Title: Measuring Consumer Perception of Care
1Measuring Consumer Perception of Care
- Challenges Opportunities
- John Bartlett, M.D.,M.P.H.
- March 20-21 Meeting with Californias Division of
Alcohol and Drug Programs
2Goals for Presentation
- Review consumer perception of care as a concept
- Review success criteria for its measurement
- Review the development testing of CSATs
Modular Survey
3The Concept
- Measuring consumer response
- core business function
- In healthcare tied to growth of consumerism
- CQI initiatives
- A NOMS domain
- Consumer perception of care ? satisfaction
-
4Measuring Consumer Perception of Care
- Approaches to measurement differ
- depending on scope purpose
- For purposes of comparability, improvement over
time, benchmarking measures must be - Meaningful
- Scientifically-sound
- Actionable
5The Problems with Satisfaction
- No evidence linking the measurement of
- satisfaction to client outcomes
- Few satisfaction surveys scientifically
validated - Data is not actionable (ceiling effect)
6The Modular Survey
- SAMHSA supported initiative
- Conducted under the auspices of the Forum
- on Performance Measurement
- the Washington Circle
- Conducted in 2 phases
- Phase 1 in conjunction with mental health Rx
- Phase 2 substance abuse specific
7Design Requirements
- Phase 1 focus on commonality,
- not comprehensiveness
- Short
- Scientifically sound
- Actionable
- Use of existing, widely-used, non-proprietary
- surveys
- Consensus-driven
8Modular Survey Flow of Common Questions for
Individual Respondent
Common Design Template
Adult Mental Health Core Measures
Adult Common Measures
Adult Substance Abuse Core Measures
Field-level Common Measures
C/Adol Mental Health Core Measures
Child/ Adolescent Common Measures
Adol Substance Abuse Core Measures
9Approach to Phase 1
- 4 workgroups to develop consensus
- Selection of instruments
- Identification of concerns
- Identification of potential items
- Ranking of items
- Final item selection (modified Delphi)
- Pilot testing
10Phase 1 Pilot Testing
- Conducted during summer/fall 2004
- Primary data collection in Cincinnati
- United Way agencies (N 1157)
- Secondary analysis using MHSIP data
- (16 state LA County data sets)
- Final N gt 22,000 respondents
- Pool of items reduced from 28 to 11
- All items common to both fields, both populations
11Approach to Phase 2
- Stand-alone SUD Rx initiative
- Under Washington Circle with Forum as
subcontractor - New item development (no existing SUD survey)
- Content work group co-chaired by
- Tom McLellan (TRI) Doreen Cavanaugh
(Georgetown) - Support from Forum Methods Work Group
- Ann Doucette (George Washington
- Public Provider Consumer Advisory Groups
12Phase 2 SUD Initiative
- Closely coordinated with NOMS
- Identification of concerns
- Relationship to treatment program
- Self awareness of problem/commitment to change
- Perceived outcomes
- Social connectedness
- Generation of items (35 in testing pool)
13Phase 2 Pilot Testing
- OMB IRB approval spring 2006
- Conducted in 3 rounds
- Round 1 Adult Adolescent (summer 2006)
- 14 programs, N 1207
- Round 2 Adult Adolescent (winter 2006 07)
- 6 programs, N 585
- Round 3 Adolescent (spring-summer 2007)
- 8 programs, N 268
- Final adult N 1549 (2 samples)
- Final adolescent N 492 (1 sample)
- All demographic groups covered except Native
American
14Phase 2 Completion
- Analysis recommendations by Ann Doucette PH.D.
- Use of IRT
- For a copy of the technical report, e-mail
- jbartlett_at_avisagroup.com
- Review by Forum Methods Work Group
- (November 2007)
- Review Approval by SUD Content Committee
- (November 2007)
15Final SUD Modular Survey
- 21 items (11 from Phase 1, 10 from Phase 2)
- Quality 6 items
- Perceived Outcomes 6 items
- Social Connectedness 7 items
- Commitment to Change 2 items
- 10 demographic background items
- Spanish translation available
16Modular Survey Flow of Common Questions for
Individual Respondent Final Version
Phase 2 Mental Health Items
Phase 1 Common Items
Phase 2 SUD Items
Common Design Template
All populations, all fields
17Convergence with NOMS
- In Spring 2006 NOMS Technical Consulting Group
convened - Recommended 17 items from 8 different
instruments - 9 of the 17 from the Modular Survey
- 5 are in the Final Modular Survey
18In summary
- Consumer perception of care key measurement
domain - Its measurement must meet certain criteria in
order to be worth the effort - The Modular Survey is the only current
instrument measuring consumer perception of
care that is - SUD Rx specific
- Product of both consensus and empirical analysis
- Short and actionable