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Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

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Page 1: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit

Eleanor Davidson, MDTanya Massey, CNPMaryann McGlenn PhDCase Western Reserve University

Page 2: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Objectives

1. Introduce the National College Depression Partnership and discuss how it led to our focus on self-management

2. Describe 3 self-management tools used for patients with depression

3. Describe 3 self-management tools used for clinicians

4. Describe a teaching process for clinicians learning to use self-management

5. Describe how clinician self-management tools can be entered into the medical record

Page 3: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Our model

Page 4: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

So why screen for depression in primary care?

US Preventative Services Task Force Recommendation:

Adult primary care practice settings should screen for depression—but only within the context of a “prepared practice.”

http://www.uspreventiveservicestaskforce.org/

Page 5: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Background: Phase I NCDP

College Breakthrough Series-Depression: 2006-07NYU, Princeton, Cornell, CUNY (Hunter & Baruch), CWRU, St Lawrence

Gap Strategy

Under-detection of students with depression & suicidal ideation

Maximize existing medical & mental health resources to identify and treat depression

All studies show that follow up after initiation of treatment (in any setting) is a critical factor for successful outcomes

Create a safety net for identified depressed students including systematic planned follow up, treatment monitoring & coordinated referrals to community links.

Page 6: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Phase I (CBS-D): challenges

● How would students react to depression screening in the health service?

● Could the health service achieve an 80% rate of screening all patients once during a school year?

● How would clinicians react to screening for depression in primary care?

-Use of Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles

-Start small and grow.

Page 7: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Some of us imagined that our biggest challenge was identification of depressed students who would then be referred to the counseling service for treatment.

Page 8: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Successes and challenges (our model)

We could achieve 80-90 % screening of all students in primary care (throughout—all visit types).

We could achieve simple self-management goals with a majority of patients (30 min of exercise 2-3 times per week was most common).

Page 9: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Successes & challenges (our model)

The majority of our patients were entered from primary care; we had a disproportionate number who did not want either counseling or medication.

Identification was the easy part. The challenge became what do after depression was identified.

Page 10: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

In other words, if a student did not want to go to counseling, we wanted to initiate treatment without feeling forced to

start medication.

We needed another way to start and self-management seemed like a plausible option

Page 11: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

What Is Self-Management?

Self-management - Goal directed patient behaviors that enhance clinical & functional outcomes:

– Medication management and adherence– Self-monitoring of symptoms, treatment status

– Managing effects of illness on social role function– Reducing health risks (alcohol misuse, smoking)

– Preventive maintenance (e.g., exercise,

screening check-ups)– Working with health care professionals

Page 12: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

NCDP Operational Definition

The engagement of patients in a collaborative partnership with clinicians to achieve goal-directed behavioral change and patient activation.

Page 13: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Why Self-Management?

We know it is evidence based

It is simple

Fits well in a college setting. It focuses on a developmental model. For them everything is a self-management tool.

Page 14: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Phase II (NCDP) 20 schools 2008-09

Refined the concept of a prepared practice

Expanded self-management tools to a treatment goal:

- Exercise

- Harm reduction (e.g. alcohol, marijuana)

- Sleep hygiene

- Full session with dietitian: concern for eating

disorder

- Assessment in career services

- Positive activity: spending time with friends

- Medication follow through

- Mindfulness/Stress Management: Friday group

therapy sessions

Page 15: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Phase III (NCDP-CAN) 17 schools 2010-11

Further refine/expand self-management:

-Collaborative treatment planning (educate

about treatment options, elicit feedback,

encourage behavioral activation) by four

weeks

- Personalized self-management

(personalized goal, frequency, duration,

confidence rating, reassessment of goal)

by 8 weeks

Page 16: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Findings

N = 42

Baseline 4 weeks 4-8 weeks 8 weeks 12 weeks

PHQ-9 100% 48% 20% n/a n/a

Functional recovery n/a n/a n/a n/a 33%

Treatment initiated - 84% - - -

Self-management goal set and reviewed by 8 weeks

n/a n/a n/a 0% n/a

Page 17: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

What Happened?

Self-Management goals/measurement criteria were high

Not enough time to accomplish this in one visit

After obtaining PHQ-9, history, and addressing the patient’s medical concern, we were lucky to have enough time for a self-management goal let alone elicit duration, frequency, and student confidence.

Page 18: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Is time the biggest impediment?

We’ll return to something we invented as a bridge to counseling that involved encouraging patient activation, exploring self-management options, and chart documentation of these steps.

One of the psychology post docs created this in consultation with our NCDP team.

[The BRIDGES Program]

Page 19: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

What if time is not the biggest impediment:The patient’s perspective

May disagree on diagnosis• Believe there is a physiologic etiology such as

fatigue due to anemia or thyroid problem

May disagree on treatment plan• May not be ready for counseling• May not be ready for medication• May not be ready for the self-management

tools we have in mind.

Page 20: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

We need to step back and figure out where the patient is. Is the patient ready to make changes?

Page 21: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Transtheoretical Model of Change

Page 22: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Transtheoretical Model of Change

Where are the CWRU students?

Although many are in pre-contemplation or contemplation, the model does not necessarily describe every student

Page 23: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Where are our clinicians?

We noticed that clinicians could quickly figure out a student was likely depressed but the student was nowhere near that conclusion.

We wondered if our team member from mental health could help us understand more about where we might lose patients in the journey.

Page 24: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

NCDP Team

A group made up of clinicians, a care manager, a women’s health advocate, and a representative from counseling services.

Meet every 2 weeks to discuss patient cases.

Page 25: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Mental Health Professional as Team Member

Focus on:

Biopsychosocial/Mind-Body perspective and viewing the person as a whole

Relationship as an important change factor

Interaction between provider and patient can be a help or hindrance towards change

Self care tools – Providers also need them

Page 26: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

PRECURSORS MODEL OF CHANGE

Adapted from Hanna, F. J. (2001)

Therapy With Difficult Clients: Using the Precursor Model to Awaken Change.

Page 27: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Seven Elements Necessary for Therapeutic Change

CLIENT CLINICIAN

1. Sense of necessity => Sense of necessity to help the client change

2. Willingness to experience anxiety => Willingness to experience the anxiety or difficulty inherent within the client

3 . Awareness of the problem => Awareness of the client’s issues and one’s own corresponding issues

4. Confronting the problem => Confronting the client’s issues

5. Effort or will toward change => Effort or will to work through issues with the client

6. Hope for change => Hope for client change

7. Social support for change => A therapist’s social support for facilitating change

Page 28: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Comparing Models of Change

Transtheoretical Model of Change

Precursors Model of Change

Looks at: Stages of change occurring within the individual client

Looks at: Both the client and the clinician and the interaction between them

Emphasizes 7 Contextual Factors necessary for change to occur . Factors which must be present for advancement along the stages

Regression occurs because the precursors have waned

Page 29: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Difficult Client or Difficult Therapist?

One-sided View of a Difficult Client

One who is defiant, unruly, stubborn, undermining, ambivalent, apathetic, deceptive (pejorative)

One who fails to make satisfactory progress in treatment

Shared Perspective (of a difficult client)

One for whom change is not forthcoming in spite of therapist and client efforts to achieve it

Page 30: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Rating the Clinician on the Precursor Scale

It’s important to examine the clinician’s disposition and reactions to “difficult” clients (aka countertransference)

“Resistance” viewed as client or therapist interference in the change process

Therapist Effectiveness is enhanced by

Building the Relationship and Reducing Interference

Page 31: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Relationship Building: Strategies and Techniques

1. View empathy as a duty not a suggestion

2. Attend to the unspoken conversation that the client may be having with the therapist (metalog)

3. Set (mutual) boundaries including asking permission and taking time to reflect before responding

4. Leave the ego at the door

5. Work from a strength based approach and validate the client’s abilities and positive qualities

6. Reframe Negative Behaviors and Attitudes

Page 32: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Reducing Therapist Interference

1. Detach from one’s own agenda

2. Confront with curiosity, empathy, serenity and the intention to help

3. Be aware of becoming too rigid, flexible, distant or long-winded

4. Meet hostility with equanimity and humor and avoid power struggles

5. Attend to differences in culture and socioeconomic status

6. Use consultation to regain focus and a sense of control

Page 33: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Self Survey for Clinicians(adapted from Kottler, 1992)

1. What am I doing to exacerbate the situation?

2. What buttons is this client pushing in me?

3. Who does this client remind me of from my past?

4. In what ways am I acting out my impatience?

5. What are my expectations for this client?

6. Which of my needs are not being met by this client?

Page 34: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

So we’ve looked at factors that influence both the patient and the clinician in this change process.

Now let’s examine 3 cases which illustrate how this might apply in the clinical setting.

Page 35: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Case Example: Patient M.

27 y/o Asian male MD/PhD student

Presents with chief complaint of fatigue and headache

Also reports sleeping more, decreased appetite, less energy, trouble focusing, and hand weakness

Page 36: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

14

3

21

3

32

3

0

0

0

941

Page 37: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Case Example: Patient M.

• Rejects possibility of depression as the initial diagnosis• Requests blood work to rule out the physiologic first

• BMP, CBC, and TSH are all normal• Again discussed counseling. Said he would consider it

after exams

3

Page 38: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Case Example: Patient M.

• One month later made an appointment for ADHD testing

• Canceled appointment and rescheduled with counseling

• Attended an initial intake evaluation and then one full counseling session

• Two weeks after that met with psychiatry. Wellbutrin prescribed initially. Klonopin added later

• On and off meds for the next year.

• Never returned for counseling sessions. “Not a talker”

Page 39: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Case Example: Patient M.

Returned to UHS sporadically, seeing a different provider each time, often when off meds

• Fatigue—concerned with sleep apnea, enlarged tonsils

• HA—began one week after stopping antidepressants

Last saw psychiatry Oct 2012. Did not keep 3 month follow up

Last seen at UHS Feb 2013 for travel visit (on med)

Page 40: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Case Example: Patient M.

What would we do differently now?•Assign a primary care clinician•Schedule routine follow up at UHS (even if it seemed like he was going to UCS)•Send periodic messages via secure e-mail•Work on relationship and self-management

Page 41: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Case Example: Patient M.

We might also be kind to ourselves and realize someone that is not only getting an MD but also a PhD in the sciences might be more focused on identifying a ‘molecular” cause of his distress.

How would this help?

We don’t need to berate ourselves in the process.

We might get a bit more therapeutic distance to help us make observations.

Page 42: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Case Example: Patient N.

19 year old undergraduate studying piano performance seen for women’s health annual physical exam Routine PHQ-2 = 1.

PHQ-9 = 7. Functional score = 1 somewhat difficult.

Counseling information given and also referred to Dr. Davidson. Declined scheduling follow up appointment.

Page 43: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Case Example: Patient N.

Seen 5 months later for Depo-Provera shot.

PHQ 9 = 9 with yes to question 9 (suicidal ideation)

Functional score = 2 very difficult

More thorough history taken

Realized she was depressed but admitted to coming from an ethnic background that did not accept mental health treatment--it was looked down upon in her culture.

Had discussed counseling with her parents in high school and was told that counselors would just “mess with her”

Page 44: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Case Example: Patient N.

States on the one hand she is interested in counseling but on the other and it is “unnecessary and for the weak”.

Not interested in medication or therapy but interested in other options.

Assessed that she was not in acute danger to herself or others and scheduled a one week follow up appointment

Self-management: safety, enjoyable activity, spend time with friends

Page 45: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Case Example: Patient N.

In the next two years, I saw her periodically for sick visits, Depo-Provera shots and annual exams.

During that time I continued to work on the relationship, getting a thorough history, encouraging treatment and working on self-management.

Eventually, she did start counseling at CWRU, started on medication through a home psychiatrist. The last time I had seen her she was on medication and going to counseling.

Page 46: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

What did we learn?

Removing barriers to treatment• Multiculturalism—she knew she needed treatment but did not

have family or cultural support to back her up

Keeping patients in the women’s clinic• Many women would prefer all of their care in one place.

Forget about seeing a provider in a different side of campus. We learned they wanted to “stay within the product line” they chose originally.

Benefits of our Women’s Health Advocate• She could do full PHQ-9 if time was an issue• Clinicians felt more comfortable raising these issues if the

health advocate was there for back up.

Page 47: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Case Example: Patient D.

19 year old sophomore with chief complaint of chest discomfort/tightness, heart palpitations, and body aches.

Came in realizing that all her symptoms were linked to anxiety provoking situations.

Had been attending counseling weekly for the last 2 months but felt uncertain about returning. Wanted to switch counselors

PHQ-9 = 18

Functional score = 2 very difficult

Page 48: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Case Example: Patient D.

She had already been making changes by going to counseling

She was ready to start medication (Zoloft) and work on her issues

We worked on self management

Finding a counselor that was the right fit for her

Putting herself in situations to work on her social anxiety

Page 49: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Case Example: Patient D.

She has stayed on the medication

Has kept regularly scheduled appointments with me

She found a new therapist that she is happy with and sees regularly

PHQ-9 started at 18 and decreased to 6

Functional score: Very difficult initially to somewhat difficult four months later

Time will be the test

Page 50: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Real World Use

Rule out the physiologic• physical exam, lab work, etc

Work on relationship--build rapport, trust• taking the time to listen to their concerns• acknowledging these concerns but also offering

alternative diagnoses

Obtain a more thorough psychosocial history• where they were born, grew up, current major, why they

came to this school. • family history—health, parent’s occupation, marital status • relationship with family, friends, significant other

Page 51: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Real World Use

Work on self-management

• working on the relationship and learning more about the patient helps the provider guide the patient to determine their own self-management goals

Schedule follow up with same provider

• must establish a relationship for this to be successful long-term

Maintain follow-up until successfully transitioned

• But remember that may not be what the patient may choose

Page 52: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

What else can we do? BRIDGES program

Invented as an intermediary type of visit when a student did not see counseling as an option.

Our post-doc (Sasha Ribic PsyD) worked on creating this alternative.

Behaviors

Relationships

Interests

Development

Growth

Emotion

Success

Page 53: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

BRIDGES

Page 54: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Documentation

We wanted to put this in electronic record where it could be seen both by counseling and health services.

After this was completed at a visit, the paper copied would be scanned into the chart.

Page 55: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Summary

Describe three self-management tools used for patients with depression

1. Exercise

2. Spending time with friends

3. Regular sleep schedule

But we also learned sometimes self-management needs to be more basic than that

1. Think about what we discussed at this visit

2. Keep one week follow up appointment

Page 56: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Summary

Describe 3 self-management tools used for clinicians:

1.Reframing – work from a strength-based approach, check your ego

2.Detach – from your own agenda; check your posture with the client (too rigid, flexible, long-winded)

3.Consult – form a team, do a self-survey

Page 57: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Questions or Comments?

Thanks for listening!

Page 58: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

Resources

Arkowitz, H., Westra, H.A., Miller, W.R., & Rollnick, S. (2008). Motivational Interviewing in the Treatment of Psychological Problems. The Guilford Press.

Barlow, et. al. (2002) Patient Education Counseling. 48,177.

Bodenheimer, T., Lorig, K., Holman, H., & Grumbach, K. (2002). Patient self-management of chronic disease in primary care. JAMA, 288(19), 2469-2475.

Hanna, F. J. (2001). Therapy With Difficult Clients: Using the Precursors Model to Awaken Change. American Psychological Association.

Katon, W., Ludman, E., & Simon, G. (2008). The Depression Helpbook. Bull Publishing Co.

Kottler, J.A. (1992). Compassionate therapy: Working with difficult clients. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

Rollnick, S., Miller, W.R., Butler, C.C. (2008) Motivational Interviewing in Health Care. The Guilford Press.

Page 59: Self-Management Tools: It's Not Just Patients Who Can Benefit Eleanor Davidson, MD Tanya Massey, CNP Maryann McGlenn PhD Case Western Reserve University

ACHA Boston

May 30, 2013