The Mental Health Technician is an entry level position applying principles and techniques of evaluation, therapeutic intervention, and treatment of patients. The technician manages a safe and therapeutic environment for mental health patients.
Essential Duties:
- Able to perform mental status evaluations in ER setting to report to appropriate Dr. to determine appropriate disposition.
- Able to effectively follow through with recommended dispositions.
- Assists to maintain MHU standards of safety and cleanliness within the therapeutic milieu.
- Demonstrates an understanding of the action and side effects of psychotropic medications.
- Documents observations, interventions, and progress towards planned outcomes according to charting standards.
- Ensures that group and milieu programming occurs as scheduled.
- Implements planned treatment interventions and documents patients' response.
- Monitors assigned patients and assists with their personal care needs.
- Observes patient's mental status and documents per MHU charting guidelines.
- Possesses the knowledge and skill required to evaluate patients' mental status to determine treatment needs/interventions.
- Reports patient observations (assigned, group, milieu) to RN every shift.
- Utilizes approved behavioral management techniques when appropriate.
Preferred Experience
- Experience in a medical or psychiatric setting preferred
Required Licensure/Education
- High school diploma or equivalent required.
- Basic Life Support (BLS) required
Preferred Education
- College level courses in Psychology or related field preferred or Bachelors Degree preferred.
Employee Health Requirements
Exposure:
- Chemicals: Refer to MSDS sheets
- Video Display Terminals: Average
- Blood and Body Fluids: Diagnostic composite of patients, frequent contact with intravenous devices, and high potential for contact with contaminated body fluids (blood, stool, vomitus) and administration of blood does create a high risk. use of needleless IV system, universal precautions and protective equipment minimize risk.
- TB or Airborne Pathogens: Patient diagnostic presentations do pose high risk; however, usage of protective wear, appropriate size TB mask from fit test and universal precautions reduces risk.
Sensory requirements (speech, vision, smell, hearing, touch):
- Speech: Required to communicate with patient/families/staff/doctors, coworkers, ancillary personnel and other department heads. Ability to ask for help.
- Vision: Required to observe patients and their physical assessment, ability to read reports, ability to read machines.
- Smell: Helpful to note presence of incontinence, vomitus, blood; electrical/fire safety.
- Hearing: Necessary to hear alarms, calls for help and to hear patient verbalizations; ability to listen for lung, bowel, heart sounds.
- Touch: Necessary to assess patients, need to distinguish between hot and cold.
Activity/Lifting Requirements:
Percentage of time during the normal workday the employee is required to:
- Sit: 10%
- Twist: 4%
- Stand: 40%
- Crawl: 0%
- Walk: 25%
- Kneel: 1%
- Lift: 10%
- Drive: 0%
- Squat: 1%
- Climb: 1%
- Bend: 30%
- Reach above shoulders: 3%
The weight required to be lifted each normal workday according to the continuum described below:
- Up to 10 lbs: Frequently
- Up to 20 lbs: Frequently
- Up to 35 lbs: Frequently
- Up to 60 lbs: Occasionally
- Up to 75 lbs: Not Required
- Up to 100 lbs: Not Required
- Over 100lbs: Not Required
Describe and explain the lifting and carrying requirements:
- Lifting of patients off their beds that are unable to move independently is done with assistive lifting equipment.
- Horizontal movement of patients to and from carts/beds who are unable to move independently is done with assistive lifting equipment.
- Lifting equipment - carry 25'- 150' waist high (IV bags, patient trays).
- Carry charts 25'- 150' waist high. Filled laundry bags are filled half full so as not to weigh over 35 lbs.
- Carry fire extinguishers up or down 3-4 flights of stairs and several yards in an emergency.
Maximum consecutive time (minutes) during the normal workday for each activity:
- Sit: 30
- Twist: 15
- Stand: 60
- Crawl: 0
- Walk: 10
- Kneel: 0
- Lift: 5
- Drive: 0
- Squat: 2
- Climb: 1
- Bend: 15
- Reach above shoulders: 2
Repetitive use of hands (Frequency indicated):
- Simple grasp 10 lbs. Normal weight <5lbs.
- Pushing & pulling - 50-200 lbs: Occasionally
- Fine Manipulation: Typing in computer, medical/supply dispensing cabinet, using pens to chart, drawing up meds in syringe and administration, starting IV's.
Leg Strength:
- Up to 50 lbs: Occasionally- (repetitive use of foot or feet in operating machine control: utilized in positioning beds during transport; x-ray, surgery or in an emergency situation from floor to floor, locking beds or cardiac chairs.)
Environmental Factors and Special Hazards:
Environmental Factors (Time Spent):
- Inside hours: 6-40
- Outside hours: 0
- Temperature: Normal Range
- Lighting: Average
- Noise levels: Average
- Humidity: Normal Range
- Atmosphere: Odors
Special Hazards:
- Chemical -drugs/work with patients receiving chemotherapy-Explosive-oxygen; Radiation-cesium implants and radioactive iodine therapy direct radiation for radiology equipment; mechanical- use of Hoover lift bed scales, motorized wheelchairs, bathtub lift chair.
- Protective Clothing Required: As required for chemotherapy or in cases of isolation, i.e. gloves, gowns, masks, goggles.