Learned Recognize the limits of what a case manager can and CANNOT do Once a case manager “fixes” a situation, there is a tendency to refer ALL difficult students that others do not want to deal with.

  19. Lessons Learned FERPA - HIPPA • Releases of Information (ROI’s) • Communicating with other • University Officials • Communicating with Family - Need • to problem solve with parents • A Case Manager cannot “un-know” • information • Clinical Degree – Help or Hindrance?

  20. Lessons Learned Certain areas are best outsourced • Psychological Assessments • Long Term Therapy • Community Provider List is vital • Functional Safety Net • Mobile Assessment Team Case Management

  21. Best Practices • Community • Network with community mental health providers • Send introduction letters with information on services as well as • signed ROI to providers seeing students followed by case • management • Arrange meetings with administrators of local hospitals; inundate • them with business cards and other written materials to give staff • and students • Maintain referral database • Take Donuts (make them your friend & collaborate) • Campus • Establish visibility within university • Marketing case management both on and off campus is vital • Provide current and accessible web presence • Meet regularly with campus counseling center and other • university departments

  22. Best Practices • Professional • Annual Case Manager Roundtable • http://studentaffairs.utk.edu/casemanagement/index.php • Case Managers in Higher Education Google Group/List Serv • http://groups.google.com/group/higher-education-case-managers

  23. Case Studies • Small Group case studies • What are the problems? • What is ideal? • What is realistic? • How did CSU or Tulane handle it?

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