Discharge is where a lot of plans quietly fail, not because clients “don’t care,” but because we underestimate how fast structure disappears and triggers return. We walk through aftercare planning the way we want you to think on a licensing exam and the way we want you to practice as a therapist: as a clinical process that starts early, stays collaborative, and keeps working after the final session.
We unpack a simple four-phase framework (assessment, goal setting, resource matching, and implementation with follow-up) and then zoom in on the stance that makes it work. We lean on motivational interviewing so clients buy into the plan instead of tolerating it, and we keep it strengths-based so aftercare feels achievable. We also talk harm reduction and systems thinking, because “meet the client where they are” is not a soft option, it’s the clinically appropriate one when real life includes family dynamics, housing instability, employers, and neighborhoods that can either support recovery or pull someone backward.
Then we get concrete and exam-ready: continuing care and recovery management checkups, Critical Time Intervention (CTI), Assertive Community Treatment (ACT), and the growing evidence for peer support. You’ll also hear practical tools you can use tomorrow, including relapse prevention planning, warning sign hierarchies with clear crisis steps like 988, support network mapping, behavioral rehearsal, warm handoffs, and the Stanley Brown Safety Plan. We close with the assessment instruments exam writers love: ASAM criteria, WHODAS 2.0, the Recovery Capital Scale, and the Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS).
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This podcast is not associated with the NBCC, AMFTRB, ASW, ANCC, NASP, NAADAC, CCMC, NCPG, CRCC, or any state or governmental agency responsible for licensure.