Fundamentals of Case Management Practice: Skills for the Human Services 5th Edition Solution Manual
Preview Extract
Exercises for Chapter 2
Exercises
These exercises can also be filled out online at CengageBrain.com.
Exercises I: Ethics
Instructions: The hypothetical practice situations that follow are designed to stimulate
thinking and discussion on the issue of confidentiality. Each situation is followed by a
multiple-choice list of possible responses you might make. Choose the responses that you
consider the best. In some cases you might want to use more than one of theresponses listed.
Others may choose a different answer. Discuss with your fellow students the different
possibilities and what might present the best outcome for the client.
1. Paula is a 17-year-old client in the daytime partial hospitalization program. Her mother
phoned and requested to know Paulaโs psychiatric diagnosis so that she could inform the
familyโs physician who is treating Paula for diabetes. You should:
a. Advise the mother of the diagnosis and the name of the psychiatrist who made the
diagnosis.
b. Call the family physician directly and advise him of the diagnosis.
c. Ask Paula to sign a release of information form giving consent for the physician and
the mother to be advised of her diagnosis.
d. Refuse to release the information at all.
2. Kelly requests a copy of his current treatment plan. You should:
a. Have Kelly put the request in writing and discuss the issue with the treatment team.
b. Make a copy of the current treatment plan and give it to Kelly.
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c. Discuss the treatment plan with Kelly and then see that he has a copy.
d. Refer Kelly to the attending psychiatric physician.
3. A 13-year-old boy requests that his school counselor be sent a copy of his initial
interview and discharge summary. He signs a release of information form, documenting
his written consent for the information to be transmitted. You should:
a. Forward the material to the school counselor.
b. Give the information to the boy who can deliver it to the school counselor.
c. Have the medical records department forward the information to the school counselor.
d. Refuse to release the information until a parent cosigns the release of information
form.
4. In the case above you would
a. Release the complete chart
b. Release just the discharge summary
c. Release only those portions of the discharge summary that the school needs for their
work with the boy and not release the initial intake summary as it contains
information that is no longer relevant but taken out of context could be damaging to
the boyโs family
d. Meet with the parents to go over what you have decided to release as outlined in C
before anything is released to the school.
5. Mary Smith is a depressed elderly woman who was admitted to PolyclinicHospital due to
severe back pain. She was advised she might need surgery to correct the problem. You
are her case manager at the Office of Aging, and she calls to say she is considering
suicide. The constant back pain has made her feel like โjust giving up.โ Mary is currently
at home, awaiting a surgery date. You know Mary has a supply of pain pills, and she says
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she wants to take all the pills. You feel there isa substantial risk that Mary might follow
through on her threat. You should:
a. Contact the Polyclinic orthopedic staff who are currently seeing Mary in the
outpatient clinic.
b. Maintain frequent contact with Mary, but respect her wishes to keep her suicide plans
confidential.
c. After discussing with Mary what you are about to do, contact crisis intervention.
d. Advise the city police department of Maryโs suicide plans.
6. Bill Jones is a client who has been in alcohol treatment programs at your facility.He is
currently depressed about his pending divorce and present marital separation. He has
signed a release of information form for you to share information with his priest, who is
counseling Bill about his religious conflicts regarding the divorce.A man calls you
claiming to be Billโs priest and requesting information on Billโs current state of mind.
You have never actually spoken with Billโs priest, andyou think this might actually be
Billโs wifeโs attorney calling. You should:
a. Give no information on the phone until you have verified the identity of the caller.
b. Refer the caller to Bill, but send the information to the person at the address on the
release form Bill signed.
c. Insist upon meeting with the priest in person.
d. Share no information with the caller and contact Bill
e. Get the personโs number and call him back.
7. Patty is completing a student internship for her associateโs degree in the therapeutic
activities program. She asks to review the medical records of the people who were just in
her projects group. You are supervising Patty. You should:
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a. Advise Patty that the records are confidential and may not be inspected by students.
b. Make certain that Patty is well trained in the policies and procedures relating to
confidential information, and only then allow her access to the medical records.
c. Permit Patty free access to the records because she is like part of the staff.
d. Obtain written consent from each client for Patty to review the records.
8. Jerry was a client who improved and was discharged 2 years ago. You receive a call from
the National Can Company. The caller explains that Jerry has applied for a job and that
the company would like to hire him. Jerry told them he was in treatment 2 years ago and
was discharged after showing considerable improvement. The company wishes to
confirm the fact that Jerry did indeed complete the program as he claims. You say to the
caller:
a. โI donโt know if Jerry was ever a client of our agency. If you send me a release-ofinformation form I can look into that and get back to you.โ
b. โJerry was a patient here but I am not at liberty to say any more than that without a
release-of-information form.โ
c. โI can tell you that Jerry was a client here around 2012 and he successfully completed
the program with us. I will need a signed release-of-information form from Jerry to
put in his file.โ
d. โI donโt know what you are talking about. Good-bye.โ
9. Clark is currently enrolled in treatment, and you are his case manager. He asks you if he
may read his medical record. You should:
a. Ask Clark to put the request in writing, and assist Clark in completing the written
request if he seems to have limited skills in reading and writing.
b. Present Clarkโs request to Clarkโs treatment team.
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c. If the treatment team concludes that it will not harm Clark to review his record, allow
Clark to read it in the presence of a therapist (after deleting information from sources
that asked to remain anonymous).
d. Decide with the treatment team who will assist Clark in reading and understanding his
record. Then follow through by allowing Clark to review his record with that person.
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Exercises II: Ethically, What Went Wrong?
Instructions:The following hypothetical practice situations are designed to help you apply
what you have learned in this chapter. For each situation, decide what was done in the
situation that was unethical.
1. Jennifer had a long day and was trying to get out of the office before 5:00 P.M. She had
one more person to see. Dr. Adams had asked Jennifer to give Abdul, a young man
recently diagnosed with schizophrenia, a prescription for a new medication. Jennifer had
her coat on when she handed the prescription to Abdul in the waiting room. Abdul wanted
to know what the medication was and why his prescription was being changed. โWill
there be any side effects?โ he asked Jennifer. She replied hurriedly, โOh, no. Dr. Adams
says just take this until he sees you next time.โ
2. Carl is uncomfortable around gay men. Bert, his client, is gay and has just broken up with
his lover. Bert, who is 42 years old, had been in a long-term relationship and is devastated
and in tears in Carlโs office. Because Bert has suffered from severe depression in the past,
Carl attempts to have him evaluated by the therapist this afternoon. In the meantime, Bert
is still weeping and now threatening to take his life. Carl is particularly uncomfortable
with this manโs tears and believes this is drama. Carl says, โOh, cโmon now. Letโs get a
grip. You canโt sit in here all afternoon carrying on. Here, take some tissue and go out in
the waiting room until Dr. Paul can see you.โ
3. Elizabeth visited the home of an elderly man and got him to sign a release of information
form so she could process an application to the county nursing home. In the manโs
records were references to the fact that many years ago as a teenager he was convicted of
shooting a man in a bar fight, a crime for which he served 2 years in prison. She knows
the people at the home will be titillated over this little tidbit of information, especially her
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friend Rhoda, who does the intakes. Even though she knows this is not part of the homeโs
evaluation, that the client has led an exemplary life since that time, and that the nursing
home staff might take it out of context, she releases the information anyway, based on her
clientโs signature on the release form. She and Rhoda have a good laugh about it the next
day.
4. Jim is doing an intake with a man who claims he is depressed. He tells Jim that ever since
his wife left he has had trouble concentrating and waking up in the morning. He talks
about how lonely it is at home, how much he misses his children, how he is tempted to
drink in the evenings, and how little he has to look forward to. Jim nods. He understands.
โYes, my wife left last month too,โ Jim tells the man. โI know just what you mean. I get
to feeling like, well, like there isnโt as much meaning. I never knew the kids were so
important to me, but I guess they were. On Saturdays, I used to do things with my son and
I still get him every other weekend, but itโs not quite the same thing, is it?โ โNo,โ the man
responds, โI was thinking . . .โ Jim interrupts the man to say, โWell, I do a lot of thinking
too. I think about what I could have done differently and if it was my fault. Donโt you
think these women would see that itโs hard, too hard I think, to raise kids alone?โ The
conversation continues in this vein until the end of the interview.
5. Carmen is supposed to see her small caseload of persistently mentally ill individuals at
least twice a week. Lately, with school and her motherโs death, she has not really seen her
clients that often. She has checked in with them on the phone, but she also has used time
when she was out seeing clients to do errands at the library and to empty her motherโs
home. Now one of her clients is in court after committing a crime. The client and the
lawyer agree that the client might be able to use his mental health status as a reason for
committing the crime, and they ask to introduce the case record as evidence in the court
proceedings. Fearing that it will be discovered how little supervision and attention she has
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given her client, and knowing that ultimately she could be blamed for the fact that her
client committed the crime while under her somewhat irresponsible care, Carmen invokes
the concept of privileged communication to avoid having to give the file to the court.
6. Ted is in a clinic with his elderly client, Gretchen, for a routine blood workup, which they
do every other month. He notices Gretchen is bruised on the face and arms. For a while
he makes small talk with her, and then he asks her about the bruises. She is somewhat
evasive but indicates, โThey werenโt the result of no fall!โ Without explicitly blaming her
daughter and son-in-law, with whom she lives, Gretchen makes it quite clear that the
bruises are not the result of an accident. After the blood test, during which neither the
doctor, who sees her briefly, nor the technician make any mention of the bruises, Ted
takes Gretchen home. He toys with the idea of reporting the bruises to protective services
at the countyOffice of Aging but decides not to. He bases his decision on the fact that the
law does not specifically require him to do so, that it would be hard and take a lot of time
to have to place Gretchen in another living arrangement, and that the daughter seems like
a very nice person whom Ted does not feel like stirring up over an uncomfortable
situation.
7. Kitty has a whole list of things to do today and doubts she can get it all done. She hates
the way there are always things left to do at the end of the day. It just seems that no
matter how hard she works, something new comes up that she cannot complete. One of
her clients, Isabel, has told her on the phone that she wants to sign a release of
information form for her lawyer. Kitty has the form ready for the time when Isabel will be
coming in at the end of the week. Today a man calls and says he is Isabelโs lawyer and he
needs just two dates to help him file a brief with the court on the Isabelโs behalf. Kitty
gives him the two dates and hurries to the next thing on her list.
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8. While having lunch in the staff room, Jorge is obviously mad. He spent one morning
taking a meticulous social history from a new client. The client, a man in his 20s, was
pleasant and helpful. He seemed to genuinely want the assistance of the agency and to
like Jorge. Two more interviews followed to set up services, and the man signed a release
of information form for Jorge to meet with the clientโs physician. Jorge cannot understand
why this man never mentioned the fact that he is HIV+. This Jorge found out in the
conference with the manโs physician some weeks later. โHow do these people think I am
going to help them if they donโt tell the whole story?โ Jorge fumed. โThey come in here
and want my help and then withhold information from me. They leave me in the dark. I
donโt know whatโs going on, and then they think Iโm going to be able to help them.โ
9. A new worker, Jill, is working at a large residential facility for the mentally ill and has
been assigned four clients for whom she is to develop goals and objectives to help these
clients move forward to greater independence. She meets with the first two clients and
then confides to a worker who has been there longer that she had trouble understanding
what the clients wanted to work on. The worker tells Jill, โJust make up the plans. These
people are a waste of time. They wonโt ever get any better. Look at that one. This is his
fourth trip through here. No one ever made a difference with a plan, and you wonโt either.
Just put something down to satisfy the insurance company, and come in here with us.
There is a good movie on TV tonight, and the staff is going to put the residents to bed
early and get together in the patient lounge to watch it.โ
10. Beatrice, who has suffered from schizophrenia for most of her life, has been placed in a
long-term residential facility. One night the worker decides to take the residents to a
movie. The residents all get in the van to go to the movies, and the worker waits to leave
until everyone has a seat and has fastened their seat belts. Beatrice finds a seat but
complains that the seat belt does not fit, that she cannot fasten it around herself. The
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worker replies, โWell, if you didnโt eat so much, you wouldnโt be so fat. You always pig
out at the table, and this is what you get. I guess youโre too fat to go to the movies
tonight, Beatrice. Guess youโll have to just stay home.โ
11. Pedro noticed that his colleague, Antoine, was using clientsโ spending money to make
small purchases for himself. Each resident in the group home was given a specific amount
of spending money every month, and it was kept in the residentโs envelope. When money
was spent from the envelope, a receipt was to be left in the envelope showing where the
money went. Antoine was taking money for small purchases for himselfโlunch, movie
tickets, a gold chain. He was placing the receipts for these purchases in the residentsโ
envelopes. It was not possible for administration, when doing an audit of all the residentsโ
accounts at the end of the month, to determine from the receipt who actually benefited
from the expenditure. Pedro thought about telling the administration but felt it was likely
that Antoine would deny the allegations, and this would ruin their working relationship.
Therefore, Pedro did nothing.
12. Marcella began to drink in the evenings after work when her husband left her foranother
woman. As the months went by, the divorce became increasingly acrimonious. There were
accusations, attempts to take Marcellaโs money, and attempts to deprive her of custody of the
children. The children began to exhibit problems, and there were financial problems as well.
Drinking in the evenings expanded to a drink with lunch and later to a drink and then several
drinks in mid-afternoon. In time, Marcella could not face the day without alcohol when she
first got up. She continued to report for work where she was the sole worker on the day shift in
a small residential setting with four clients. Marcella began to ignore the residents. It started
with naps in the afternoon, which left the people unsupervised. Later, Marcella found it too
hard to fix dinner for her residents and began to allow them to eat junk food for dinner. As the
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situation deteriorated, Marcella became more and more mired in self-pity, anger at her exhusband, and alcohol abuse. She continued to work at the group home.
13. Arnie has problems with substance abuse. He considers himself an โalcoholic who likes a
little cocaine now and then.โ He is funny, articulate, and clever. When he comes to the
case management unit he seems open about his progress and regressions. He always asks
how his case manager is doing, what she did for Christmas, how her little boy is doing.
Sometimes he brings in the paper and leaves it for her to read, saying he has read it and is
finished with it. On Friday evening some of the case managers go out to dinner at a place
that serves alcohol and very good food. They are having a good time unwinding after
work when Arnie joins them. It appears that he is drinking a soft drink, but no one knows
that for sure. Arnie and the case managers laugh and talk about their work until late in the
evening. Arnie is funny and has hilarious insights about some of the clients he has
encountered in the waiting room.
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Exercises III: Decide on the Best Course of Action
Instructions: Sit with a small group of other students and decide how you will handle this
situation. There are many areas both ethically and legally that are not clear, so the discussion
you have with your colleagues is much like a discussion you might have in a real agency.
There are no โcorrect answers.โ
You have been working with a client who is HIV+ and is a regular user of
heroin. He needs both medical and substance abuse treatment. However, he is
inconsistent about coming for regular treatment and medical care. You suspect
he is not taking medications prescribed for him. In addition, he is sexually
active with several women. He has asked that you not contact him at his home
where he lives with one of his girlfriends. He has stipulated that no family
members may have any information about him. You think that if you could
commit him to a substance abuse treatment facility he will be out of
circulation sexually and he will receive the treatments he needs to save his life.
You do not know for sure where he is but know his girlfriend with whom he
has been living probably does. Can you contact her? What ethical and legal
principles are at play here? What do you decide to do or not do?
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Exercises IV: What is Wrong Here?
Instructions:Sit with a small group of other students and decide where there was a lapse in
good judgment or a lapse in good ethical behavior. Where are the gray areas? What makes
these situations clear-cut or unclear about the proper course of action?
1. A childrenโs case manager writes a letter to a parent of a 14-year-old girl, currently a
client at the case management unit. In the letter is this: โWhile it has not been confirmed
or established that your daughter was sexually abused, it is my opinion that she has
experienced sexual abuse in the past.โ What did this case manager do wrong? What could
be the consequences to the family members if such a letter was received?
2. A human service worker is asked to plan a recreational activity for elderly residents on
the floor where she works. She is not sure what to arrange but finally decides to do a
program on supplemental Medicare insurance. She invites a friend who sells
supplemental Medicare insurance. The friend gives a complete explanation, handing out
brochures on her business and her business card and explaining the insurance products
her company can offer individuals on Medicare. What is the issue here?
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