Structures psychiatric treatment plans with diagnoses, goals, interventions, and measurable outcomes. Use when creating psychiatric treatment plans, setting therapeutic goals, or documenting treatment modalities.
Structures psychiatric treatment plans with DSM-5-TR diagnoses, SMART goals, evidence-based interventions, and measurable outcomes for regulatory compliance and clinical effectiveness.
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.
List all active diagnoses with ICD-10-CM codes in order of treatment priority:
Format per diagnosis:
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:
Include medical and psychosocial problems that affect psychiatric treatment: housing instability, chronic pain, substance use, legal involvement, childcare responsibilities.
For each identified problem, create goals at two levels:
Long-Term Goals (discharge or treatment completion):
Short-Term Objectives (stepping stones, typically 30-day increments):
Examples of properly structured goals:
Problem: Major Depressive Disorder, severe (PHQ-9 = 22)
For each short-term objective, document specific interventions:
Required elements per intervention:
Pharmacotherapy interventions must include:
Psychotherapy interventions must specify:
Psychosocial interventions must include:
Every treatment plan must include a safety component:
Review schedule:
Discharge/transition criteria:
Patient participation: