Mental health common intervention terminology in documentation pdf

DOCUMENTATION/ PAPERWORK

I will be honest. I always have difficulty with this one. With the experience of working at different agencies, I would say I am not 100 percent expert but was able to be better at writing my notes. Each and every agency have its own way of documenting notes. But these are my favorite way of doing it.

TREATMENT PLAN- My favorite find

Whoever created this pdf, they are a godsend for me. Luckily, after I created this website. I received an email via LinkedIn from the creator Kimberly Fore. She created this cheat sheet for the therapists she supervised. She also said she is happy that it has been helpful and also welcomed me sharing it with you guys. This 11-page pdf has specific examples of goals, objectives, and interventions for different topics (abuse/ neglect, addiction, adoption, anger, anxiety, behavior problems,…..and the list goes on). I lost my pdf after I left one of the jobs, and am so glad I found it again. https://studylib.net/doc/7892034/treatment-plan-goals-and-objectives

Mental health common intervention terminology in documentation pdf

PROGRESS NOTES

Usually, I am famous for writing too much. However, these are the bullet points I usually focus on.

    1. Progress on goals: This is straightforward. Since the last session, how did the patient do? Were they able to achieve the goal/ did worse?
    2. Engagement: This is where I write the patient’s engagement. Usually, it is super easy to write up “Patient was engaged and involved in the session”. or “Patient was refusing to participate, defiant, disrespectful, noncompliant, or aggressive”.
    3. Interventions used by the provider: I just make it basic giving little detail on the interventions “improve or teaching skills”, “explore and process”, and specific modalities “CBT, DBT, play therapy, family therapy….”.
    4. Reactions/ Interactions by the patient: I am not even sure if I should be giving recommendations on this one. I give too many details myself. Hehehe. But I use this one to remind myself of any basic bullet points that I can use later in the sessions”their stress, triggers, belief system, and their reaction to homework given/ interventions suggested”.
Mental health common intervention terminology in documentation pdf

SOAP Notes

positivepsychology.com has a pdf that you can use to write your notes. It uses S= Subjective, O= Objective, A= Assessment, and P= plan. You can find the pdf and also read more on how to write notes. https://positivepsychology.com/soap-notes-counseling/

Mental health common intervention terminology in documentation pdf

INTERVENTION TERMINOLOGY

I am not sure if you have seen this one online. But this one is a famous one too. It lists common intervention terminology in the documentation. I am not sure who created this. But these words help a lot when I am writing my documentation. https://www.pinterest.com/pin/534169205775458559/

Mental health common intervention terminology in documentation pdf

SAID SYNONYM

I don’t know about you. But I also have a very difficult time finding other words than said, when I am doing my paperwork. If that’s you. Here is a list of words you can use other than said.

Mental health common intervention terminology in documentation pdf

How do you document mental health progress notes?

Mental Health Progress Notes Templates. ... .
Don't Rely on Subjective Statements. ... .
Avoid Excessive Detail. ... .
Know When to Include or Exclude Information. ... .
Don't Forget to Include Client Strengths. ... .
Save Paper, Time, and Hassle by Documenting Electronically..

What are some mental health interventions?

4 Examples of Evidence-Based Mental Health Interventions.
Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy. ... .
Solution-focused brief therapy. ... .
Schema-focused therapy. ... .
Interpersonal psychotherapy..

How do you write an intervention note?

Make sure that your session notes do not reflect any negative feelings or reactions that you have toward the child, other people or events. Try to avoid terms and descriptions that seem judgmental. Write clearly and legibly Be objectively descriptive. It helps you be precise about what you are describing.

How do I document a mental health assessment?

To write a mental health assessment, start by writing a detailed explanation of everything that is affecting the patient and how it is affecting them. Include a detailed description of the patient's mental health problem, as well as any social or medical history that may have caused the problem.