CHCMHS003 - Provide recovery oriented mental health services Competency Mapping Template
Unit of Competency Mapping – Information for Teachers/Assessors – Information for Learners
CHCMHS003 Mapping and Delivery Guide Provide recovery oriented mental health services
Version 1.0 Issue Date: May 2024
Qualification
-
Unit of Competency
CHCMHS003 - Provide recovery oriented mental health services
Description
Employability Skills
Learning Outcomes and Application
This unit describes the skills and knowledge required to work collaboratively in providing services to implement a range of strategies as part of recovery oriented service provision for people with mental illness.This unit applies to work with people living with mental illness in a range of community services work contexts.The skills in this unit must be applied in accordance with Commonwealth and State/Territory legislation, Australian/New Zealand standards and industry codes of practice.
Duration and Setting
X weeks, nominally xx hours, delivered in a classroom/online/blended learning setting.
Prerequisites/co-requisites
Competency Field
Development and validation strategy and guide for assessors and learners
Student Learning Resources
Handouts Activities
Slides PPT
Assessment 1
Assessment 2
Assessment 3
Assessment 4
Elements of Competency
Performance Criteria
Element: Elements define the essential outcomes
Element: Share and collect information to collaboratively inform the plan for recovery
Work in a recovery oriented framework that respects the person’s experience, culture and unique recovery journey and the agreed recovery alliance relationship
Use a collaborative approach to discuss and determine information to be collected and sources of information to be accessed
Explain any organisation or program requirements including the commitment to access and equity, and limits to confidentiality
Obtain consent from the person according to organisation policy and procedure
Gather and document information from the person and other agreed sources to explore and clarify the person’s preferences, meanings and needs
Apply best practice principles, if formal assessment is to be conducted, and work within organisation policy and procedures relating to assessment protocols
Together identify the range and potential effects of social and other barriers that are impacting on the person
Element: Facilitate collaborative planning process for recovery
Work collaboratively to develop a plan for recovery and transition based on the person’s choices, preferences, values, needs and goals and discuss different planning options and tools
Facilitate planning sessions using effective communication strategies in a manner that respects the person as their own expert, fosters their strengths and supports them as the driver of their recovery journey
Discuss and confirm the person’s choices for personal wellness, development of self-efficacy, cultural requirements, values, meanings and purpose in life
Work collaboratively with the person to identify strategies and priorities to achieve goals including self-advocacy strategies and transition beyond the service
Identify possible barriers or risks with the person and the strategies and/or other people who can assist in responding to or overcoming these challenges
Develop and document personal wellness plan, risk plans or other plans to meet the person’s priorities, as appropriate
Work collaboratively with the person to identify and balance duty of care and dignity of risk considerations whilst promoting independence from service
Identify and document the person’s and worker’s roles and timelines for action
Element: Collaboratively implement plan for recovery
Discuss with the person their interest and readiness to initiate their plan for recovery
Undertake service actions as agreed in the plan in a timely manner
Facilitate access to information, resources and education about opportunities and service options relevant to the persons aspirations
Support person’s decision making and self-advocacy
Support person’s positive risk taking and resilience building
Maintain regular contact with the person, and be available to offer support and follow up on actions
Maintain records and progress notes in collaboration with the person
Element: Develop and maintain effective working relationships with care support network
Determine with the person who else they choose to involve in their recovery process and the roles they want them to play
Obtain consent specifying what information can be shared with specific members of their care network and the circumstances in which the information can be released
Identify the information and support needs of family, carer/s and friends
Establish rapport and build an effective working relationship with relevant members of the care network
Provide and communicate information so that it is readily understood by members of the care network
Work from a strength based approach and communicate in a manner that respects the rights, dignity, choices and confidentiality of the person with the mental health condition while facilitating the care network to support the person
Facilitate support, training or services to family, carer/s and friends based on identified needs
Element: Support person during challenges
Respond proactively to potential obstacles, challenges and barriers that arise, working with the person to identify ways to proceed and to reduce the likelihood of occurrence
Maintain an empathic, supportive and hope inspiring approach as challenges occur seeing challenge as part of the recovery journey and sources for learning
Respond promptly, positively and supportively to person in distress or crisis and support access to required services
Respond promptly to de-escalate potential incidents or risks and promote safety
Element: Collaboratively review the effectiveness of the plan and support provided
Review recovery plan and alliance regularly with person to ensure continued relevance and effectiveness
Gather feedback from the person at key milestones about the effectiveness and progress in implementing their recovery plan
Identify new directions and areas for change in the recovery plan and amend plans and transition strategies
Continue implementation and review cycle for the recovery plan until outcomes have been achieved and no further service or support is required
Gather and respond to feedback from the person on their satisfaction with the service and support provided
Reflect on work practice and feedback and identify opportunities for enhancing empowerment and improved processes
Evidence Required
List the assessment methods to be used and the context and resources required for assessment. Copy and paste the relevant sections from the evidence guide below and then re-write these in plain English.
ELEMENT
PERFORMANCE CRITERIA
Elements define the essential outcomes
Performance criteria describe the performance needed to demonstrate achievement of the element.
1. Share and collect information to collaboratively inform the plan for recovery
1.1 Work in a recovery oriented framework that respects the person’s experience, culture and unique recovery journey and the agreed recovery alliance relationship
1.2 Use a collaborative approach to discuss and determine information to be collected and sources of information to be accessed
1.3 Explain any organisation or program requirements including the commitment to access and equity, and limits to confidentiality
1.4 Obtain consent from the person according to organisation policy and procedure
1.5 Gather and document information from the person and other agreed sources to explore and clarify the person’s preferences, meanings and needs
1.6 Apply best practice principles, if formal assessment is to be conducted, and work within organisation policy and procedures relating to assessment protocols
1.7 Together identify the range and potential effects of social and other barriers that are impacting on the person
2. Facilitate collaborative planning process for recovery
2.1 Work collaboratively to develop a plan for recovery and transition based on the person’s choices, preferences, values, needs and goals and discuss different planning options and tools
2.2 Facilitate planning sessions using effective communication strategies in a manner that respects the person as their own expert, fosters their strengths and supports them as the driver of their recovery journey
2.3 Discuss and confirm the person’s choices for personal wellness, development of self-efficacy, cultural requirements, values, meanings and purpose in life
2.4 Work collaboratively with the person to identify strategies and priorities to achieve goals including self-advocacy strategies and transition beyond the service
2.5 Identify possible barriers or risks with the person and the strategies and/or other people who can assist in responding to or overcoming these challenges
2.6 Develop and document personal wellness plan, risk plans or other plans to meet the person’s priorities, as appropriate
2.7 Work collaboratively with the person to identify and balance duty of care and dignity of risk considerations whilst promoting independence from service
2.8 Identify and document the person’s and worker’s roles and timelines for action
3. Collaboratively implement plan for recovery
3.1 Discuss with the person their interest and readiness to initiate their plan for recovery
3.2 Undertake service actions as agreed in the plan in a timely manner
3.3 Facilitate access to information, resources and education about opportunities and service options relevant to the persons aspirations
3.4 Support person’s decision making and self-advocacy
3.5 Support person’s positive risk taking and resilience building
3.6 Maintain regular contact with the person, and be available to offer support and follow up on actions
3.7 Maintain records and progress notes in collaboration with the person
4. Develop and maintain effective working relationships with care support network
4.1 Determine with the person who else they choose to involve in their recovery process and the roles they want them to play
4.2 Obtain consent specifying what information can be shared with specific members of their care network and the circumstances in which the information can be released
4.3 Identify the information and support needs of family, carer/s and friends
4.4 Establish rapport and build an effective working relationship with relevant members of the care network
4.5 Provide and communicate information so that it is readily understood by members of the care network
4.6 Work from a strength based approach and communicate in a manner that respects the rights, dignity, choices and confidentiality of the person with the mental health condition while facilitating the care network to support the person
4.7 Facilitate support, training or services to family, carer/s and friends based on identified needs
5. Support person during challenges
5.1 Respond proactively to potential obstacles, challenges and barriers that arise, working with the person to identify ways to proceed and to reduce the likelihood of occurrence
5.2 Maintain an empathic, supportive and hope inspiring approach as challenges occur seeing challenge as part of the recovery journey and sources for learning
5.3 Respond promptly, positively and supportively to person in distress or crisis and support access to required services
5.4 Respond promptly to de-escalate potential incidents or risks and promote safety
6. Collaboratively review the effectiveness of the plan and support provided
6.1 Review recovery plan and alliance regularly with person to ensure continued relevance and effectiveness
6.2 Gather feedback from the person at key milestones about the effectiveness and progress in implementing their recovery plan
6.3 Identify new directions and areas for change in the recovery plan and amend plans and transition strategies
6.4 Continue implementation and review cycle for the recovery plan until outcomes have been achieved and no further service or support is required
6.5 Gather and respond to feedback from the person on their satisfaction with the service and support provided
6.6 Reflect on work practice and feedback and identify opportunities for enhancing empowerment and improved processes
Submission Requirements
List each assessment task's title, type (eg project, observation/demonstration, essay, assignment, checklist) and due date here
Assessment task 1: [title] Due date:
(add new lines for each of the assessment tasks)
Assessment Tasks
Copy and paste from the following data to produce each assessment task. Write these in plain English and spell out how, when and where the task is to be carried out, under what conditions, and what resources are needed. Include guidelines about how well the candidate has to perform a task for it to be judged satisfactory.
ELEMENT
PERFORMANCE CRITERIA
Elements define the essential outcomes
Performance criteria describe the performance needed to demonstrate achievement of the element.
1. Share and collect information to collaboratively inform the plan for recovery
1.1 Work in a recovery oriented framework that respects the person’s experience, culture and unique recovery journey and the agreed recovery alliance relationship
1.2 Use a collaborative approach to discuss and determine information to be collected and sources of information to be accessed
1.3 Explain any organisation or program requirements including the commitment to access and equity, and limits to confidentiality
1.4 Obtain consent from the person according to organisation policy and procedure
1.5 Gather and document information from the person and other agreed sources to explore and clarify the person’s preferences, meanings and needs
1.6 Apply best practice principles, if formal assessment is to be conducted, and work within organisation policy and procedures relating to assessment protocols
1.7 Together identify the range and potential effects of social and other barriers that are impacting on the person
2. Facilitate collaborative planning process for recovery
2.1 Work collaboratively to develop a plan for recovery and transition based on the person’s choices, preferences, values, needs and goals and discuss different planning options and tools
2.2 Facilitate planning sessions using effective communication strategies in a manner that respects the person as their own expert, fosters their strengths and supports them as the driver of their recovery journey
2.3 Discuss and confirm the person’s choices for personal wellness, development of self-efficacy, cultural requirements, values, meanings and purpose in life
2.4 Work collaboratively with the person to identify strategies and priorities to achieve goals including self-advocacy strategies and transition beyond the service
2.5 Identify possible barriers or risks with the person and the strategies and/or other people who can assist in responding to or overcoming these challenges
2.6 Develop and document personal wellness plan, risk plans or other plans to meet the person’s priorities, as appropriate
2.7 Work collaboratively with the person to identify and balance duty of care and dignity of risk considerations whilst promoting independence from service
2.8 Identify and document the person’s and worker’s roles and timelines for action
3. Collaboratively implement plan for recovery
3.1 Discuss with the person their interest and readiness to initiate their plan for recovery
3.2 Undertake service actions as agreed in the plan in a timely manner
3.3 Facilitate access to information, resources and education about opportunities and service options relevant to the persons aspirations
3.4 Support person’s decision making and self-advocacy
3.5 Support person’s positive risk taking and resilience building
3.6 Maintain regular contact with the person, and be available to offer support and follow up on actions
3.7 Maintain records and progress notes in collaboration with the person
4. Develop and maintain effective working relationships with care support network
4.1 Determine with the person who else they choose to involve in their recovery process and the roles they want them to play
4.2 Obtain consent specifying what information can be shared with specific members of their care network and the circumstances in which the information can be released
4.3 Identify the information and support needs of family, carer/s and friends
4.4 Establish rapport and build an effective working relationship with relevant members of the care network
4.5 Provide and communicate information so that it is readily understood by members of the care network
4.6 Work from a strength based approach and communicate in a manner that respects the rights, dignity, choices and confidentiality of the person with the mental health condition while facilitating the care network to support the person
4.7 Facilitate support, training or services to family, carer/s and friends based on identified needs
5. Support person during challenges
5.1 Respond proactively to potential obstacles, challenges and barriers that arise, working with the person to identify ways to proceed and to reduce the likelihood of occurrence
5.2 Maintain an empathic, supportive and hope inspiring approach as challenges occur seeing challenge as part of the recovery journey and sources for learning
5.3 Respond promptly, positively and supportively to person in distress or crisis and support access to required services
5.4 Respond promptly to de-escalate potential incidents or risks and promote safety
6. Collaboratively review the effectiveness of the plan and support provided
6.1 Review recovery plan and alliance regularly with person to ensure continued relevance and effectiveness
6.2 Gather feedback from the person at key milestones about the effectiveness and progress in implementing their recovery plan
6.3 Identify new directions and areas for change in the recovery plan and amend plans and transition strategies
6.4 Continue implementation and review cycle for the recovery plan until outcomes have been achieved and no further service or support is required
6.5 Gather and respond to feedback from the person on their satisfaction with the service and support provided
6.6 Reflect on work practice and feedback and identify opportunities for enhancing empowerment and improved processes
Copy and paste from the following performance criteria to create an observation checklist for each task. When you have finished writing your assessment tool every one of these must have been addressed, preferably several times in a variety of contexts. To ensure this occurs download the assessment matrix for the unit; enter each assessment task as a column header and place check marks against each performance criteria that task addresses.
Observation Checklist
Tasks to be observed according to workplace/college/TAFE policy and procedures, relevant legislation and Codes of Practice
Yes
No
Comments/feedback
Work in a recovery oriented framework that respects the person’s experience, culture and unique recovery journey and the agreed recovery alliance relationship
Use a collaborative approach to discuss and determine information to be collected and sources of information to be accessed
Explain any organisation or program requirements including the commitment to access and equity, and limits to confidentiality
Obtain consent from the person according to organisation policy and procedure
Gather and document information from the person and other agreed sources to explore and clarify the person’s preferences, meanings and needs
Apply best practice principles, if formal assessment is to be conducted, and work within organisation policy and procedures relating to assessment protocols
Together identify the range and potential effects of social and other barriers that are impacting on the person
Work collaboratively to develop a plan for recovery and transition based on the person’s choices, preferences, values, needs and goals and discuss different planning options and tools
Facilitate planning sessions using effective communication strategies in a manner that respects the person as their own expert, fosters their strengths and supports them as the driver of their recovery journey
Discuss and confirm the person’s choices for personal wellness, development of self-efficacy, cultural requirements, values, meanings and purpose in life
Work collaboratively with the person to identify strategies and priorities to achieve goals including self-advocacy strategies and transition beyond the service
Identify possible barriers or risks with the person and the strategies and/or other people who can assist in responding to or overcoming these challenges
Develop and document personal wellness plan, risk plans or other plans to meet the person’s priorities, as appropriate
Work collaboratively with the person to identify and balance duty of care and dignity of risk considerations whilst promoting independence from service
Identify and document the person’s and worker’s roles and timelines for action
Discuss with the person their interest and readiness to initiate their plan for recovery
Undertake service actions as agreed in the plan in a timely manner
Facilitate access to information, resources and education about opportunities and service options relevant to the persons aspirations
Support person’s decision making and self-advocacy
Support person’s positive risk taking and resilience building
Maintain regular contact with the person, and be available to offer support and follow up on actions
Maintain records and progress notes in collaboration with the person
Determine with the person who else they choose to involve in their recovery process and the roles they want them to play
Obtain consent specifying what information can be shared with specific members of their care network and the circumstances in which the information can be released
Identify the information and support needs of family, carer/s and friends
Establish rapport and build an effective working relationship with relevant members of the care network
Provide and communicate information so that it is readily understood by members of the care network
Work from a strength based approach and communicate in a manner that respects the rights, dignity, choices and confidentiality of the person with the mental health condition while facilitating the care network to support the person
Facilitate support, training or services to family, carer/s and friends based on identified needs
Respond proactively to potential obstacles, challenges and barriers that arise, working with the person to identify ways to proceed and to reduce the likelihood of occurrence
Maintain an empathic, supportive and hope inspiring approach as challenges occur seeing challenge as part of the recovery journey and sources for learning
Respond promptly, positively and supportively to person in distress or crisis and support access to required services
Respond promptly to de-escalate potential incidents or risks and promote safety
Review recovery plan and alliance regularly with person to ensure continued relevance and effectiveness
Gather feedback from the person at key milestones about the effectiveness and progress in implementing their recovery plan
Identify new directions and areas for change in the recovery plan and amend plans and transition strategies
Continue implementation and review cycle for the recovery plan until outcomes have been achieved and no further service or support is required
Gather and respond to feedback from the person on their satisfaction with the service and support provided
Reflect on work practice and feedback and identify opportunities for enhancing empowerment and improved processes
Forms
Assessment Cover Sheet
CHCMHS003 - Provide recovery oriented mental health services
Assessment task 1: [title]
Student name:
Student ID:
I declare that the assessment tasks submitted for this unit are my own work.
Student signature:
Result: Competent Not yet competent
Feedback to student
Assessor name:
Signature:
Date:
Assessment Record Sheet
CHCMHS003 - Provide recovery oriented mental health services
Student name:
Student ID:
Assessment task 1: [title] Result: Competent Not yet competent
(add lines for each task)
Feedback to student:
Overall assessment result: Competent Not yet competent