Transcript
Page 1: Public Health Notice

Public Health Notice

Contagious Disease

Hazard

City and County of San Francisco

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Oversight, PerformanceAnd

Focus Groups

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Using Focus Groups in State

Oversight of County

Medicaid Managed Care

Specialty Mental Health

Services

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A Little Background...•California implements Managed Care for Medi-Cal Mental Health Specialty Services in FY 97-98

•CMS Freedom-of-choice waivers

•State oversight plan - review 56 county MHPs

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Obtain direct input from consumers and families

Employ consumers and families as reviewers and moderators

DMH Policy

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California Counties run their own mental health programs (MHP’s)

State DMH provides oversight and some direct services

And…

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Combine Two Approaches

COMPLIANCE• 49 Page Protocol• In/Out of Compliance• Look at Policies &

Procedures• Interview Admin Staff• Make Calls to Access

Line• Write Plan of

Correction

QI/TAT• Hold 1 - 6 Focus

Groups(10 - 60 Participants)

• Prepare draft reports to County

• Hold exit discussion• Prepare final reports to

County - 30 days• TAT makes follow-up

visits

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Oversight = (C+QI+TAT)

Compliance +

QI +Tech. Assistance &Training

Or,

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A Quality Improvement MantraFor Our Times:

“Good news is no news”

“No news is bad news”

“Bad news is good news”

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Who Said That?

Free Lunch to the Person Who Can Tell Us!

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•Cheaper & faster than other methods

• Interaction generates additional information

• Questions can be changed rapidly, if needed

• Consumers like interaction with others

But why use focus groups?

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And, by golly,

People LIKE them!

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What Kind of Groups?• Adult Clients

• Youth Clients

• Family Members of Adult Clients

• Family Members of Children/Youth

Clients

• Clients/Family on QI Committees

• Monolingual/Non-English Speaking

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How many?

About 150 each year!

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What’s the Question?

Access and Availability

Beneficiary Protection

Coordination with other Services

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Who leads them?

• 1 Family Member (of adult or youth)

• 1 Adult Client

• 1 DMH Technical Assistance and

Training Staff

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How are moderators selected?

• DMH “Expert Pool”

• Individual Contracts

• Stipend and Expenses Paid

• Not in your own county!

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How are moderators trained?

• Two-day paid workshop

• Faculty = Clients and Family

Members and DMH Staff

• Training is mostly experiential -

role playing

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Focus Group Training - Spring, 2002

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Focus Group Training - Spring, 2002

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Moderator Responsibilities

• Group Leader

• Note Taker

• Report writer

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ConductFocus Groups

ConductFocus Groups

WrittenReports

to County

WrittenReports

to County

Verbal ReportVerbal Report

How Information Flows

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Three Years of Focus GroupsThree Years of Focus Groups

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Evaluation Teams

1 - Family Member of Children/Youth1 - Family Member of Adult Client1 - Adult Consumer1 - DMH Staff

4

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Draft State-wide

Report

SelectEvaluation

Teams

TrainEvaluators

Teams ConductEvaluation

DMH Approves and Disseminates

County Directors

Client Orgs.

Family Orgs.

The Evaluation Process

Family Orgs.SQIC

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A consistent, collaborative process:

• Team members generate “Theme Lists” independently

• Collaborative ranking of themes

• Report written using final rankings

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Analysis by DMH Staff

• Enter demographic data (Excel)• Tally recorded comments• Reconcile results with theme lists• Check with evaluation teams• Draft narrative• Send to Client/Family Member T/F

More Evaluation Process:

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Overview of 3 years

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Who we saw - Groups

Year 1 Year 2 Year 3

118 157 163

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Who we saw - People

Year 1 Year 2 Year 3

776 1195 1161

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Who we saw : Types

Type Year 1 Year 2 Year 3Adults 53% 33% 37%

F/Youth 26% 17% 16%

F/Adults 21% 15% 14%

QI 0% 12% 8%

Language N/A 19% 23%

Mixed N/A 4% N/A

Youth 0% 0% 2%

Total 100% 100% 100%

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What we have learned

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Access Themes

•Staff turnover remains a problem

•Most know how to gain access

•But - it can be complex, difficult

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Access Themes - 2

•Once you’re “in,” it’s better

•but long delays persist •They’d like more staff, money, services

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Access Quotes

• “Family involvement has worked very well…”

• “Call 1-800-GOOD LUCK.”

• It takes a mental health crisis to get mental health services.”

• We need more clinical staff.”

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Themes - BeneficiaryProtection

•B/P system is a fuzzy concept to most

•>50% recall seeing printed material

•BUT - content is not easily recalled

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Beneficiary Protection 2

•Process is seen as too complex for clients to navigate without help

•Some fear retaliation if they complain

•BUT- There are few reports of actual retaliation

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Beneficiary ProtectionQuotes

• “I’ve seen the yellow brochure and forms but I didn’t read it.”

• “When you’re going thru a crisis situation, you don’t think about any booklet.”

• “I didn’t complain because I didn’t understand the process.”

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Coordination Themes

•>50% say it’s good, O.K.

•but A significant minority (up to 50%) say improvement is needed

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Coordination Themes - 2•Problems: Communication;

Rx & pharmacy - TARS, Dental & Housing services

•Some Staff are exceptional at linking clients to services

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Coordination Themes -3

•Most Frequently mentioned problem:

“My doctor and my psychiatrist don’t communicate!”

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Coordination - Quotes

• “Yes, they’ll help with anything.”

• “Mental Health works closely

with my physical care doctor.”

• “I didn’t know they could do that for you.”

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New in year 2

Involvement in Quality Improvement

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The QI Experience

•Client/Family input has been used in a meaningful way

•Some impact on services is noted

•They’d like more feedback on results

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The QI Experience (2)

•More education, training needed

•When it’s good, it’s very, very good…

•And when it’s bad…

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QI - Quotes• “The local Mental Health Board is

behind us 100%.”• “Absolutely. We are not considered

part of the problem - we’re part of the solution

• “They talk the talk but they don’t walk the walk.”

• “I’d like to be more than a rubber stamp. They do all the work first, then run it by us.

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Room for Improvement

• Close the loop - feedback from county MHPs

• Recruit for specific participant types

• Integrate data from Compliance & Outcomes

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The EndThe End

FinallyFinally!!


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