treatment-planning

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Use when developing treatment plans, writing SMART goals, determining appropriate level of care, implementing measurement-based care protocols, or adapting treatment based on patient progress. Provides SMART goals framework, ASAM/LOCUS criteria guidance, and treatment monitoring strategies.

rhavekost By rhavekost schedule Updated 2/3/2026

name: "treatment-planning" description: "Use when developing treatment plans, writing SMART goals, determining appropriate level of care, implementing measurement-based care protocols, or adapting treatment based on patient progress. Provides SMART goals framework, ASAM/LOCUS criteria guidance, and treatment monitoring strategies."

Treatment Planning

Description

This skill provides frameworks and tools for developing evidence-based, collaborative treatment plans. Includes SMART goals methodology, level of care guidance, and measurement-based care approaches.

Clinical Context: Effective treatment planning translates assessment findings into actionable, measurable interventions. These frameworks support collaborative goal-setting and progress monitoring while maintaining clinical flexibility.

Available Frameworks

Framework Purpose Key Components
SMART Goals Behavioral health goal setting Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound
Level of Care Guidance Matching symptoms to treatment intensity Criteria for outpatient, IOP, PHP, residential, inpatient
Measurement-Based Care Using assessments to track progress Baseline, regular monitoring, treatment adjustment

Response Style

  • Start with the Quick Reference table below.
  • Ask if the user wants the detailed guidance and examples.

Quick Reference

Step Action Tools
1 Review assessment results and severity PHQ-9, GAD-7, PCL-5, AUDIT-C/DAST-10
2 Select level of care OP, IOP, PHP, residential, inpatient
3 Write SMART goals and monitoring plan SMART + outcome tracking

Interactive Mode (Lightweight)

Use this mode when the clinician asks to build a plan step-by-step.

  1. Confirm readiness, target problems, and recent assessment results.
  2. Ask one domain at a time (goals, objectives, interventions, timeframe).
  3. Propose SMART goals and check for clinician approval.
  4. Identify level of care considerations and monitoring plan.
  5. Summarize the plan and offer documentation-ready bullets.

Usage

This skill can be invoked when you need to:

  • Develop treatment goals with patients
  • Determine appropriate level of care
  • Create measurement-based care plans
  • Write treatment plan documentation
  • Monitor and adjust treatment based on outcomes

Example requests:

  • "Help me write SMART goals for this patient"
  • "What level of care does this patient need?"
  • "How do I implement measurement-based care?"
  • "Guide me through treatment planning"

Framework Details

SMART Goals Framework

Purpose: Structure goals to be clear, achievable, and measurable for behavioral health treatment.

SMART Criteria:

  • S - Specific: Clear, concrete behaviors or outcomes
  • M - Measurable: Quantifiable progress indicators
  • A - Achievable: Realistic given patient's current functioning and resources
  • R - Relevant: Aligned with patient's values and treatment needs
  • T - Time-bound: Specific timeframe for achievement

Examples: Well-Formed vs. Poorly-Formed Goals:

  • Poor: "Feel less depressed." Good: "Reduce PHQ-9 from 16 to <10 within 8 weeks through weekly CBT and activity scheduling."
  • Poor: "Stop having panic attacks." Good: "Complete 3 interoceptive exposure exercises per week and reduce GAD-7 by 4 points in 6 weeks."
  • Poor: "Sleep better." Good: "Average 7 hours of sleep on 5 nights/week within 6 weeks, tracked with sleep diary."

Common Goal Areas:

  • Symptom reduction
  • Functional improvement
  • Coping skills development
  • Relationship enhancement
  • Recovery maintenance

Goal-Writing Guide (Detailed):

  1. Start with baseline data (PHQ-9, GAD-7, PCL-5, AUDIT-C/DAST-10).
  2. Name the target behavior/outcome in observable terms.
  3. Set a time frame that matches acuity and resources.
  4. Define measurement (score change, frequency, duration, or functional milestone).
  5. Use patient language and confirm buy-in.

Examples by Domain:

  • Depression: "Increase daily activity to 5 days/week; PHQ-9 decrease by ~5 points in 4-6 weeks."
  • Anxiety: "Practice 10 minutes of relaxation daily; GAD-7 decrease by ~4 points in 4-6 weeks."
  • Trauma: "Complete grounding skills plan; PCL-5 decrease by 10-20 points over 8-12 weeks."
  • Substance Use: "Reduce drinking days to 1/week; AUDIT-C moves from hazardous to low range in 8 weeks."

Level of Care Guidance

Purpose: Match symptom severity and functional impairment to appropriate treatment intensity.

Level of Care Continuum:

  1. Outpatient (OP):

    • 1-2 sessions per week
    • Stable, lower acuity symptoms
    • Adequate social support
    • No acute safety concerns
  2. Intensive Outpatient (IOP):

    • 9+ hours per week, multiple days
    • Moderate symptoms affecting functioning
    • Needs structure but can maintain community living
    • Some safety concerns manageable with increased support
  3. Partial Hospitalization (PHP):

    • 20+ hours per week, weekdays
    • Significant symptom severity
    • Marked functional impairment
    • Needs daily clinical monitoring
    • Alternative to inpatient or step-down
  4. Residential Treatment:

    • 24-hour structured environment
    • Severe, persistent symptoms
    • Unable to maintain community living safely
    • Needs constant supervision, not acute medical
  5. Inpatient Psychiatric:

    • 24-hour medical management
    • Acute safety risk (suicide, homicide, grave disability)
    • Severe symptoms requiring medical monitoring
    • Brief stabilization focused

Decision Factors:

  • Symptom severity and acuity
  • Suicide/violence risk
  • Functional impairment
  • Social support availability
  • Previous treatment response
  • Co-occurring conditions
  • Patient preference (when safe)

Decision Tree (Quick Guide):

  1. Imminent risk or inability to care for self -> Inpatient
  2. Severe symptoms with unsafe home environment -> Residential or PHP
  3. Moderate impairment needing structure -> IOP
  4. Mild to moderate symptoms with stable supports -> Outpatient

Additional Indicators for Higher Level of Care:

  • Recent suicide attempt or escalating self-harm
  • Severe functional impairment or inability to complete ADLs
  • Psychosis or severe substance withdrawal risk
  • Failure to improve with appropriate outpatient treatment

Measurement-Based Care

Purpose: Systematically use assessment data to guide treatment decisions and track outcomes.

Key Principles:

  1. Baseline Assessment: Establish starting point with validated measures
  2. Regular Monitoring: Consistent re-assessment (weekly, monthly)
  3. Collaborative Review: Share results with patient
  4. Treatment Adjustment: Modify interventions based on progress
  5. Outcome Tracking: Document change over time

Common Measures:

  • PHQ-9 (depression)
  • GAD-7 (anxiety)
  • PCL-5 (PTSD)
  • Functioning scales
  • Quality of life measures

Implementation Steps:

  1. Select appropriate measures for presenting problems
  2. Administer at baseline
  3. Set review schedule (e.g., every 4 sessions)
  4. Graph progress with patient
  5. Discuss results and adjust treatment
  6. Document in clinical notes

Using Measurement to Guide Treatment:

  • Reliable change indices
  • Clinically significant change
  • When to intensify treatment
  • When to step down care
  • When to change approaches

Implementation Guide (Detailed):

  • Select measures aligned with primary problems (1-3 tools max).
  • Baseline at intake and repeat every 2-4 weeks or every 4 sessions.
  • Share results with the patient and document clinical interpretation.
  • Adjust treatment if no meaningful improvement after 4-6 sessions.
  • Escalate level of care if scores worsen, risk increases, or function declines.

Clinical Interpretation

Translating Assessment to Plan (Examples):

  • Mild severity: Low-intensity interventions, psychoeducation, brief therapy.
  • Moderate severity: Structured therapy (CBT/DBT), weekly visits, consider meds.
  • Severe or complex: Combined treatment, close monitoring, consider higher level of care.
  • Positive safety screens: Immediate safety plan and risk-focused interventions.

Treatment Plan Development Process:

  1. Review assessment findings
  2. Identify primary problems/diagnoses
  3. Discuss patient's goals and priorities
  4. Determine appropriate level of care
  5. Develop SMART goals collaboratively
  6. Select evidence-based interventions
  7. Establish progress monitoring plan
  8. Set review timeline

Matching Interventions to Goals:

  • Evidence-based practices for specific diagnoses
  • Patient preferences and values
  • Cultural considerations
  • Available resources
  • Therapist competencies

Safety Protocols

Treatment planning must address safety:

  • Document suicide/violence risk assessment
  • Include crisis plan in treatment plan
  • Identify early warning signs
  • Specify emergency contacts and procedures
  • Plan for means restriction if indicated
  • Schedule more frequent contact if needed

When to revise treatment plan:

  • Emergence of safety concerns
  • Significant symptom worsening
  • Major life changes or stressors
  • Lack of progress over reasonable timeframe
  • Patient request or preference change

Safety Protocols (Expanded):

  • Use ASQ or C-SSRS for any positive PHQ-9 Item 9 or clinical concern.
  • Document intent, plan, means, protective factors, and prior behaviors.
  • Include a written safety plan for any elevated risk.
  • Arrange same-day evaluation for moderate to high risk.
  • For imminent risk, activate emergency services and do not leave patient alone.

Limitations & Considerations

These are support frameworks, not rigid requirements:

  • Treatment plans are collaborative documents
  • Patient autonomy and choice essential
  • Cultural factors shape goal priorities
  • Social determinants affect achievability
  • Flexibility within structure
  • Clinical judgment guides application

Cultural Considerations:

  • Individualism vs. collectivism in goal-setting
  • Family involvement expectations
  • Traditional healing integration
  • Language and communication style
  • Structural barriers to care access
  • Cultural concepts of distress and recovery

Common Challenges:

  • Patient and clinician goals may differ
  • Insurance limitations on level of care
  • Limited availability of appropriate services
  • Social determinants limiting goal achievement
  • Balancing structure with flexibility

Additional Limitations and Considerations:

  • Resource constraints may limit ideal level-of-care placement.
  • Insurance authorization may require justification and measurable goals.
  • Patient readiness and preference affect pacing and intervention selection.
  • Cultural factors influence goal relevance and engagement.

References

SMART Goals:

  • Doran GT. There's a S.M.A.R.T. way to write management's goals and objectives. Manage Rev. 1981;70(11):35-36.
  • Bovend'Eerdt TJ, Botell RE, Wade DT. Writing SMART rehabilitation goals and achieving goal attainment scaling: a practical guide. Clin Rehabil. 2009;23(4):352-361.

Level of Care:

  • American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM) Criteria
  • LOCUS (Level of Care Utilization System) for psychiatric services
  • Mee-Lee D, ed. The ASAM Criteria: Treatment Criteria for Addictive, Substance-Related, and Co-Occurring Conditions. 3rd ed. Carson City, NV: The Change Companies; 2013.

Measurement-Based Care:

  • Scott K, Lewis CC. Using measurement-based care to enhance any treatment. Cogn Behav Pract. 2015;22(1):49-59.
  • Fortney JC, Unützer J, Wrenn G, et al. A tipping point for measurement-based care. Psychiatr Serv. 2017;68(2):179-188.

Additional References:


Status: ✅ Implemented Priority: MEDIUM - Phase 3 Last Updated: 2026-02-03

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