This document provides guidance on writing progress notes for therapy sessions. It discusses that progress notes are an important clinical documentation form that therapists must complete after each session to keep a record of what was discussed and done. It outlines the key components that should be included in progress notes according to HIPAA regulations, such as symptoms, interventions used, plans for future sessions, and handling of any crisis situations. It also describes two common note formats, DAP notes and SOAP notes, which have similar elements arranged differently. The document emphasizes the importance of balancing client privacy with documenting competent treatment in progress notes.
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Progress Note Transcript
This document provides guidance on writing progress notes for therapy sessions. It discusses that progress notes are an important clinical documentation form that therapists must complete after each session to keep a record of what was discussed and done. It outlines the key components that should be included in progress notes according to HIPAA regulations, such as symptoms, interventions used, plans for future sessions, and handling of any crisis situations. It also describes two common note formats, DAP notes and SOAP notes, which have similar elements arranged differently. The document emphasizes the importance of balancing client privacy with documenting competent treatment in progress notes.
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Hi, this is Dr.
Diane Gay Harden, Welcome to my lecture on progress notes that
goes with my textbook mastering competencies and Family Therapy, the second edition. In his lecture, I'm going to talk about how to write progress notes. And you will find that these are one of the most common clinical forms of documentation. And as you work in the field as a therapist or a counselor, you will be completing several of these each day. So hopefully this lecture will get you started. So progress notes or the document that you complete everyday after seeing a client and a typical session. And and what happens in this document is you basically it is the official record of what happened and what you did. So the one hand the most basic reason for doing progress notes is for you to keep a record of what you're doing from week to week to kind of track your sessions and care. So that's the most basic purpose of a progress note. And in a larger sense, there's a, there's an ethical and professional standard for maintaining these because it is the only real documentation we have. It's a field where we sit in a room and we talk to people. And then, you know, it's based on our work, but we did. And so we use these progress notes to document what happened. And so these are very important for third-party payers to keep track of what happens if there's ever questions about what happened in session. And similarly, progress notes can be helpful in protecting against lawsuits or complaints on because a document what we did. And so these are generally considered protection or can't be protection and those types of situations. And so generally, it's important to also notice under the new HIPAA regulations like his hip isn't that knew 2004, I believe. But in that way back then in 2004, there was a distinction has been made between progress notes and psychotherapy notes. So progress nodes are the official medical record that can be shared with other medical professionals. And it generally has a little more limited scope in the sense that there's certain things that are supposed to go into a HIPAA base progress down and we're going to go into that in just a minute. But it basically is documenting the symptoms of client had and what you did about that. And that's the main thing that a progress notes does. And as the name indicates, you're tracking progress. On the other hand, psychotherapy nodes are separate and from progress notes. And these are more for the, the clinician in terms of thinking through case, conceptualizing, and putting their thoughts onto paper. Psychotherapy notes are kept in a distinct and separate place and file can be kept separate from the official medical records. So for example, when you don't have the physician is requisitioning or requesting a copy of of of records, you would generally just send the progress notes were psychotherapy notes are often have basically more subjective impressions that the clinician has is these are protected a bit more. And it's really more on rare circumstances where the psychotherapy notes specifically would be subpoenaed and normally that would be in some kind of legal case where there's been a complaint against the clinician. So psychotherapy knows if you're going and you do not need to maintain psychotherapy knows they are optional. If you do maintain them, they should be kept in a separate file on physical separate physical or digital files separate from the progress notes, which are the official record. For the most part, anything we put in psychotherapy note, so the rest and the remainder of this lecture is on, it's on how to write progress notes because you can put what you want in psychotherapy notes generally. I mean, obviously it should be professional. But they are really for the clinician. We're progress notes have become more standardized with the hip, HIPAA legislation of privacy legislation in 2004. So when you're writing a progress doubts, you really want to do two things you want to or balanced to different priorities. You want to maximize client privacy. Knowing that these are official medical records that can be subpoenaed and share with other medical providers. While at the same time, you want to document competent treatment and that you're conforming to professional standards of care. So you need to put enough in there to document competent care for there to be a medical record of what happened. The specifically related to treating the diagnosed or condition or the focus of treatment, while at the same time maximizing client privacy. So these progressions are going to contain detailed information about the frequency and duration of symptoms. That's considered standard medical record information. You also want to include very clearly the interventions that you use to treat symptoms that so you're going to document your competency. Decline came in with these problems. And this is the frequency and duration of the problems. And then this is what I did about interventions. And then also if there was any type of crisis situation such as suicide or self-harm. Child abuse. Progress notes are also used to document how you stabilize crisis. So does also a particular area of focus that needs careful documentation in your progress notes. The good thing about progress notes is that there are now common ingredients to your average progress note. And that's really been through the HIPAA legislation that kind of outlined what should be in a progress note, which is something we didn't have this consistently before these regulations. So the first thing I generally is that you will have a client case number. And in most cases you want to not use a name but use a number because this protects client privacy so that their name isn't needlessly documented someplace. And as with all medical records, there should be a date, time, the length of session. And this is especially if you're doing third party billing are important to have this clearly documented. And then obviously you also want to document who attended the session because that's also very important information. At the typically also there needs to be the clinicians original professional signature with your title. And generally, if you are in training, working under someone else's license in many situations, you'll also have your supervisor signature there. And then one of the most important things to a document is client progress. So you'll document the symptoms, the frequency, duration of symptoms, and how bad are they this week, where did they happen is better or worse than last week? That these are the types of things you would document. And then also the interventions again, what you did for that typically, there's also plans for future sent sessions. What do you plan to do next week based on this week? And again, if there were any crisis issues, you will want to go into some detail documenting what you did to stabilize it. And then once you've identified a crisis such as self-harm, week to week, checking in about whether or not there was futures self-harm as therapy progresses. The nice thing about progress notes is that once you understand the basic ingredients, no matter where you go, where you work or what agency you're at. If you look closely below the different formats, you will find they all pretty much nowadays. After HIPPA have very similar ingredients are just arrange differently. So two of the more common format you might find are DAP notes and soap notes. And you will see that even though these look like very different acronyms, that the information in them is very similar. So the Datanode stands for data assessment and plan. And so the data is generally, and again, different agencies and clinicians can put different things here. But generally the data is going to be some content about what happened to the client since the last session. In the assessment, you'll generally put the duration, frequency of the symptoms, what the things are progressing or if there's been backsliding for whatever reason. And then the plan is what do you plan to do next week and or robot revision to the treatment plan so that your basic DAP note. So know that you're going to see is very similar and some nodes are actually frequently used in the medical community. And so you'll see a lot of different mental health agencies also using them, especially if they're connected with medical communities. So notes, generalist Danforth, objective observations, objective observations, assessment and plan. So that assessment and plan are still there. And so I have seen actually that soap notes can be used and that slightly differently in these acronyms, even though they look really clear cut, can be used differently by different agencies. So in general, objective observations are going to be talking about either the clinicians are the client's objective report about what happened over the week. The objective observations are going to be focusing on more measurable reports or MIT, objective observations by the clinician. Again, the assessment will be talking and focusing on the progress made, whether we're going forward or backwards and the duration and frequency of symptoms. And then again, the plan will be, what do you plan to do next week and or what you plan to do with the treatment plan. So these are two common formats and I will let you know, do not be surprised if in a different agencies that different people interpret what goes in these categories slightly differently. So in my textbook, I have put together a progress note template that you can use that I call the all-purpose HIPAA progress note that includes all the important HIPAA ingredients. It just spelled out a bit more. And so you're going to see at the top of this, there is the initial information that has the client number, the date, time, length of the session, who was present. And it will include the CPT billing codes. And you'll note that in 2013, these codes change per mental health practitioners. So in the second edition you will see the new 2013 Coase. And if you have an older edition of Mastering Competencies, you will have the, the other codes that were in place for at least 20 years or more. So that's the initial information that you will see. And then you need to fill in the symptom progress. And so that is the duration and frequency and severity of the symptoms as well as the intervention. So what did you do about it? And then the client response is typically are often also included in progress notes. And so that is how did the client respond to the interventions? Were they receptive, wizard, some hesitancy or resistance. And so there's a place for you to document that there than you include your plan and how you handled any crisis issues. And then at the bottom, there's a place, especially for trainees, where you can put in whether you consulted with other professionals and supervision and and or whether you made any type of collateral contacts, such as calling calling family members or social workers. And then finally, there's a place for professional signatures, which would be your signature if your intern or trainee. And then in some agencies they would also have you have your supervisor sign off on those. So in the next several slides, what I want to do is break down this form and kind of walk you through how to fill it out in a little more detail. So starting with the beginning initial information on the progress note, like I've mentioned before, you want to try they generally use a client number instead of a name. And this is particularly important if for any reason you're at a place where your notes or sometimes separate from the physical file and your notes can get misplaced. I always think it's a great thing if you can actually have the note fall out of the file and land on the floor and you can look at and not know exactly where it goes. The only person who would know who that's about is the person who actually wrote the progress note because it's confidential enough that it's, you know, if it slips out, there's a little more protection for the client. You do it that way. I know not all agencies will will do it that way. It's good for protecting client information. Then you of course, that the date, the time, and the length of session and that length of session should match up with your billing code. And then you end up with who was present. And I like to use the abbreviations AF for adult female, AN adult male cf, and then an age for child female, and then cm and a number for child male. And the reason I do this, even when you're working with a family, really makes it much faster and easier and I don't know any other way to really document without using name so much with the family. So when you're working with a couple of our family, it really is helpful. But also even when you're working with an individual, it is quite helpful. It's very fast to note it. And you can, even if you're working, let's say for example, with the adult female, you're working with the woman, but she's referring to her kids, her husband, or a lover. It's much better to be using abbreviations like this than to actually putting people's names. And sometimes it becomes even awkward to write out, you know, husband, lover if they're having an affair. So yeah, it's probably best to not even use that term. So I really find it using these abbreviations can be very, very helpful in terms of protecting client confidentiality in multiple ways. As well as if you do have supervisors reading. It's, it's very quick and easy for third person to read this and understand who the players are, what the issues might be, because you can have the ages and everything like that. If a woman talking about an eight year old kid or 16, or even a 22-year- old kid. It just very quick notation that makes it easy. And so, So that said that there are different agencies that have the convention of using CL for client and that's also an option. So let's see. In addition, we have here the CPT billing codes, and this is the Procedural Terminology codes are set forth by the American Medical Association in 2013. They actually change all these for mental health. So what do you have? The most common used weren't commonly used ones are 90, 79 line, which is a diagnostic interview and it's generally used for the first session. Then you have 90834 and this is typically used for 4550 minute session with the client and or family member may be present. And so this is your typical session psychotherapy session. And there is also a nano 90846, which is 45 minutes a family psychotherapy when the focuses is for the family. And in the textbook I list out all the other commonly used codes for mental health practitioners. And these are good to use when you're working generally with insurance companies, they will use these codes. If you're working for something like a large county mental health agency, they may have their own internal codes that they're using. Otherwise for medical purposes, most people would use the codes put forth by the American Medical Association. The next thing you're going to document, and for many people, this is one of the main things. A document in your weekly progress notes is the symptom progress. And so for this, you're going to be focusing on duration, frequency, and severity of the symptoms. And especially when using the DSM BY that has a lot of dimensional assessment indicating the severity from week to week is particularly important. So indicating whether it's mild, moderate, or severe is a particular interest. So some examples of how you would do this. The first thing to note is that generally the convention is you're going to say client reported or clients dated for virtually everything in a progress note. And because obviously we're most Ali information unless you're observing it, is based on client report and it's just important to to to indicate that you are aware that this is something that the client told you versus something that you observed. So examples of how this might look is the client reported mild depression or mild yeah. Depressed mood for most days in a week or five out of seven days. So here we've got the severity and the frequency of the depressive mood symptom. So again, we have here climb reports when panic attack over the past week with moderate severity. So CLI reports decrease conflict with parents to arguments in the past week. So here, these are some of the different ways that you can document progress. And it kind of depends on the symptom, whether you're putting in how much duration or frequency or severity. But again, you want to get as for most for most third-party payers in the typical convention is increasingly 1-sum, something kind of measurable. Sometimes that's hard I know and mental health. But as much as you can define measurable symptoms and try to indicate that as well as their severity from week to week in whether things got better or worse. So once you've documented symptoms that the client has, to document your competency, you need to indicate what you did, what interventions you used, and how what you did to help the client with these particular symptoms. So and when in this section I really encourage you to go through and find very specific language. This is where you can document your, your theory and your, your clinical case conceptualization comes through. And so this is real important to how to think about how you language. This is saying something like You discussed work stress or you've talked about client fears. I mean, that's all very nice. And we expect that you did that. It doesn't actually document that you did something that is based on the professional standards of the field. Because basically a bartender or a hairdresser can talk about work stress or fears. So you'd want to distinguish herself as a rendering some kind of professional care. And so this is really where you document your competency here. So, and so again, it's very simple. You just need to cite some of the techniques generally that are listed in the various sections of the book. And that's probably the easiest way to go about putting writing your intervention section. So some examples can be using solution focused scaling to identify steps to reduce depression over the next week. So that's pretty clear that you rendered some kind of known professional intervention there. You can also do something like using enactments to practice alternative to conflict. These are very short, but concise, and they refer to professional known interventions that are well-respected. And so it does appear as of, you know, you did something professional. And so you're again, you're documenting your competence, particularly in the intervention section. Now this next section, client response may not be included in all progress nodes at all agencies. But increasingly you will see this in most. Progress notes in recent years. And basically, client response allows the clinician to document how the client responded to the session and to the interventions, or to just kinda note on what was going on. And so this is helpful in particular to note if there's some kind of tension between the client and the clinician. But it also can be very useful. Even you as a clinician, as you're sitting down and just thinking about what did my client financially useful, seemed least seemed on the outside. So rarely do they verbalized. That's like that was the best reframe I've heard nears there knowing I'll say something to that effect. But generally you get a sense of what was useful and what wasn't. And I have found that since I've started documenting this on a regular basis, that I just pay a little more attention to what went well and what didn't. So even if you don't need to document this, because you're going to have an unhappy client down the road, which I think is how it ended up as a document. I have personally found that it helps me just tune in a little bit more. This particular client finds helpful. Cuz some examples of things that you can write in this in this space is called something like client receptors. The re-frame related to work issues less receptors, the reframe on the patterns of the relationship. You can plan actively engage an enactment, optimistic that they could do this at home. Something like client expressed enthusiasm about mindfulness. So so you can use this to just kinda document both for the official record but also for yourself to notice what's working and what's not working. Kind of fine tuning what you do in the next session based on their response in this session. So in this next part of the note, you're going to talk about the plan. And this generally refers to the plan for the next session, but it can also refer to more long-term plans and goals within the treatment plan. But for, in most cases on your average proud progress note you're just going to put down what you plan to do for the next session or two to some examples could be that you will want to bring in like the parents for the next section, our partner. And you can also follow up on a journaling or other homework assignment. Uh-huh. If there has been any crisis issue, it's nice to note that you plan to, in the next session, I'll continue to assess for self-harm or suicidal ideation or whatever that might be. So this could actually be often the most practical part for the clinician themselves through yeah. Next time The right before the client comes, you can, you know, look over this and remind yourself what you were planning to do with this session last week. So a lot of people use this part that way. And also it is creates continuity of care if ever there different clinicians and bulb. So this can often be the most useful part for you. In the next section on the progress note, you will see that there's a place for crisis issues to be addressed. And this, if there are crisis issues is generally the most important part to document. Well. You're protecting yourself on liability issues and you're also helping to document for the client what happened in the crisis situation, how it was handled. And oftentimes, especially if you're an agency with more than one clinician that might be looking at these notes or if there is a crisis down the road after you leave with the same client. This is the most important part to have documented well, both for your clients welfare as well as in terms of legal liability issues. So what you want to document or any type of crisis issues that arise in session. And so this is obviously things like child abuse, elder abuse, dependent adult abuse, suicidal ideation, homicidal ideation, reports of domestic violence. This can also include eating disorders, substance abuse, obviously in the type of self-harm falls into this category. So there are quite a number of different types of crisis issues that can be important to address and even something like distributed announcing that there might be a divorce or something like that back and also be considered a type of crisis issue in at least a reason to be assessing for other potential crisis issues. So, so think broadly when you think of crisis issues, not just the major child abuse or elder abuse and suicide homicide. So when it comes time to documenting crisis issues, this is the one time where your notes are going to be a little more detailed and a little more specific. It helps often to use direct quotes from the client. For example, when you are documenting I plan who has suicidal ideation? You're going to definitely want to cover, you know, is it a passive suicidal ideation like I'd rather be dead versus a more active ideation. I want to kill myself. Two very different statements, although they sound somewhere. And so do they have a plan? Do they have mean do they intend to do it? All those types of details need to be clearly documented. And also if you're developing a safety plan and or, you know, when you ask about reasons for living, those sorts of things are very helpful to put in quotes. You know, I often have a lot of clients who will say something like you now, I sometimes I wish I were dead, but of course I could never do it because of my children. And so things like that are good to put in quotes. And what you want to have. Ultimately when you're done with this section, is that you're going to document all the concerns that were actually there and all of the mitigating factors or other things and so that any reasonable person who reads through your progress notes, who understands legal responsibilities of coalitions in your state, would think and arrive at the same decision you made in terms of the action that you take to keep your client safe. So you want to have enough information there if you end up calling the client, infer suicide assessment and contacting the sheriffs to do a formal assessment or having them taken to a psych hospital with your state allows that. Then you need to have that clearly documented at any reasonable person in your state would have taken the same type of action. And or similarly, if you assess and determine that you don't, it doesn't meet the threshold for when you need to take action in your particular state, then that needs to be clearly documented. So any other clinician in the state reading through this would come to a similar decision about what to do with that client and what's going on. So that's the real GO goal here to make sure that you're documenting all of the reasons and evidence. And that's where the having direct quotes can be particularly helpful. And then you can also document everything you did to keep the client safe. So whether you made a phone call, child protective services, whether you've developed the safety plan, what are the basic steps, the safety plan, whether no harm contract was signed, all those sorts of things. So this is very important. So on the next slide here I'll look at some ways that you can document this, give you some examples. So here you can see on the first example shows how you might in the progress note itself documented that there were suspected child abuse in the family. And you have to report the basic summary that the child was hit with a belt and more than one occasion. There was a child abuse report made and the time and who took it. And in this case here you can see full report, place and file. So somewhere in this client's file, we should also find the full child abuse report that would have more of the details. In this next example, we have a client who's reported a passive suicidal ideation. I wish I were dead, but quickly denied plan or intent. I would never do it because of my kid. So those quotes there help us understand, you know, what was said where the client was does show that there was a safety plan with renames to call whenever emergency contact for the therapist. So here you can see how that was handled. And the next, what do we have reported cutting twice a week, developed a safety plan in which a client agreed to scaling for safety, to develop alternative action. When they hit a seven on the scale. And the client readily agreed the plan. So that kind of shows that same D And that was kind of client responds to the intervention is actually put right there. So you have a sense of what went on. In this next one, you can see Client a nice cutting this week, no new cuts and was evident. So again, here, this is what you're putting in the safety crisis issue section. And then following week, you can also put this under symptoms, I guess as long as it's somewhere, the progress note. But there again, once you've assessed a crisis issue, should appear at least for subsequent weeks for some time to show that you have assessed and that there was no evidence of there being a problem, whether it's suicidal ideation or cutting or homicidal ideation, those sorts of things. Usually with child abuse here we're having more formal intervention, but you should still be assessing no evidence. Further abuses should be regularly in your file either under the crisis section here or you in some cases, you can also put it up at the top if you're perhaps documenting depressed mood. So you could say no depressed mood or suicidal ideation. You can talk to your supervisor where you want to put it, but I would say to progress than it should have it in one place or the other. So finally, the last thing you might want to document and maybe not an all work contexts where you documents up. Such things are all elements of this. But if you are getting supervision, you can or some form of consultation, you can document those recommendations or information that you got from your supervisor. Similarly, if you contact me collateral contacts, so that's calling valid numbers were non-treatment social workers, physicians, psychiatrists, schoolteachers, other school personnel. So if you're calling anyone in relationship to the case, you should be documenting that in your files. And often it's called collateral contact. And it's useful to also know whether or not you have a release of information that's there to help remind you that you should. But so document in contact with other professionals or family members. And then finally, there should be a signature. And generally what is expected is it is an original signature and original date. I generally you include your license status. And in some situations, if you're being supervisor's supervisor should also be signing the progress note. But initials are not usually acceptable on progress notes as a way of signing off. So you duty that original signature. So that's basically in a nutshell. What what's on a progress note or inner progress. Now, finally, I just want to end with a few real practical suggestions and guidelines about doing writing progress notes. The first is, and this may sound simplistic at first, but it is Is writing your notes on a daily basis and generally, obviously immediately after the session is best. But to really make it a practice that if you are seeing clients that before you leave the building or whatever worksite you're at, that you always do those progress notes before you leave. And that's clearly considered best practice and it's generally is expected. And if you ever can't do that for whatever reason and there will be a couple a handful of days may be in your career where that will happen and when it has happened to me for whatever, usually there's another crisis and I'm trying to attend to if some form. It is amazing how hard it is to recall what happened yesterday and session. And you really do not recall it with the same accuracy and clarity. Now if you only are seeing two or three sessions a week, maybe in the beginning, you think you can get away with it or maybe it's easier to do. But certainly once you end up S, after you have a full regular, a load of clients, that becomes nearly impossible to do. So it's very important that you make it a practice to always be doing this progress notes following on the same day that you see those clients. And that is is just I don't know how to emphasize how important enough that is. And I hear people talk about or they don't always do that, are they? I'm about, are we doing it in the field? It's still important to make it happen and to organize your professional lives so that on a very regular basis, those are done every single day. And if for any reason you're at a work site, that doesn't make that makes it very difficult for that to happen. You really need to be having a conversation with your employer or your supervisor because it really is an ethical issue that those should be done each day and if for any reason they're not, it should be documented when they actually were done so that it's clear when we see a date where the notes done that's after the date of the actual session. That's also assign that these notes may not actually be all that accurate. And that is how they would be interpreted in a legal setting should end up there. So it's also important to know that as you probably do and you can't say it enough that all progress nodes belong locked file when not in use. And so that's very important. And I want to add to that an anything with plan information should be locked when not in use. And so that includes, you know, little notes with a client phone numbers or even sticky notes with client phone numbers. Anything with client information should be locked up when not in use. And in this digital age, that means password protecting, at least with one level of password protection. And so if you call clients at all from your phone, if you use your computer at all, you should be is peaking with your supervisor or employer about standards for password protecting, you know, at multiple levels, usually to ensure client confidentiality when you're using digital tech, digital devices. It's become much more complex in some ways with the advent of iPhones and email to really protect client confidentiality. So it's an art that we will. I think it's a real challenge to keep everything confidential as digital technology kind of explodes and what we can do and where our emails can end up. It's even more important nowadays to really focus on client confidentiality. In general. You keep client records for 70 years past the age of majority. That means pass the age of 18 is a general guidance for how long to keep these records. And so that's an important thing to keep in mind. And for someone who's been in private, private, private practice long enough to worry about these things. It's really nice if when you close not the files, you can put what's the destroy date on it so that you can organize them that way as you archive them over the years. Just, just a little note to me. But under your cat for years down the road. So and that is it. I so hopefully you've been and feel a little bit more comfortable and confident in terms of writing progress notes and have a sense of where to go and what to do with these. And I wish you the best and I know that should you stay in this field for any length of time, you will be using what you've learned in this lecture for years to come. Thanks so much.
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