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LCP evolved in the 1980s from the field of vocational
rehab counseling. A pioneer in developing standards
used by certification organizations is Paul Deutsch,
Ph.D., CLCP, who runs a consulting business in Ovieda,
Fla. "When I started, there was no such thing as
life care planning or certification," Deutsch said.
"There were case managers working with the catastrophic
disabled who tried to do planning, but there were no
tools to aid them in that process. I recognized the
need to come up with a consistent methodology not only
to analyze the disability but to pull together all the
components of care associated with the disability."
Deutsch said the LCP concept was adopted quickly by
the legal system and insurance companies as an effective
way to chart the projected cost of care in catastrophic
cases for juries and others. As he saw the field of
LCP growing, Deutsch began authoring guides in 1981
for the insurance and legal communities on innovations
in rehabilitation for various injuries.
For health care professionals interested in pursuing
LCP, Deutsch has helped develop-and is an instructor
for-a comprehensive 12-month online study program launched
by Kaplan College in June. A series of seven courses
is designed as a pathway to becoming a certified life
care planner for a cost of $3,250. "I will be frank
in saying I came into the project a little skeptical
of how to adapt what I've always taught in a traditional
setting to the online environment," Deutsch said.
"The Kaplan system made that simple and I'm now
an enthusiastic supporter."
Tricia Johnson, MSN, NP, RN, a pediatrics nurse practitioner
in San Diego, said she signed up for the Kaplan course
because she is looking for a new challenge. "Life
care planning seems like a perfect fit for me, for my
personality," she said. "I needed an educational
program that was flexible and was drawn to Kaplan when
I realized Paul Deutsch was instrumental in developing
the curriculum."
Johnson said the course is user-friendly, has a live
chat room for interaction, a virtual classroom and a
message board where questions can be answered by instructors
and other students. She also has sent private e-mail
questions to the instructors and received personal replies
from Deutsch. "It's been a really helpful learning
process for me-like a real classroom," Johnson
said.
Barbara Sonderling, RN, executive director of Kaplan's
Health Care Pathways online certificate programs, said
that cyber-learning works for LCP because students already
have clinical skills but need the academic knowledge
base to enter the field. Kaplan's Health Care Pathways
online certificate programs, which are run from Kaplan's
Boca Raton, Fla., campus, include LCP, forensic nursing
and legal nurse consulting.
"The wonderful thing about online education is
you can work at your own pace within the 12-month time
frame, so it lends itself to the lifestyle of a working
professional or someone with family responsibilities,"
Sonderling said.
Deutsch said the field of LCP can bring rewards far
greater than monetary ones. He remains available to
patients he's helped in the past, including James Tuttle
of Lenoir, N.C., who at age 15 broke his neck in a diving
accident. "I met Deutsch when I first got hurt
and we still stay in touch," said Tuttle, a quadriplegic
who for 20 years has relied on the comprehensive LCP
that Deutsch developed.
Tuttle said Deutsch helped him get the support and
equipment he needed as he progressed at home and even
showed up for a community fund-raising event. "He's
supported me a lot," Tuttle said. "He's a
wonderful man."
Deutsch said that because Tuttle had no large sums
of money from litigation to administer a LCP, he had
to be creative and organize community, church and state
resources for basic medical care and equipment needs.
"When his high school put on a fund-raising wrestling
match, we were fully supportive and participated,"
Deutsch said. "When those kind of events took place,
we were able to guide those organized events to raise
funds where they were most needed and most effective
and to make sure nothing was done during fund raising
that would interfere with or jeopardize state or federal
resources."
Gary and Kim Juliana of Ocala, Fla., said that Deutsch
developed and administered an integrated LCP for their
son, Gary Jr. At age 7, the youngster was left with
severe brain damage and cerebral palsy when a machine
malfunctioned during a surgical procedure and resulted
in the loss of oxygenated blood flow to his brain. "Before
the life care plan, we didn't have any idea what the
future held," the father said. "What Paul
did was provide a road map that gives us a sense of
direction for both the near future and the long-term
future."
Deutsch said he's preparing a new version of his 30-volume
"Guide to Rehabilitation" series. One of his
favorite activities has been meeting with a group of
the top 150 life care planners in the country to exchange
information and brainstorm on the challenges ahead.
Hess, too, said the support network of life care planners
has been an important element in the success of his
Indiana business. More than 100 nurses who were energetic
and charged up about the LCP process attended this year's
annual conference in Las Vegas, he said.
"It was enriching and enthralling to be surrounded
by such high-energy individuals who have a zest and
zeal for life care planning and who are nurses who are
collaborative-everybody offers to help everyone else,"
Hess said. "It's a great support system that's
really neat and is the perfect representation of what
nursing is all about."
Contact John Leighty at johnsan@aol.com
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