---
name: creating-treatment-plans-psychiatric
language: en
description: Structures psychiatric treatment plans with diagnoses, goals, interventions, and measurable outcomes. Use when creating psychiatric treatment plans, setting therapeutic goals, or documenting treatment modalities.
tags:
  - drafting
  - psychiatry
  - treatment
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - Psychiatry
    - Psychology
    - Behavioral Health
  document_types:
    - New Document
  skill_modes:
    - Drafting
    - Planning
---

# Creating Psychiatric Treatment Plans

Structures psychiatric treatment plans with DSM-5-TR diagnoses, SMART goals, evidence-based interventions, and measurable outcomes for regulatory compliance and clinical effectiveness.

## Why This Skill Exists

Treatment plans are the central organizing document of psychiatric care. CMS Conditions of Participation (42 CFR 482.61) require that each psychiatric inpatient have an individualized treatment plan developed by a multidisciplinary team within specified timeframes. The Joint Commission standards (PC.01.03.01) mandate that treatment plans include diagnoses, goals, interventions, and responsible parties. State Medicaid programs and commercial payers require treatment plans for authorization and reauthorization of behavioral health services — inadequate treatment plans are the most common reason for claim denials and audit recoupments.

Clinically, a well-structured treatment plan translates the diagnostic formulation into actionable steps, aligns the treatment team, sets measurable expectations with the patient, and provides a framework for monitoring progress. Poorly constructed treatment plans — vague goals, non-specific interventions, missing timelines — result in unfocused treatment, wasted resources, and worse patient outcomes.

---

## Checkpoint A: Pre-Draft Intake (Mandatory)

1. What is the level of care? (inpatient, partial hospitalization/PHP, intensive outpatient/IOP, outpatient, residential, assertive community treatment/ACT) — default: outpatient
2. What are the confirmed DSM-5-TR diagnoses with ICD-10-CM codes? — default: must be provided from evaluation
3. What is the patient's current functional level? (GAF equivalent, WHODAS 2.0, or clinical description) — default: assess from evaluation
4. Is this an initial treatment plan, update, or revision? — default: initial
5. What is the expected duration of treatment for this episode? — default: 90 days (review at 90-day intervals)
6. Who are the treatment team members? (psychiatrist, therapist, case manager, peer specialist, family) — default: psychiatrist and therapist
7. Has the patient expressed treatment preferences? — default: elicit during planning
8. Are there payer-specific treatment plan requirements? (Medicaid, Medicare, commercial, VA) — default: general compliance format

### Documents to Request

- Completed psychiatric evaluation with diagnostic formulation
- Validated symptom measures (PHQ-9, GAD-7, PCL-5, AUDIT, Columbia C-SSRS)
- Prior treatment plans and progress reviews
- Functional assessment documentation
- Patient strengths and preferences inventory
- Relevant medical records affecting treatment (medical comorbidities, medications)
- Payer authorization requirements and approved service levels
- Crisis/safety plan if applicable

---

## Step 1: Diagnostic Summary and Problem List

List all active diagnoses with ICD-10-CM codes in order of treatment priority:

**Format per diagnosis:**
- DSM-5-TR diagnosis with ICD-10-CM code
- Severity specifier (mild, moderate, severe)
- Course specifier (first episode, recurrent, in partial remission, in full remission)
- Key symptoms driving functional impairment
- Baseline severity score on validated measure

**Problem List** (derived from diagnoses and functional assessment):
Translate diagnoses into treatable problems. Each problem statement should be specific, observable, and tied to functional impairment:
- Problem: "Patient experiences persistent depressive mood with PHQ-9 score of 18 (moderately severe), resulting in inability to maintain employment and social withdrawal"
- NOT: "Depression"

Include medical and psychosocial problems that affect psychiatric treatment: housing instability, chronic pain, substance use, legal involvement, childcare responsibilities.

---

## Step 2: Goal Setting Using SMART Framework

For each identified problem, create goals at two levels:

**Long-Term Goals (discharge or treatment completion):**
- Specific: What will be different? (e.g., "Patient will achieve PHQ-9 score <10")
- Measurable: How will progress be quantified?
- Achievable: Is this realistic given the patient's baseline and history?
- Relevant: Does it address the identified problem?
- Time-bound: Target date for achievement

**Short-Term Objectives (stepping stones, typically 30-day increments):**
- Break each long-term goal into 2-4 sequential objectives
- Each objective should be independently measurable
- Progress on objectives should predict progress toward the long-term goal

**Examples of properly structured goals:**

Problem: Major Depressive Disorder, severe (PHQ-9 = 22)
- LTG: Patient will achieve sustained remission (PHQ-9 <5) within 6 months
- STO 1: PHQ-9 will decrease to <15 within 30 days of medication initiation
- STO 2: Patient will attend 4 weekly therapy sessions within 30 days
- STO 3: Patient will identify and practice 3 behavioral activation activities within 45 days
- STO 4: Patient will return to part-time employment within 90 days

---

## Step 3: Intervention Planning

For each short-term objective, document specific interventions:

**Required elements per intervention:**
- Type of intervention (pharmacotherapy, psychotherapy, case management, psychoeducation, skills training, crisis planning)
- Specific modality (e.g., CBT for depression, DBT skills group, supportive psychotherapy — not just "therapy")
- Frequency and duration (e.g., "individual CBT, 50-minute sessions, weekly x 12 weeks")
- Responsible provider (name and credential)
- Evidence base for the intervention (cite guideline or evidence level)

**Pharmacotherapy interventions** must include:
- Medication name, target dose, titration plan
- Monitoring schedule (labs, side effects, efficacy measures)
- Expected timeline to response
- Plan if inadequate response

**Psychotherapy interventions** must specify:
- Modality with session structure (individual, group, family)
- Manualized protocol if applicable (e.g., CPT for PTSD, CBT-I for insomnia)
- Specific therapeutic targets per session phase
- Outcome measure to track progress

**Psychosocial interventions** must include:
- Case management activities (housing, benefits, vocational)
- Peer support services
- Family psychoeducation
- Community resource linkage

---

## Step 4: Safety and Crisis Planning

Every treatment plan must include a safety component:

- Current risk level (from most recent risk assessment)
- Safety plan (Stanley-Brown model with all 6 components) — attach or reference
- Crisis intervention protocol: What the patient should do, who to call, when to go to the ED
- Lethal means restriction plan
- Emergency contact information
- After-hours coverage information
- Criteria for higher level of care (what would trigger re-hospitalization or PHP/IOP step-up)

---

## Step 5: Treatment Plan Review Schedule and Discharge Criteria

**Review schedule:**
- Inpatient: Review within 72 hours of admission, then at least every 7 days (or per state regulation)
- PHP/IOP: Review every 2 weeks
- Outpatient: Review every 90 days (or per payer requirement)
- Any time there is a significant change in clinical status

**Discharge/transition criteria:**
- Specify measurable criteria for stepping down to the next level of care
- Document what "treatment completion" looks like for this episode
- Include relapse prevention planning
- Identify maintenance treatment needs

**Patient participation:**
- Document patient's agreement with or objections to the treatment plan
- Record patient signature or attestation (or document refusal to sign)
- Note any goals or interventions the patient specifically requested or declined

---

## Checkpoint B: Post-Draft Alignment (Mandatory)

1. Does every diagnosis on the problem list have at least one associated goal and intervention?
2. Are all goals measurable with specific scores, frequencies, or observable behaviors (not vague language like "improve mood")?
3. Is each intervention assigned to a specific provider with frequency and duration?
4. Does the safety plan section reflect the current risk assessment?
5. Is the review schedule documented with specific dates or intervals?

---

## Quality Audit

- [ ] All DSM-5-TR diagnoses listed with ICD-10-CM codes and severity/course specifiers
- [ ] Problem statements are specific and tied to functional impairment (not just diagnosis labels)
- [ ] Long-term goals use SMART criteria with measurable outcomes
- [ ] Short-term objectives are sequential and independently measurable
- [ ] Each intervention specifies modality, frequency, duration, and responsible provider
- [ ] Pharmacotherapy includes medication, dose, monitoring plan, and response timeline
- [ ] Psychotherapy specifies manualized approach when applicable
- [ ] Safety/crisis plan included with means restriction documentation
- [ ] Patient strengths and preferences documented
- [ ] Treatment plan review schedule specified
- [ ] Discharge criteria defined with measurable thresholds
- [ ] Patient participation documented (agreement, input, signature)
- [ ] Cultural considerations and language needs addressed
- [ ] Plan is compliant with payer documentation requirements

---

## Guidelines

1. Never use vague goal language — "patient will feel better" is not a treatment plan goal. Every goal must specify what will change, by how much, and by when.
2. Match interventions to evidence-based guidelines for the specific diagnosis — a treatment plan for PTSD should reference CPT, PE, or EMDR, not just "supportive therapy."
3. Include patient strengths as a required section — treatment plans that only document pathology miss the recovery-oriented care standard required by SAMHSA and most state systems.
4. Treatment plan goals must be collaboratively developed with the patient — document the collaborative process and any areas of disagreement.
5. When updating a treatment plan, document the status of each prior goal (met, partially met, not met, discontinued) with supporting data before setting new goals.
6. For payer compliance, ensure that the medical necessity for each service is explicitly documented — link each intervention to a diagnosis and functional impairment.
7. Treatment plans for children and adolescents must include family/caregiver goals and interventions as a required component.
8. Document the patient's own recovery goals in their words, even if they differ from the clinical goals — alignment between clinical and personal goals improves engagement and outcomes.
