1 / 36

LTSS Consumer Quality – Technical Workgroup

LTSS Consumer Quality – Technical Workgroup. May 22, 2014 (Updated) Gary Montrose & Jose Torres-Vega a nd Spark Policy Institute . Agenda. Review of LTSS tools used by state partners (from May 2, 2014 state presentations)

nhu
Download Presentation

LTSS Consumer Quality – Technical Workgroup

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. LTSS Consumer Quality – Technical Workgroup May 22, 2014 (Updated) Gary Montrose & Jose Torres-Vega and Spark Policy Institute

  2. Agenda Review of LTSS tools used by state partners (from May 2, 2014 state presentations) Debrief: Dr. Kaye’s presentation for Colorado relevance, opportunities Review: Cross walk update, utility for future consumer survey work Explore: Next steps and Scope of Recommendations

  3. Review & Debrief State Agency LTSS Tools

  4. State Agency Instruments Currently used

  5. Office of Behavioral Health: Data & Evaluation Unit • MHSIP/YSS-F/YSS (Mental Health Statistics Improvement Program/Youth Services Survey for Families/Youth Services Survey) • Currently piloted: ECHO+ • Two qualitative questions: • +/- aspects of behavioral health services received • 45+ quantitative questions • Access to services & general satisfaction • Participation in treatment planning • Quality of treatment (cultural sensitivity for youth clients) • Perceived outcomes • Social connectedness & functioning

  6. HCPF/Div. for Intellectual & Developmental Disabilities (DIDD) • NCI–DD Adult Consumer Survey • Currently implemented: First year for Colorado (40 states implement) • Qualitative face-to-face interview • Individual outcomes • Health, welfare and rights • System performance • Staff stability • Family outcomes • Quantitative • Demographic and basic medical data

  7. NCI framework comprised of four types of surveys • NCI-DD face to face • Three mail surveys • Adult Family Survey • Family Guardian Survey • Child Family Survey

  8. HCPF • MFP Quality of Life Survey • Qualitative method only (primarily phone interview) • Living Situation • Choice & Control • Access to Personal Care • Respect & Dignity • Community Integration & Inclusion • Satisfaction • Health Status • Case managers collect prior to transition from facility-based care & 11 and 24 months post-transition • Mathematica evaluator

  9. HCPF • CSS Waiver: client satisfaction survey • Qualitative: only in “additional comments” • Quantitative: • Yes/No questions, Likert Scale for overall satisfaction questions & demographics • Domains • Their Case Manager • Level of involvement and choice in services & providers • Availability of information and resources • Knowledge of how to file complaints • Quality of care received from caregivers • Online survey sent to SEP agencies that mail paper copy to clients

  10. HCPF • CAHPS (Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems) surveys for Adult and Child Medicaid (FFS and Managed Care) and CHP+ • Qualitative: member, self-reported (mail & phone) • Rating of all Health Care • Rating of Personal Doctor • Rating of Specialist Seen Most Often • Coordination of Care • Conducted by HSAG (EQRO) • Random sample • Annual consumer satisfaction survey

  11. State Agency Instruments Future Plans

  12. HCPF • TEFT (Testing Experience and Functional Tools in Community-Based Long Term Services and Supports • Planning & Demonstration grant funded • Test with Home & Community-Based Services for the Elderly, Blind & Disabled (HCBS-EBD) • HCBS for Supported Living Services • Random sample for each, large enough for statistical analysis • Truven contractor

  13. TEFT (continued) • Domains • Services and Supports from personal assistant and behavioral staff • Services and Supports from homemakers • Case Management • Choice • Transportation • Personal Safety • Community Inclusion and empowerment • Employment

  14. HCPF • NCI-AD (National Core Indicators – Aging and Disability) • Qualitative: face-to-face interviews • Service Satisfaction • Living Space • Safety/Security/Privacy • Community • Everyday living • Relationships • Healthcare • Planning for Future • Independence/Functional Competence • Direct Care Workers • Health Care Workers • Quantitative • Demographic & medical

  15. Overview and Debrief Dr. Kaye’s Presentation

  16. Why Measure LTSS QOL? • States transitioning to managed care • Quality measures help states’ commitment to providing quality services • Quality measures can focus on meeting people’s needs • Quality measures allow advocates to track outcomes • People’s lives are better if they can stay in the community rather than in the institutions

  17. Types of Measures • Structure: The system • Process: Provision of services by the system • Outcomes: Effect of services on consumer*

  18. LTSS Quality & Outcomes:CLPC Conceptual Framework QOL Domains • Paid/unpaid LTSS providers • Supportive Environment • Services & Supports Received • Consumer Outcomes

  19. Potential data sources • Program documents & administrators • scope, organization, accountability, etc. • Administrative records • expenditures, participation, settings, services received, complaints, workforce • Medical or claims records (encounter data) • health & functional status, utilization, prevention • National or state survey data • unmet LTSS need, workforce, caregiver support • Surveys of LTSS recipients • adequacy, appropriateness, consumer outcomes

  20. Available LTSS quality tools LTSS program characteristics • Survey instruments, e.g., • National Core Indicators • Developmental Disabilities • Aging & Physical Disabilities • HCBS Experience Survey • Participant Experience Survey • MFP Quality of Life Survey • Consumer outcome/QOL domains • PEONIES • Kane Quality of Life domains • CQL Personal Outcome Measures • Process & structure measures • Indicators LTSS Resources Paid & unpaid providers Supportive environment LTSS received The LTSS Consumer Consumer Outcomes LTSS system responsiveness

  21. Selecting quality & outcome measures • Clarify your purpose and keep it in mind • Stakeholder & consumer input is critical • Consider using existing measures, either as is or as a starting point for further development • Selecting or developing measures is generally a trade-off: • How relevant are the measures? • Can the results be used for comparison? • Are findings likely to influence policy? • How difficult is it to obtain the needed data? • Have the measures been tested for validity/reliability?

  22. Steps for Developing Questions • Creating a new instrument • Qualitative interviews to find out what’s important • Develop questions based on understanding which issues are important to the consumer • Cognitive testing of instrument • Pilot the survey/interview • Ask testers to comment on each response

  23. Steps for Selecting Existing Questions • Use the LTSS Question Library to identify potential questions within domains/sub-domains • Selection based on what is NOT currently captured through existing state data collection but is important to understand LTSS quality of life

  24. Review Crosswalk Update & Potential Future Survey Work

  25. Kaye’s Framework QOL Domains • Paid/unpaid LTSS providers • Supportive Environment • Services & Supports Received • Consumer Outcomes

  26. Kaye’s Domains & Subdomains Related to QOL 1. Paid & Unpaid LTSS Providers 2. Supportive Environment Accessibility and accommodations Technology Resources Settings • Caregiver/family support • Workforce development • Worker availability and quality

  27. 4. Consumer Outcomes Kayes’ Domains and Subdomains Related to QOL 3. Services and Supports Received Adequacy Appropriateness Coordination Utilization Health and Function Well-being Participation Safety

  28. Instruments Cross-walked by Kaye’s Domains/Subdomains State of Colorado Uses Nationally recognized instruments NCI Family Adult Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (NCI-I/DD) CQL – Personal Outcomes Measures (POMS) CQL Basic Assurances Personal Experience Outcomes iNtegrated Interview and Evaluation (PEONIES) • National Core Indicators Adult Consumer (NCI- DD): Colorado implement for first time in 2014 • NCI Aging and Disability (NCI-AD): Colorado will pilot in 2015

  29. Kaye “Supportive Environment/ Resources” & POMS “My Self/Security and Continuity”

  30. POMS Detail

  31. Kaye “Supportive Environment/ Resources” & CQL Basic Assurances”

  32. CQL Detail

  33. Overview of the Crosswalk Results Draft Report

  34. Structure • Assesses NCI-DD and AD by Kaye domains/subdomains • Provides table in each section with • Advisory Committee input on Kaye subdomains • Potential questions derived from other instruments in the crosswalk • Serves as the technical report and basis for a library of questions by domains

  35. Explore Next Steps and Scope of Recommendations

  36. Proposed Consensus Recommendations Update the 2007 HCPF Quality Strategy from a Consumer Perspective Consumer-Agency Alignment Pursue R&D opportunities regarding “Add-on” questions to standardized surveys Maintain/grow an LTSS Question/Methods Library Pursue funding opportunities

More Related