The Mental Health Paradigm
Social worker Shulamis Lieber claims “the only people benefiting are the insurance agencies:”
Shulamis Lieber, a social worker from New York City who works for a nonprofit called The Institute for Family Health and specializes in mental health for HIV patients, is on the front lines of America’s health care crisis. She has three years of experience in the field and sees first-hand how for-profit healthcare and draconian budget cuts are destroying careers and harming patients.
Over the past 10-15 years, she says, the mental health paradigm has shifted away from long-term therapy, in which the patient spends roughly 45 minutes with a professional talking about problems and digging for root causes of distress, to short-term, concrete therapy, in which patients are given medication and engage in problem solving exercises designed to help them take their medicine, focus on things that give them pleasure and transcend barriers to achieving structure in their daily schedules. “Many patients have a real need for and interest in doing long- term therapy,” Shulamis says. “An average mental health session used to be 45 minutes to an hour, and now they’ve really cut that. My average meeting time with a patient is 15 minutes, 30 minutes tops, and it’s really a huge difference and huge cutback because the people need more time to feel like they can trust their therapist and develop a unique bond.”
The reason for the transformation is that the newer model is cheaper and far more profitable. Public insurers have turned to this method to cope with massive budget cuts created by the financial crisis, and private insurance corporations love it because it dramatically boosts their bottom line by saving money and doubling the number of patients.
Shulamis must treat patients “based on what Medicaid, Medicare and the insurance companies want, and they want you to make a diagnosis in a very short amount of time and use short-term behavior models like cognitive behavioral therapy, which require the least expertise and training, instead of any other type of psychodynamic approach.” This has made her job “very difficult.”
The object is for social workers to see as many patients in the least possible amount of time. Last week Shulamis saw a man who is HIV positive and taking his medication on schedule. He just wanted to talk about his struggles coping with the stigma, along with financial and relationship troubles. But he was ineligible for treatment because Shulamis is required to treat only those who are either not taking their medication or struggling with barriers to achieving daily structure and staying positive. In order to properly help her patient therefore, she has to forfeit her lunch break to squeeze him into her schedule and exaggerate the true nature of his condition by writing in her paperwork that he can continue to attend to his medical needs only if he gets support with his financial and relationship problems.
This poses risks. Shulamis must spend countless hours filling out bureaucratic paperwork to satisfy the demands of insurance providers, who “dictate to the clinician exactly what needs to be done, what the paperwork needs to look like, and if it’s not matching up exactly we’re not covered.” Such precautions are taken largely to avoid malpractice lawsuits. In general, asThe New York Times has reported, most therapists have to deal with the same restrictions, and talk therapy is dying as a profession because insurers won’t pay anymore. According to Shulamis, “the insurance companies will not cover mainstream mental health issues. The only way you’ll get covered today is if you’re experiencing really severe symptoms.” If you’re a typical, healthy person who needs support the “therapist has to fabricate their notes to get covered by insurance.” And the paperwork is brutal.
Accordingly, many social workers in mental health with private practices do not accept insurance. They instead work on an out-of-pocket basis and charge a fortune. Only rich people can afford such treatment, which, according to Shulamis, is “literally going against the mission of social work,” which is “trying to help the most vulnerable people, the poor, the elderly, etc.”
But most people in her profession have little choice. One can either be a slave to the insurance companies and likely experience burnout or pursue a practical means of making a living. Indeed, most social workers suffer from chronic job insecurity and gross underpay, she says. And, as with graduates in most professions, the debt burden is insufferable. Shulamis will be paying back loans “at $900 a month for over 30 years.”
She says that many in her field feel extremely discouraged and fears the next generation will turn away from social work. “Even though we’re at a time when our services are needed most, we’re also at a time when the funding for these services aren’t really there anymore. The city is dying for more social workers but they just don’t have enough money to introduce more social workers into the field.”
In truth, we have the money. But it is so heavily concentrated in the hands of the oligarchs who control our country that there are only crumbs left for most Americans. The executives of WellPoint and Goldman Sachs will have no trouble paying for healthcare. The overwhelming majority will suffer. And as the recent debt deal indicates, the elites have institutionalized a permanent underclass. Taxes on the rich will not be raised. And the rest of society will have to pay for the crisis created by Wall Street. “At the end of the day,” Shulamis says, the new paradigm of cost cutting is “not as helpful for the patient and it’s really losing the whole purpose of mental health, taking steps backward, but we have to go with it because that’s how we get paid.” She adds that “the only people benefiting are the insurance agencies.”
Support independent/dissident journalism business model: If you like my work please, if you haven’t already, make a $1 (or more) recurring-monthly donation (one-time donations are also welcome, though my business model depends on recurring donations for job security). As many know, journalism is being destroyed by the everything-for-free internet paradigm; it is now almost impossible to earn a living wage. I can continue to tell the truth uncompromisingly, advocate for reform and avoid corporate money only with your help. So long as thousands of people make a recurring monthly donation of just $1 I can make a living, since I own and run Thebloodycrossroads with few expenses, and this is my only source of income. You probably won’t notice $1 missing from your monthly credit card statement, and your $1 will make all the difference. It should take only 30 seconds to a minute to set up the recurring donation through Paypal below and contribute to the fight against corporate propaganda. If you run a Web Site or post on blogs, please link to this article. Nobody may republish the piece in its entirety elsewhere without my permission; those who do so are stealing.
|
“ |
|
”
|
Tagged with: budget cuts • cognitive behavioral • dictate • elderly • Health care • HIV • insurance companies • long-term therapy • Medicaid • medicare • medication • Mental health • New York City • New York Times • oligarchs • poor • private practice • Psychotherapy • short-term therapy • Shulamis Lieber • Social worker • talk therapy • vulnerable • Wall Street • Social work • Wall Street • WellPoint
Filed under: Health Care
Like this post? Subscribe to my RSS feed and get loads more!


I, too, am a licensed clinical social worker. Yes, there has been a shift. You are very correct in your article. There is even emphasis on means of presenting progress notes so that your services are not doubted by Medicaid, Medicare, and the insurance companies. The amount of paperwork is obscene. I have a masters in both clinical psychology and social work. I got into this field to help the mentally ill. The best place for the severely mentally ill is inpatient treatment. The truly obscene fact is that most severely mentally ill are being place in locked and in open units with the geriatric population, or those who are in residential centers for retirement. Their diagnosis and extensive behavioral histories often suggests histories of violence. They are not on appropriate medication because psychiatrists are frequently not in the area and will not work for the small payments that Medicaid/Medicare pay. There are a number of “Mental Health Psychiaric Groups” who actually contact the isolated nursing homes. They offer a contract agreement to pay the nursing home back for there monthly video session conducted via video conference. This technique is controversial due to lack of interaction and the fact the session last only for 15 to 30 minutes. However, my clinical notes were sent to the MD for review of treatment plan. Only medication management is continued.
I like to deliver to you a manuscript pertinent to the above stated mental health issue and more. Please send me with your email address.
mine is:hcostandi@yahoo.com
I totally agree with this article, the whole medical field is corrupt. The only ones profiting are the insurance agencies & the drug companies. The whole field needs to be restructured. I went to see a psychologist a few yrs ago cuz I was having issues….I got 15-30 minutes with her….I am a VERY private person, it takes me that long to start opening up. I was only able to see her a couple of times but she told me I had all the signs of PTSS. I, too could not afford to seek help privately so I muddled through for the next few yrs with the help of my husband taking care of my 3 young children. We should be able to get help when we need it so that our children can have stable lives & parents. Maybe then the stories of Andrea Yates & Susan Smith would have ended differently.
Unfortunately, I feel the sad truth is that a majority of Americans have little to no understanding of mental health and mental disease, therefore there is little to no compassion; most people just don’t care. There is the impression that because the condition is “all in the mind” the ill person should be able to simply change the way they think, take a pill and their condition would get better. Even though a person would never be expected to cure their own “physical” ailments by using the power of the mind, they are somehow expected to cure their mental ailment that way….The topic comes up regularly in my circle and I’m constantly surprised by how people think of the mentally ill; sometimes I feel very alone in my point of view. I can’t imagine being a therapist trying to help people while being hindered by the uneducated and unsympathetic powers that be…..I admire those who not only understand the mentally ill and try to help them, but also fight for understanding, funding, and quality care for their patients….Keep fighting the good fight and maybe someday I won’t feel so alone in my point of view among my peers; that would be a truly beautiful day
Very well said. It’s refreshing to find a blog that I can refer my readers to. Keep up the good work!