3.G.21.a. Person-centered plan

Rule

Evidence that each resident develops and participates in individualized recovery planning that includes an exit plan/strategy.

Levels

I

II

III

IV

This rule applies to all levels.

Guidance

Person-driven recovery plans are very different from treatment plans. Whereas treatment plan goals are often set by the professional, recovery plans are driven by the individual. Treatment plans are time limited, recovery plans can be lifelong. If a recovery residence finds itself prescribing recovery goals for the residents, it is not a person-driven recovery plan. The residence can provide residents a self assessment that may result in many of them choosing the same personal goals.

Person-driven recovery plans begin with a self assessment, using one of many tools. Based on the self assessment, the resident identifies strengths, areas of growth and recovery goals. As part of their plan, they identify how they will know they reached their goal, resources they can potentially use, how they will report their progress, and how they will celebrate their milestones. They periodically complete the self assessment to reflect on their growth and progress as well as to identify what they want to focus on next.

Evaluation

Is there evidence that each resident develops and participates in individualized recovery planning that includes an exit plan/strategy?

Evidence

Evidence that this rule is met should be found in the resident packet and leadership manual

References

https://www.samhsa.gov/brss-tacs/recovery-support-tools/shared-decision-making

Course Syllabus

  • NARR 3.0 | 3.G.21.a. Person-centered plan