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Achieving Our Mission

Achieving Our Mission. The Role of Continuous Quality Improvement in Community Corrections and Public Safety Kimberly Gentry Sperber, Ph.D. Efforts To Date. “What Works” Literature Principles of Effective Interventions

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Achieving Our Mission

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  1. Achieving Our Mission The Role of Continuous Quality Improvement in Community Corrections and Public Safety Kimberly Gentry Sperber, Ph.D.

  2. Efforts To Date • “What Works” Literature • Principles of Effective Interventions • Growing evidence based on individual program evaluations and meta-analyses • Continuing Gap Between Science and Practice • Few programs score as satisfactory on CPAI

  3. Why Isn’t “It” Working?Latessa, Cullen, and Gendreau (2002) • Article notes 4 common failures of correctional programs: • Failure to use research in designing programs • Failure to follow appropriate assessment and classification practices • Failure to use effective treatment models • Failure to evaluate what we do

  4. CPAI Data as Evidence of Fidelity • Lowenkamp and Latessa (2005) • Examined data from 38 residential correctional programs for adults • Looked at relationship between program fidelity and program effectiveness. • Program fidelity was assessed using the CPAI. • Found significant correlation between fidelity and effectiveness • CPAI scores correlated to reincarceration

  5. Lowenkamp and Latessa FindingsContinued • Differences in recidivism rates based on CPAI scores: • Scores of 0-49% demonstrated 1.7% reduction compared to comparison group. • Scores of 50-59% demonstrated 8.1% reduction. • Scores of 60-69% demonstrated 22% reduction.

  6. CPAI Data Continued • Holsinger (1999) • Examined data from Adolescent Community Correctional Facilities in Ohio • Looked at relationship between program fidelity and program effectiveness. • Program fidelity was assessed using the CPAI. • Outcome measures examined included any court contact, felony or misdemeanor, felony, personal offense, and commitment to a secure facility

  7. CPAI Data Continued • Total composite score significantly correlated with all outcome measures. • Each individual domain of the CPAI also significantly correlated with all of the outcomes • Program Implementation • Client Assessment • Program Characteristics • Staff Quality • Evaluation

  8. Recent CPAI Results • Results from more than 550 programs: • 7% HIGHLY EFFECTIVE • 18% EFFECTIVE • 33% NEEDS IMPROVEMENT • 42% INEFFECTIVE

  9. More Fidelity Research • Landenberger and Lipsey (2005) • Brand of CBT didn’t matter but quality of implementation did. • Implementation defined as low dropout rate, close monitoring of quality and fidelity, and adequate training for providers. • Schoenwald et al. (2003) • Therapist adherence to the model predicted post-treatment reductions in problem behaviors of the clients. • Henggeler et al. (2002) • Supervisors’ expertise in the model predicted therapist adherence to the model. • Sexton (2001) • Direct linear relationship between staff competence and recidivism reductions.

  10. More Fidelity Research Cont’d. • Schoenwald and Chapman (2007) • A 1-unit increase in therapist adherence score predicted 38% lower rate of criminal charges 2 years post-treatment • A 1-unit increase in supervisor adherence score predicted 53% lower rate of criminal charges 2 years post-treatment. • Schoenwald et al. (2007) • When therapist adherence was low, criminal outcomes for substance abusing youth were worse relative to the outcomes of the non-substance abusing youth.

  11. Washington State Example(Barnoski, 2004) • For each program (FFT and ART), an equivalent comparison/control group was created • Felony recidivism rates were calculated for each of three groups, for each of the programs • Youth who received services from therapists deemed ‘competent’ • Youth who received services from therapists deemed ‘not competent’ • Youth who did not receive any services (control group)

  12. Functional Family Therapy Results: % New Felony Results calculated using multivariate models in order to control for potential differences between groups

  13. Washington State Study Continued • When FFT was delivered competently, the program reduced felony recidivism by 38% • When considering how much the program costs, substantial savings in ‘avoided crime’ were observed – particularly for the competent therapists • When ART was competently delivered, felony recidivism was reduced by 24% • Also resulted in substantial savings

  14. Project Greenlight • Short-term prison-based reentry program in New York • CBT Skills Training • Employment Services • Housing Services • Drug Education and Awareness • Family Counseling • Practical Skills Training • Community-Based Networks • Familiarity With Parole • Individualized Release Plans

  15. Project Greenlight Benefits • Participants received more service referrals • Participants reported more contacts with community services after release • Participants demonstrated significantly more familiarity with parole conditions • Participants were more positive about parole

  16. But Did It Work?

  17. What Went Wrong? • Violation of the risk principle • Ceased use of risk assessment instrument when staff deemed process too cumbersome • Violation of the need principle • All offenders received same services whether needed or not • Violation of the fidelity principle • Staff modified delivery of the CBT curriculum (shortened the duration, increased frequency, increased class size) • Differential staff competence • Certain case managers produced worse outcomes

  18. UC Halfway House/CBCF Study in Ohio: A Look at Fidelity Statewide • Average Treatment Effect was 4% reduction in recidivism • Lowest was a 41% Increase in recidivism • Highest was a 43% reduction in recidivism • Programs that had acceptable termination rates, had been in operation for 3 years or more, had a cognitive behavioral program, targeted criminogenic needs, used role playing in almost every session, and varied treatment and length of supervision by risk had a 39% reduction in recidivism

  19. 2010 UC Halfway House/CBCF Study in Ohio:Adherence to CBT in Groups and Changes in Recidivism

  20. What Do We Know About Fidelity? • Fidelity is related to successful outcomes (i.e., recidivism reductions). • Poor fidelity can lead to null effects or even iatrogenic effects. • Fidelity can be measured and monitored. • Fidelity cannot be assumed.

  21. QA versus CQI CQI – What Is It? Infrastructure Peer Review Indicators Client Satisfaction Action Planning Process Evaluation Outcome Evaluation Benefits Monitoring Fidelity Through a CQI Process

  22. What Is Quality? • Services are based on current professional knowledge. • Services produce desirable outcomes.

  23. CQI – What Is It? • A method of continuously examining processes and making them better. • Key principles: • Use of data and team approaches to improve decision making • Involvement of entire organization to improve quality • Strong focus on customers • Continuous improvement of all processes and outcomes

  24. CQI versus QA • QA: • Retrospective review process • Emphasis on regulatory and contract compliance • Catching people being bad leads to hide and seek behavior

  25. CQI versus QA • CQI: • CQI is a prospective process • Holds quality as a central priority within the organization • Focus on customer needs; relies on feedback from internal and external customers • Emphasizes systematic use of data • Not blame-seeking • Trust, respect, and communication • Move toward staff responsibility for quality , problem solving and ownership of services

  26. Objectives of CQI • To facilitate the Agency’s mission • To ensure appropriateness of services • To improve efficiency of services/processes • To improve effectiveness of directing services to client needs • To foster a culture of learning • To ensure compliance with funding and regulatory standards

  27. Building a CQI Process • Formal infrastructure • Core Elements • Documentation Review • Indicators • Process Versus Outcome • Performance Goals • Action Planning • Customer Satisfaction • Clients, Staff, Stakeholders • Program Evaluation

  28. Process Evaluation Sample Projects

  29. Process Evaluation • Are we serving our target population? • Are the services being delivered? • Did we implement the program as designed (tx fidelity)? • Are there areas that need improvement?

  30. Example 1Review of LSI Scores • Reviewed all open cases at Facility A • Recorded LSI risk category, UC Risk category, and name of interviewer • 77.5% of cases reviewed did not have a match between staff rating and UC rating

  31. LSI Scores Post-Training • First 2 weeks after training – 0 matches • 3-6 weeks after training – 46.2% matched • First 2 weeks after training – 50% were off by 2 risk categories • 3-6 weeks after the training – 0% were off by 2 risk categories

  32. Example2CBIT Site Assessments • Cognitive Behavioral Implementation Team • Site visits for observation and rating • Standardized assessment process • Standardized reports back to sites • Combination of quantitative data and qualitative data

  33. Example 3Review of Core Correctional Practices • Reviewed 6 programs • Live observation of treatment groups for use of core correctional practices: • Anticriminal Modeling • Effective Reinforcement • Effective Disapproval • Problem-Solving • Structured Skill Building • Effective Use of Authority • Cognitive Restructuring • Relationship Skills • Documented strengths and opportunities for improvement

  34. Example 4Process Evaluation of 2 Adolescent Residential Programs • Collecting data on 128 youth admitted during FY10 and FY11 across 2 boys’ programs. • Goal – to identify and quantify changes in population and programming in order to identify any necessary changes to service delivery. • Advantages: • Allows the agency to gain an accurate assessment of current target population and treatment needs • Allows the agency to seek out evidence-based practices that best align with current treatment needs of clients • Positions the agency for future outcome evaluation

  35. Example 5Assessing Best Practices at 17 Sites • Use of ICCA Treatment Survey to establish baseline • Complete again based on best practice • Perform Gap Analysis • Action Plan • Reassess

  36. Outcome Evaluation Sample Projects

  37. Outcome Evaluation • Are our services effective? • Do clients benefit (change) from the services? • Intermediate outcomes • Reduction in risk • Reduction in antisocial values • Long-term outcomes • Recidivism • Sobriety

  38. Example 1Off-Site Non-Emergency Medical Visits for 6 Months • Goals of the project: • Reduce the overall number of off-site visits for non-emergency medical care. • Reduce the number of staff-escorted visits (impacts dollars and coverage) • Reduce the amount of behavioral treatment missed • Increase the number of referrals for primary care upon discharge

  39. Example 1 ContinuedOutcomes Data

  40. ER VISIT COSTS $ 400 Average Visit $ 34 Average Staff Cost $$$ Hospital Pharmacy TOTAL $ 434 not including pharmacy savings TALBERT HOUSE $ 62.50 Average Visit $ 0 off-site staff cost Medication savings: samples, patient assistance programs TOTAL $62.50 average cost/visit Savings of $371.50/visit Sample Cost ComparisonER versus On-Site Care

  41. Example 2Outcomes Pre/Post TFM ImplementationPassages Program for Girls

  42. Example 3Outcome Evaluation of Enhanced Outpatient Services • 3year SAMHSA grant to enhance drug court OP program • Sample of 357 clients • Assessing intermediate outcomes (6 months post-intake) • Assessing long-term outcomes (12 months post discharge) • Comparing to clients receiving services prior to enhancements

  43. Benefits of Program Evaluation • Proof of effective services • Maintain or secure funding • Improve staff morale and retention • Educate key stakeholders about services • Highlights opportunities for improvement • Data to inform quality improvement initiatives • Establish/enhance best practices • Monitor/ensure treatment fidelity

  44. The Role of QA/QI in Community Corrections(based on UC Halfway House and CBCF study)

  45. NPC Research on Drug Courts

  46. Conclusions • Many programs are not implementing the principles of effective intervention with strong fidelity. • Result is an ongoing gap between science and practice. • This gap often results in null or even iatrogenic effects. • Correctional organizations have a responsibility to ensure effective services. • Monitoring fidelity is key to success. • Responsibility for EBP needs to be aligned at all levels – administration, management, line staff. • Need to focus on creating formal infrastructure to support and sustain evidence-based practices.

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