Title: Sustaining Innovation: Using Implementation Drivers to Ensure Sustainability
1Sustaining InnovationUsing Implementation
Drivers to Ensure Sustainability
- NCHSD Fall Conference
- September 16, 2009
- Kari Collins, LCSW
- Kentucky Division of Behavioral Health
2 Joyce and Showers, 2002
3 Ask Yourselves
- When we are investing time and money in a new
program, practice or initiative are we - simply wanting to provide Continuing Education
Credits and Certifications? - or
- wanting to change practice and human behavior ?
4Implementation Research A Synthesis of the
Literature
- Fixsen, D. L., Naoom, S. F., Blase, K. A.,
Friedman, R. M. Wallace, F. (2005).
5- The usability of a program or practice has
nothing to do with the weight of the evidence
regarding that program
- Evidence on effectiveness helps you select what
to implement for whom - Evidence does not help you implement the
program, practice or initiative
6- Identification
-
- Dissemination
- of a Positive Intervention
- ? Implementation
7- What is known is generally not what is adopted
- Implementation Gap
- There are not clear pathways to implementation
- What is adopted often is not used with fidelity
and good effect - What is implemented disappears over time and with
staff turnover
8What Works?
Effective Programs, Practices or Initiatives
Effective Implementation Practices
Good Outcomes
9Implementation and Sustainability Drivers
PARTICIPANT EVALUATION - DATA TO SUPPORT
PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT
PROGRAM EVALUATION - DATA TO SUPPORT DECISION
MAKING
CONSULTATION, COACHING, MENTORING
Internal ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORTS - THAT
FACILITATE IMPLEMENTATION
INTEGRATED COMPENSATORY
PREPARATION TRAINING
External SYSTEMS INTERVENTIONS
PARTICIPANT RECRUITMENT SELECTION
Adapted from Fixsen, D.L., Naoom, S.F., Blase,
K., Friedman, R.M., Wallace, F. (2005).
10Implementation Drivers Initial
ConversationPlanning Tool
11- Initial Team Work
- What are you implementing?
- What levels of system change will you be your
primary focus (local, regional, state)? - Who are the primary participants you will focus
on? - Who are some secondary participants you will want
to keep in mind? -
12Participant Recruitment and Selection Family
Peer Support Specialists(Existing Liaisons,
Emerging Leaders, Coaches, Supervisors and
Administrators, Family/Youth Organizations)
- What measurable qualifications or experience?
- What personal characteristics?
- What methods to recruit and select?
- Pre-selected?
- Workforce development issues?
- Extra demands?
13 - Preparation and TrainingFamily Peer Support
Specialists(Existing Liaisons, Emerging Leaders,
Coaches, Supervisors and Administrators,
Family/Youth Organizations) - How can you prepare participants?
- How can you provide formal training?
- How can you provide opportunities for practice
and feedback in a safe environment?
14Coaching, Consultation or MentoringFamily Peer
Support SpecialistsExisting Liaisons, Emerging
Leaders, Supervisors and Administrators,
Family/Youth Organizations, Coaches
- Who can be the coaches, consultants and/or
mentors (roles, positions or names)? - How can they support and monitor behavior change?
- How can this be maintained?
- What ongoing role can they play with the
administrators, whose support is necessary?
15Participant EvaluationFamily Peer Support
Specialists(Existing Liaisons, Emerging Leaders,
Supervisors and Administrators, Family/Youth
Organizations, Coaches)
- How can you evaluate the effective use of
- The identified qualities and characteristics?
- The skills taught in training?
- The skills reinforced and expanded through
coaching, consultation or mentoring? - How can you evaluate the participants view of
the effectiveness of the coaches, consultants, or
mentors? - Are their existing fidelity tools?
16Program EvaluationFamily Peer Support
Specialists(Existing Liaisons, Emerging Leaders,
Supervisors and Administrators, Family/Youth
Organizations, Coaches)
- What types of program data can be used to
determine and monitor progress? - Who should use the program data?
- How can the data be used to assist with awareness
and marketing strategies? - How can the data be used to determine the
usefulness of the training, coaching,
consultation or mentoring - Is there an overall and ongoing assessment of the
performance over time?
17Internal Administrative SupportsFamily Peer
Support Specialists(Existing Liaisons, Emerging
Leaders, Supervisors and Administrators,
Family/Youth Organizations, Coaches)
- Who provides the strong leadership?
- Who can be a connector to the external
agencies/organizations/systems? - How can the administrative leadership use data
(participant and program) to inform their
decisions and support the infrastructure
necessary for the ongoing implementation and
sustainability? - How can the leadership be involved in integrating
and improving these implementation drivers
throughout the life of the program? - How could awareness and marketing strategies be
utilized to develop and/or support these
administrators?
18External Systems InterventionsFamily Peer
Support Specialists(Existing Liaisons, Emerging
Leaders, Supervisors and Administrators,
Family/Youth Organizations, Coaches)
- Who (role or name) currently provides or can
provide the strong external agency/organization/sy
stems leadership for this program? (Consider
current and future supports.) - In order to support the implementation and
sustainability efforts, what strategies for
awareness and marketing techniques are in place
or will need to be created to work with external
systems - To obtain financial support?
- To obtain other necessary agency/organizational/sy
stem support? - To obtain human resource support?
19Next StepsAction Planning Tool
- The Next Steps Action Planning Tool is designed
to follow the Initial Conversation. - It helps you determine the perceived readiness of
each driver and begin to frame your
implementation and sustainability action plan.
20Next StepsAction Planning Tool
- Review each driver and come to a consensus as to
the readiness to develop an action plan for your
program, practice or initiative based on each of
the three considerations - The existence of a template model process or
structure that can be used to guide the process
to implement the driver, and - The awareness of knowledge that could be
available to implement the driver - Anticipated presence of resources and supports
that are necessary to implement the driver. - Score each 1 (weak) to 5 (strong)
21Consensus Readiness ScoresFamily Peer Support
Specialist Program
22Next Steps Action Planning Family Peer Support
Specialist Program
23Family Peer Support Specialist Program
- Where are they in implementation?
24Kentuckys Use of theImplementation Drivers
- Peer Family Support Network
- Seven Challenges
- Transition to Independence Program (TIP)
- Substance Abuse and Co-occurring Family Network
- Wraparound with Fidelity
- Dual Diagnosis Capable Assessment Tool (DDCAT)
- Seeking Safety
- Trauma Informed Care
- Reclaiming Futures and
- Green Dot Adolescent Violence Prevention
- Local Implementation Facilitator Training
25 Kentucky is Moving Implementation Forward
State Team
Regional or Collaborative Implementation Team
Agency Team
26Summary
- We need to invest in what works
- Research (national and locally defined) results
help us choose what to implement - But implementation and the science of systems
change are practices and science unto themselves - Materials and training alone wont work
- Policy and Mandates alone wont work
- Fidelity Matters
- When working with systems change and best
practices, the it needs to be operationalized
27Summary
- Competence needs to be Developed and Sustained
- Selection, Training, Coaching, Fidelity Measures
help change and support new practitioner behavior
and skills - Organizations and Systems need to change
- Data systems need to be used to make decisions
- Administrative practices systems interventions
create hospitable environments - Policy enables new practice AND practice needs to
inform policy - Purveyors, Organizations, and Implementation
Teams to help with system and service change
Knowledge wont get there of its own volition - You are never done The environment is in motion
- Process Improvement Cycles are Critical
- The right leadership strategies are needed for
the issues at hand
28- Effective Practice
-
- Effective Implementation
- ______________________
- Good Outcomes
29- Children, adolescents, and families cannot
benefit from good interventions - if they dont experience them!
-
30For More Information
Kari Collins, LSCW Kentucky Division of
Behavioral Health Frankfort, Kentucky 502-564-7610
Kari.Collins_at_ky.gov
31Implementation Research A Synthesis of the
Literature
- Download the monograph at
- http//www.fpg.unc.edu/nirn/resources/publication
s/Monograph - Fixsen, D. L., Naoom, S. F., Blase, K. A.,
Friedman, R. M. Wallace, F. (2005).