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Western New York Care Coordination Program

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Title: Western New York Care Coordination Program


1
Western New York Care Coordination Program
  • Meeting with New York State
  • Office of Mental Health
  • November 19, 2004

2
Stakeholders
  • A collaborative effort of
  • New York State Office of Mental Health
  • Chautauqua, Erie, Genesee, Monroe, Onondaga, and
    Wyoming Counties
  • Peers and Family Members
  • Care Coordination Organizations (CCO)
  • Licensed Outpatient Providers (LOP)
  • Community Service Providers (CSP)

3
Implementation Structure
  • Steering Committee
  • Eleven voting members, plus two non-voting
    representatives from OMH
  • Representatives from counties, service recipients
    and families, and provider organizations
  • Peer and Family Advisory Group
  • County advisory/implementation groups
  • Subcommittees, workgroups, trainings
  • Project management staff

4
Enrollment
5
Goals
  • To improve outcomes for persons diagnosed with a
    serious mental illness
  • To transform community service systems for
    persons diagnosed with serious mental illness,
    creating systems that
  • Are based on a person-centered approach
  • Promote rehabilitation and recovery, based on a
    single, comprehensive plan
  • Ensure access to high quality services
  • To develop a financial model that supports
    flexible resources in support of rehabilitation
    and recovery
  • To improve physical health outcomes for persons
    diagnosed with a serious mental illness

6
Accomplishments 2004
  • Person-centered planning
  • Performance management
  • Review of Individual Service Plans for indicators
    of person-centered planning
  • Enrollee Satisfaction Survey
  • CAIRS data on client outcomes based on Periodic
    Reporting Form
  • Medicaid claims data on cost effectiveness
  • Peer and Family
  • Family Education and Support Initiative
  • Collaborative planning for PROS Plus
  • Physical/mental health integration model

7
Creating a Culture Change 2004
  • Person-centered approaches and planning
  • Training begun 2003
  • Continued in 2004
  • Over 300 provider staff members, 97 training days
    at 3 sites
  • Care Coordination Organizations, service
    providers who will be converting to PROS,
    community support providers, peer organizations,
    clinicians and others
  • 21 organizations developed strategic plans for
    transitioning to a person-centered approach
  • 46 individuals trained as trainers will present
    the training in 2005
  • Curriculum developed by The Blessing/Meissner
    Group

8
WNYCCP Video
  • Video produced to introduce the concept of
    person-centered planning to a wide variety of
    constituencies

9
Have Person-Centered Planning and the Care
Coordination Program had an impact?
  • Care Coordinators report
  • Redefining relationships with enrollees as
    partnerships
  • Listening differently
  • Focusing on goals, not just disabilities
  • Pro-actively supporting individuals in achieving
    their goals in the face of obstacles and systems
  • They attribute it to
  • Training in Person-Centered Planning
  • Processes and documentation that require a new
    way of listening and setting priorities
  • Flexible funds to be able to go beyond life
    necessities and be creative around community
    integration and wellness

10
Care Coordination Quality Process Improvement
  • Step 1 Care Coordination identified as the
    evidence-based practice to bring about the
    desired system.
  • Step 2 Review of the Individual Service Plans
    developed in the early months of the project
    shows no evidence of transition from Case
    Management to Care Coordination
  • Step 3 Person-Centered Planning identified as a
    philosophy and technology to drive the change to
    Care Coordination
  • Step 4 Tool designed to review Individual
    Service Plans for indicators of person-centered
    planning
  • Step 5 Training in Person-Centered Planning
    begun Spring 2003, and continued in 2004
  • Step 6 Care Coordinators identify need to
    revise Individual Service Plan to more directly
    support Person-Centered Planning for Enrollees.
    Full transition to new form by 12/31/04
  • Step 7 Survey of 10 of Individual Service
    Plans conducted September 2003 (n102) and
    September 2004 (n161) significant progress

11
Survey of Individual Service Plans for Indicators
of Person-Centered Planning6 Questions, 4-Point
Scale
  • Q1 The person's (enrollee's) dreams, interests,
    preferences, strengths and capacities are
    explicitly acknowledged and drive activities,
    services and supports (QOLSA and ISP).
  • Q2 Services and supports are individualized and
    don't rely solely on pre-existing models (ISP).
  • Q3 The person has a presence in a variety of
    typical community places. Segregated services
    and locations are minimized (ISP).
  • Q4 Planning activities occur periodically and
    routinely. Lifestyle decisions are revisited
    (QOLSA, ISP).
  • Q5 A group of people who know, value and are
    committed to the person remains involved (ISP).
  • Q6 There are steps towards tangible changes in
    areas where the person is dissatisfied (QOLSA,
    ISP).

12
Review of Individual Service Plans for Indicators
of Person-Centered Planning
13
Sallys Story
  • Person-centered planning as a powerful force for
    change for individuals and systems
  • Sally is 36 and has been in the mental health
    system for her entire adult life.
  • Multiple admissions to RPC, other hospitals, and
    emergency departments.
  • She is in case management, a residential setting
    and has a reputation as being difficult.
  • Service plan goals read maintaining mental
    health and compliance.
  • Enrollment in WNYCCP.
  • Sallys Care Coordinator is trained in
    Person-Centered Planning.
  • Using the new Care Coordination forms, the
    Quality of Life Self Assessment and the
    Individual Service Plan, Sally and her Care
    Coordinator partner in developing a plan in a new
    way.
  • The Care Coordinator listens differently,
    focusing on goals and not just disabilities.
  • Sally articulates a goal of having her own
    apartment.
  • Sallys clinical provider suggests her move is
    clinically inappropriate and will result in her
    case being closed. Residential staff work to
    convince Sally to stay.
  • Outcome
  • Sally has been in her own apartment for 10
    months.
  • Working in partnership with her Care Coordinator,
    Sally found a new therapist.
  • The residential staff who have loved Sally now
    support her in non-traditional ways and celebrate
    her success!

14
Enrollee Satisfaction SurveyProcess
  • Enrollee Satisfaction Survey redesigned for 2004
    in response to feedback from 2003 and new
    clinical initiatives. Added dimensions
  • Measure transition to a person-centered,
    recovery-oriented approach
  • Provide ability to distinguish between
    satisfaction with Care Coordinators and with
    Primary Service Providers
  • Measure satisfaction with Care Coordination tools
    and processes
  • Redesign included input from all WNYCCP
    stakeholders
  • Survey conducted October, 2004
  • Findings will drive planning at the Project and
    County levels

15
Enrollee Satisfaction Survey2004 Results New
Elements
  • Transition to a recovery-orientation
  • The staff (primary service provider) believe
    that I can grow, change and recover.
  • 95 of respondents agreed or strongly agreed
  • My Care Coordinator believes that I can grow,
    change and recover.
  • 91 of respondents agreed or strongly agreed
  • n122

16
Enrollee Satisfaction Survey2004 Results New
Elements
  • Individual Service Planning Process
  • Agree or Strongly Agree
  • ISP reflects my plans for recovery 86
  • Satisfied with range of services available 86
  • Like using the ISP 84
  • ISP reflects strengths as well as needs 84
  • Feel free to choose or reject services 83
  • Availability of Self-help and Peer Support Groups
    76
  • Have a Crisis Prevention Plan that is helpful
    75
  • Like using the Quality of Life Self Assessment
    form 72
  • QOLSA was helpful in developing my ISP 71

17
Outcome Data
  • Data Source CAIRS PRF data for Erie and Wyoming
    Counties for the 3 months preceding report
    (6-12, 13-18, gt18 mos).
  • Preliminary data needs further analysis and
    integration with Monroe, Onondaga, Chautauqua and
    Genesee data
  • 1153 individuals, 291 (25) in sample cohort (at
    least 2 reports, at least 6 months apart).

18
Preliminary Results
  • ER Visits Average of 0.7 visits to average of
    0.2 visits (77 decrease)
  • Days in Hospital Average of 6.6 days to an
    average of 2.7 days (59 decrease)
  • Self Harm 24 enrollees to 7 (71 decrease)
  • Suicide Attempts 21 enrollees to 6 (71 decrease)

19
Preliminary Results
  • Competitive Employment 7 of enrollees to 10
    (50 increase)
  • Physical Harm to Others 15 enrollees to 7 (53
    decrease)
  • Arrests 30 enrollees to 16 (47 decrease)
  • Self Help 30 enrollees to 33 (9 increase)
  • Substance Abuse 121 enrollees to 110 enrollees
    (9 decrease).

20
Karen, Ruth and WilmaA story of community
inclusion
  • Peers enrolled in the WNYCCP are encouraged and
    supported in attending community events.
  • Six enrollees decide to attend a dinner at the
    local Grange.
  • Karen, Ruth and Wilma like the experience so much
    that they join the Grange.
  • Over the course of six months, all three are
    asked to take positions in the organization.
  • Obstacle
  • Older members of the Grange speak up at a
    meeting. These people cant do these things,
    they are mentally ill.
  • Outcome
  • The President of the organization lets the
    members know that they are doing it and they
    will be helping to run the organization in the
    future.
  • The Grange becomes a natural support for those
    involved and will support and encourage them to
    do more.

21
Measuring performance based on Medicaid claims
data
  • Current enrollment is 1800
  • Projected enrollment 2005 - 2800
  • Analysis of claims data for 601 individuals
    enrolled in the CCP for the full year 2003
  • 587 used services in 2002
  • 513 used services in 2001
  • 453 used services in 2000

22
First full year of enrollment
23
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24
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26
Initial Medicaid Claims Data 2004
27
Simulated Case Payment Dollars
  • Supporting a person-centered, recovery oriented
    system
  • Current use examples
  • Non-Medicaid paid medications and treatment
    guarantees for Medicaid pending individuals same
    day medications
  • For Thomas, payment for a Christian chiropractor.
    (Hes now willing to explore other alternative
    techniques.)
  • Community inclusion Y memberships,
    socialization outside of the mental health system
  • Achieving goals cost of materials to teach an
    Italian class at a community center, art classes,
    writing classes
  • Peer coaches peer transportation
  • For Theresa, bi-monthly appointments at a salon
    to treat a scalp condition and assure the
    self-esteem needed for her goal of working as a
    nurses assistant. (She graduated)
  • Future uses
  • Physical health

28
Beverlys Story
  • Simulated Case Payment Dollars helping Enrollees
    to achieve previously unattainable goals
  • Beverly has a case manager and is forced to live
    in unsafe neighborhoods because of financial
    necessity.
  • Beverly is constantly moving in search of a safe
    place.
  • For 35 years, she has kept a scrapbook of her
    dream home no one took her seriously.
  • Enrollment in WNYCCP.
  • Care Coordinator listens differently to Beverly.
  • Beverly sets a goal of home ownership in her ISP.
  • Update
  • Beverly has found a house she likes.
  • Her Care Coordinator has introduced her to the
    Home of Your Own Program
  • Simulated Case Payment dollars have been used to
    enable completion of all the program
    requirements. And their availability made it
    possible to issue a guarantee against the cash
    requirement.
  • Beverly is now waiting for the closing on her new
    home, a 30,000 bungalow in a safe neighborhood.
  • The house payment before taxes will be 143 an
    month.

29
Continuing the Culture Change in 2005
  • Core Curriculum
  • Offer twice at 5 sites, run by 2004
    Train-the-Trainers
  • Care Coordinators, PROS staff, housing staff, and
    others engaged in planning
  • Recovery Module
  • Add a recovery module to the Core Curriculum
  • Develop in collaboration with NYAPRS
  • Trainers
  • Support individuals trained in 2004 through a
    learning community with local and project-wide
    activities
  • Add additional trainers

30
Continuing the Culture Change in 2005
  • Methods specialists
  • Advanced training for individuals to provide
    community wide resource as specialists in
    particular Person-Centered Planning Methods
  • Organizational change
  • On-going consultation on implementation of the
    PATH plans for creating person-centered agencies
    and programs
  • Expand PATH planning to additional agencies
  • Training for other groups
  • Tailor core curriculum for specific audiences
  • Offer specialized programs other groups
    including
  • Clinic staff, housing staff, inpatient staff
  • Community groups such as NAMI, Community Service
    Boards, Neighborhood Associations

31
Peer and Family Advisory Group
  • Expansion of Enrollee involvement in project
    planning
  • More enrollees participating in County level peer
    and family advisory groups
  • A once enrolled individual heading group in
    Wyoming County
  • Real time feedback
  • Two enrollees now serving on project level Peer
    and Family Advisory Group
  • Peer and Family involvement in all project
    initiatives
  • Video
  • Physical/Mental Health Integration Initiative
  • Updating survey instrument and administering
    Enrollee Satisfaction Survey
  • Peer leaders in training to be trainers in
    Person-Centered Planning
  • Designing PROS Plus processes and documentation

32
Peer and Family Perspectives
  • Peer trainer for Person-Centered Planning
  • Family member
  • Peer staff

33
Family Education and Support Initiative
  • Alternate implementation model
  • Cost efficient dissemination to 17 providers in 6
    counties same resources as 4 providers in the
    traditional implementation model
  • WNYCCP operating and training structures
  • Institute for Healthcare Improvement model
  • Learning collaborative vs. consultation
  • Agency level project teams
  • Training-site level collaborative
  • Family Institute and OMH expert resources
  • Multiple Family Groups with participants from
    multiple agencies and programs

34
Family Education and Support Initiative (cont.)
  • Implementation status
  • Orientation, agency recruitment and 2-day
    intensive training completed at all sites
  • Of the 15 agencies reporting implementation
    status as of 10/04
  • 16 have identified clients and families
  • 10 have begun outreach
  • 8 have held Joining Session 1
  • 10 have planned the Family Education Workshop
  • 2 have held the Family Education Workshop

35
PROS Plus
  • Goal
  • WNYCCP and OMH agreement Fall 2003 to develop
    PROS Plus as a means to achieve common goals
    for a more fully integrated, cost effective and
    responsive system of publicly funded mental
    health services for persons diagnosed with mental
    illness.
  • Objectives
  • Implement PROS within the context of WNYCCP
  • Use PROS license to achieve regulatory
    flexibility goals of WNYCCP
  • Integrated, single system for Care Coordinators
    and PROS providers
  • Same benefits for PROS enrollees as are being
    pursued in WNYCCP

36
PROS Plus
  • Principles
  • Person centered philosophy
  • PROS services structure
  • PROS organizational culture
  • Integration of Care Coordination with PROS
  • Evidence-based practices
  • Performance and outcomes management

37
PROS Plus Implementation
  • Planning for person-centered approaches in PROS
    agencies
  • Community level planning
  • 8 facilitated community planning days for
    implementation of Pros Plus
  • Agency level planning
  • 22 facilitated, 1-day strategic planning sessions
    for organizational implementation of
    person-centered PROS programs (PATH methodology)

38
PROS Plus Implementation
  • Training in person-centered planning for PROS
    staff
  • Core Curriculum developed by Blessing/Meissner
    Group
  • Person-centered planning philosophy and
    methodology
  • Developing person-centered PROS Individual
    Recovery Plans
  • Module on orienting PROS participants to their
    role in person-centered planning
  • 8-12 session training, offered 2 times at each of
    3 training sites
  • 300 slots in 2004 for PROS and other provider
    staff
  • 47 participating in train-the-trainer in 2004

39
PROS Plus Implementation
  • Documentation to support person-centered planning
    and integration of Care Coordination with PROS
    planning
  • Quality of Life Self-Assessment, same for both
  • PROS Plus Assessment, integrated with QOLSA
  • Participants Crisis Prevention Plan, same for
    both
  • Individual Recovery Plan, designed to stand alone
    or flow from the ISP prepared with a Care
    Coordinator
  • Review for compliance with OMH, Medicaid and
    Medicare regulations

40
PROS Plus Implementation
  • County-Provider Agreement Appendices
  • Consensus on selected PROS Plus elements to be
    included in all counties agreements
  • Data and reporting requirements
  • Operational requirements
  • Performance and outcome indicators
  • Review of IRPs for indicators of person-centered
    planning

41
PROS Plus
  • Flexible funding for PROS Plus
  • Proposal developed to use Simulated Case Payment
    Dollars to support appropriate expenditures for
    PROS Plus participants who are not in the
    current CCP cohort
  • Demonstration project regarding benefits of
    flexible funding for PROS participants

42
PROS Plus
  • Agreement on preferred process for WNYCCP
    conversion to PROS
  • Phase One
  • Simultaneous

43
Physical/Mental Health Integration Initiative
  • New initiative 2004
  • Goal
  • To improve health outcomes for persons diagnosed
    with a serious mental illness by reducing
    complications of common co-occurring physical
    illnesses through improved access to and
    integration of behavioral health and primary care
    services

44
Person centered, recovery-oriented care
  • Presidents New Freedom Commission on Mental
    Health
  • Called for a recovery-oriented mental health
    system with a single, comprehensive plan that
    includes all of an individuals service needs.
  • Institute for Medicine
  • Called for coordination of care across patient
    conditions, services and settings over time.

45
Work group formed April 2004 to plan this
initiative includes
  • County Directors
  • OMH Staff
  • Peers and Family Members
  • Health Care Providers
  • Behavioral Health Care Providers
  • Pharmacist
  • Medical Directors for Managed Care Plan and
    Psychiatric Center
  • Public Health Director
  • Project Legal Consultant
  • Project Management Staff

46
WNYCCP Initiative Focus
  • Disease management model
  • Useful organizing principle, affecting
    individuals and systems of care
  • Potential focus on diabetes/obesity, tobacco use
  • Interventions to be County specific, building on
    existing resources

47
WNYCCP InitiativeMedicaid Claims Data Review
  • Analysis of Medicaid claims data for Erie County,
    top quartile of mental health service users as
    proxy for WNYCCP and broader high needs
    population
  • Service utilization and cost information confirms
    diabetes as top non-mental health related
    diagnosis for individuals in top quartile of
    mental health and top quartile of physical health

48
Medicaid Claims Data
49
Approaches to Care Integration
  • Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law report
  • In a recovery-oriented mental health system,
    physical health care is as central to an
    individuals service plan as housing, job
    training or education.
  • Get it Together How to Integrate Physical and
    Mental
  • Health Care for People with Serious Mental
    Disorders

50
WNYCCP Initiative 3 Models for Integrating Care
  • Collaboration between providers
  • UB Family Medicine program
  • UR Community Nursing Center program
  • Unity Mental Health satellites in PCP offices
  • PCPs embedded in mental health programs
  • Strong Ties Medicine in Psychiatry
  • Unified programs
  • Federally Qualified Community Health Center and
    Community Mental Health Center

51
WNYCCP InitiativeModels for Managing
Co-Morbidities
  • UIC College of Nursing project Diabetes
    Management in the Context of Serious Mental
    Illness
  • Evidence-based practice guidelines for integrated
    care
  • Web-based instructional module for the clinical
    education of nurses and other health
    professionals, as well as clients
  • Technical competencies in diabetes care
  • Nursing case management/outreach

52
WNYCCP InitiativeEnrollee Data
  • Physical Health Services Questionnaire
  • Data on WNYCCP enrollees current physical health
    service utilization, needs, experience, barriers,
    successes and concerns
  • Purpose
  • Tool for discussion between Care Coordinator and
    Enrollee about physical health services/possible
    goals to be included in the Individual Service
    Plan
  • Program design
  • Baseline information

53
Questionnaire Preliminary Findings15 of
Monroe County Enrollees
  • BMI
  • 53 Obese (lt30)
  • 23 Overweight (lt25)
  • Queried health conditions
  • 38 high blood pressure
  • 35 diabetes
  • 14 heart problems
  • 8 emphysema
  • n91

54
Questionnaire Preliminary Findings(Continued)
  • 53 rated their physical health as fair or poor
  • 27 reported physical problems interfering with
  • normal social activities all or most of
    the
  • time 20 some of the time
  • 39 used the Emergency Room for medical care
  • 29 were hospitalized 1 or more times in the
  • past year for medical issues
  • 70 regularly take 4 or more medications
  • 59 smoke
  • 41 would like to work on smoking
  • 52 would like to work on exercise, nutrition
  • and weight

55
Work Plan Fall 2004 through 2005
  • Analyze Medicaid claims data and Health Services
    Questionnaires for all counties
  • Finalize outcome indicators and critical elements
    that are project-wide
  • Develop training materials for
  • Care Coordinators, Mental Health Providers, PCPs,
    Enrollees
  • Design and implement county-specific
    interventions
  • Counties to select model based on local needs,
    resources

56
Example- Monroe County Pilot
  • Implementation date January, 2005
  • P/T Coordinator/trainer to oversee project
    development and look for grant opportunities
  • Target- 200 enrollees having diabetes
  • Goal- Cost savings through reduced inpatient and
    ER visits
  • Collaboration model using UR CNC
  • Risk adjusted populations-intervention intensity
    to match risk
  • Nursing case management- monitor health
    parameters and service utilization
  • SCP dollars for nonbillable services

57
Phase 3 Financing
  • Principles
  • Flexibility
  • More effective use of available resources
  • Maximize Federal financial participation
  • Fewer silos
  • Administrative simplification
  • Provider support
  • Evolution Build on previous work
  • Services Planning Payment Authorization
  • Based on Person Centered Planning ISP
  • Quality and appropriateness review

58
Phase 3 Single Payment System 2005
  • Plan level issues
  • Covered Persons Covered Services
  • Administration Enrollment Claims Appeals
  • Rates Administrative budget
  • Risk allocation money management
  • Legal/Regulatory
  • Organized health care arrangement?
  • Prepaid Ambulatory Health Plan?
  • Contractual obligations
  • Should we consider a physical health or pharmacy
    management demonstration?

59
Work Plan 2005
  • Person-centered planning
  • Recovery Module
  • Core curriculum delivered twice at 4 sites
  • Specialized curricula for various groups
  • Supporting the trainers
  • Supporting organizations
  • Implement PROS Plus
  • Physical health initiative
  • Financial model development
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