initiatives to improve ltc direct care workforce retention: what is the evidence base? lauren d....

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Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging Services www.futureofaging.org [email protected] AcademyHealth Annual Research Meeting Boston, MA June 26, 2005

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Page 1: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is

the Evidence Base?

Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhDInstitute for the Future of Aging Services

[email protected]

AcademyHealth Annual Research MeetingBoston, MA

June 26, 2005

Page 2: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

Presentation Overview

• Background• Purpose• Context/Conceptual Models• Research Synthesis

– Methods– Key findings on effective interventions

• Implications• Resources

Page 3: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

Background

Page 4: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

“Education and training of staff, supervision,environmental conditions, attitudes andvalues, job satisfaction and turnover of staff,salaries and benefits, leadership,management, and organizational capacityare all essential elements affecting quality ofcare to residents.”

IOM, Improving the Quality of Long-Term Care

Page 5: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

• Over 2.4 M paraprofessional LTC workers form the core of the formal LTC system

• Turnover ranging from 45% to over 100%

• Between 2002 – 2012, 888,000 more DCW jobs

• 27 M Americans are projected to need LTC by 2050

• Significant societal factors converging “care gap”

Page 6: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

• Variety of factors associated with LTC direct care workforce (DCW) recruitment & retention problems – inadequate training, job orientation & lack of

mentoring– poor public image of LTC direct care workforce– low pay & insufficient benefits– few opportunities for development within the

position– poor supervision– emotionally & physically hard work– workplace stress & burnout– personal life stressors– lack of respect from residents’ families– short staffing

Page 7: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

Purpose

Page 8: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

– States, providers & worker groups have designed & implemented a variety of initiatives intended to address DCW LTC problems

– Some of these initiatives have been evaluated

– Current state of evidence base on relationship between how LTC work is organized/structured & DCW turnover/retention

Page 9: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

Context/Conceptual Models

Page 10: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

Local Environment

Labor Market

Regulation

Competitive Strategy

Values & Beliefs

Structure

Profit status

Chain

Religious status

Size

Case mix

Management Philosophy of Care

Medical-custodial

Medical-rehabilitative

Regenerative

Work Organization

Teams

Training

Assignments

Human Resources Practices

Wages

Benefits

Hiring

Turnover

ResidentOutcomes

Quality of Care

Quality of Life

Model of Nursing Home Quality – Eaton (2000)

Page 11: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

Employer-Related Factors Associated with Turnover

Job Satisfaction

Organizational Commitment

TurnoverRetention

Personal Characteristics & Competing Demands

Compensation & Benefits

Quality of Work Environment, Job Design, Job Stress

Initial & On-Going Training

Employer Organizational Characteristics

Adapted from Banaszak-Holl and Hines, 1996

Page 12: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

Research Synthesis

Page 13: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

Recent Insights about Frontline Long-Term Care

Workers: A Research Synthesis 1999-2003Lauren Harris-Kojetin, PhD

Debra Lipson, MHSAJean Fielding, MGSKristen Kiefer, MPP

Robyn I. Stone, DrPH

Funded by ASPE, DHHS

Page 14: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

Methods

Page 15: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

• Search sources: Ageline, PubMed, Internet searches, personal communications, conferences, initiatives in Stone (2001)

• Eligible materials: Published & gray literature

• Search terms (examples): LTC workforce, labor force, recruiting, paraprofessional, job tenure, work environment, intervention

• Timeframe: 1999 – 2003• Outcomes: turnover and/or retention• Data collection: Study documents

abstracted & categorized by intervention type, evaluation design & results

Page 16: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

Types of Interventions Evaluated

1999 - 2003• Alternative labor pools• Career ladders• Culture change• Enhanced staff-family communication• Multi-faceted initiatives• Peer mentoring• Self-managed work teams• Wage enhancements

Page 17: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

Types of Initiatives Evaluated1999 – 2003 (continued)

• 15 interventions reviewed– 2 had not (yet) had outcome evaluation – 2 did not measure actual turnover or

retention– 8 showed non-significant, negative, or

inconclusive results or did not use robust quasi-experimental design

– 3 showed significant positive turnover/retention results using a pre-post comparison group design

Page 18: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

Key Findings on Effective Interventions

Page 19: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

Growing Strong Roots – Peer Mentoring

• Trained, experienced certified nursing assistants (CNAs) matched with new CNAs

• Training & manuals for project coordinators & mentors

• Booster training & newsletters for mentors

• Mentoring active 8 weeks• Salary increase for mentor

Page 20: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

Growing Strong RootsEvaluation Results

• 12 nursing homes in New York state

• Statistically significant improvement in retention among those mentored – 18 point increase in average

retention rate while increase not significant among comparison group

Page 21: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

WIN A STEP UP – Education & Payment

Incentives• 10 modules on clinical skills,

interpersonal skills, and communication• Nurse aides (NAs) get $70 per completed

module• Facilities must agree to commit staff time

& give either retention bonus ($75) or wage increase (> $0.25/hr) 3 months after completion of modules

• NAs who complete > 7 modules & stay at facility > 3 months after training get matching $75 bonus from WIN A STEP UP

Page 22: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

WIN A STEP UPPilot Evaluation Results

• 4 nursing homes, 1 home health agency, 1 adult care home in NC

• Annual turnover rates significantly lower for NAs in the program compared to those in the matched comparison group (15% to 32%)

Page 23: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

Wellspring – Quality Improvement & Organizational

Change • Alliance super structure• Leadership & clinical training modules• Shared advanced practice nurse• Coordinator in each facility• Care resource teams• Systematic collection & use of outcome

data• Non-hierarchical management

philosophy

Page 24: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

WellspringEvaluation Results

• Wellspring facilities fared better than other Wisconsin facilities on retention & turnover – Wellspring CNA retention increased

by 6% while other homes decreased by 6%

– CNA turnover rates increased for both Wellspring & other homes, but increase was smaller for Wellspring

Page 25: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

Summary – What Works?• 3 of 15 interventions using a pre-post

comparison group design had significant improvements in retention and/or turnover– Management buy in & sustained

commitment – Facilities commit to give staff time– Direct supervisors committed to working

with DCWs– Follow-up & support beyond initial training– Financial incentives to DCW in 2 of 3

interventions– Clear, consistent messages & expectations

Page 26: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

Implications

Page 27: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

Strengthen Evidence Base• Evaluate innovative workforce

improvement models• Examine linkages among workforce &

quality of care & life outcomes• Strengthen evaluation designs

– Measure longer-term effects– Measure variation within facilities (units,

shifts)– Measure actual behavioral outcomes– Measure outcomes consistently– Use of a comparison group

• Examine other LTC settings• Determine transferability of evidence-

based models across settings

Page 28: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

Promote Evidence Base

• Provide technical assistance to LTC providers to implement & sustain new models– Give on-going feedback to providers

• Determine how to replicate effective interventions beyond the initial demonstration (inform technical assistance)

• Determine how to sustain interventions• “Incentivize” the use of evidence-based models

– Make the case for evidence-based workforce interventions with payors, regulators and providers

Page 29: Initiatives to Improve LTC Direct Care Workforce Retention: What is the Evidence Base? Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, PhD Institute for the Future of Aging

Resources

• Synthesis paper available at:http://aspe.hhs.gov/daltcp/reports/insight.pdf• Measuring Long-Term Care Work: A

Guide to Selected Instruments to Examine Direct Care Worker Experiences and Outcomes

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