Title: Implementing Evidence-Based Practice in Massachusetts: The Provider Perspective
1Implementing Evidence-Based Practice in
Massachusetts The Provider Perspective
- Elizabeth Funk, M.B.A.
- President/CEO, Mental Health Substance Abuse
- Corporations of Massachusetts
- Chairman, Board of Directors, National Council
for - Community Behavioral Healthcare
2- It is one thing to say with the prophet Amos,
Let justice roll down like mighty waters, and
quite another to work out the irrigation system. - William Sloane Coffin
- (social activist and clergy
member)
3Why change now?
- Federal government driving field Presidents
New Freedom Commission - Demand from stakeholders and consumers for
cost-effective treatments - Desire to spend less money for more clients
- Need to defend expenditures re outcomes
4Utilize Knowledge About Implementation
- Science of Implementation
- Utilize body of research and literature on
science of implementation - Applies across industries manufacturing, human
resources, other - Stages of change and implementation are known
- Address change needed at all levels
- Clinician
- Provider organization Management, Supervision
- System of Care
- State/payer policies
- Federal policies
-
-
Implementation What Research and
Experience Can Tell Us - Karen Blasé Dean
Fixsen, Univ. of Southern Florida, June 2005 -
5Example of system change MHSACM Outcome
Measurement Project
- Different route originated from provider field
- 1995 Spurred to initiate project under
federal/other pressure - Active role in development
- Ownership of project
- Adaptation of instrument, implementation to
specific needs, settings, populations - Used group of initial providers as Purveyor
Individual or group of individuals representing
a program or practice who actively work to
implement that practice or program with fidelity
and good effect (Fixsen Blasé, U. of S.F.,
2005).
6Outcome Measurement Project - Purveyors
- Celebrated and recognized for their efforts
- Serve as role models other seek to emulate
- Spread the message
- Teach
- Assume leadership
- Work out bugs
- Serve as advisory body recommend changes,
revise tools, processes
7Outcome Measurement Project Learning is
Multi-Faceted
- Providers learned about outcome measurement in
multi-faceted approach - Disseminating written information and doing
trainings alone are ineffective - Peer presentations (experiential)
- User groups, discussion, coaching, use of group
members to review, coach, advise, including
on-site, etc.
8Outcome Measurement Project Ongoing Processes
Required
- Sustainability requires ongoing support,
involvement, oversight - Ongoing processes are essential for review,
monitoring, evaluating, revisions, improvements - One-time effort, limited attention will result in
falling-off of models/initiative
9Outcome Measurement Project Dissemination/Incorpo
ration Into System of Care
- MHSACM broadly advocated for the project with
providers, state agency officials, numerous payer
representatives, policymakers - Efforts made to more widely disseminate the
initiative and incorporate it into policies of
state and other payers - Sought funding to assist with loss of revenue and
additional expense that accompany any change of
practice
10How can we work together to deliver more EBPs?
- Strengthen and expand current initiatives
- Providers already working with state and payers
to utilize Evidence-Based Practices such as - PACT (Program of Assertive Community Treatment)
- DBT (Dialectical Behavior Therapy)
- Motivational Interviewing (Substance Abuse)
- Other Promising Practices are in early
development - Collaboration in Primary Care
- Child wraparound services
- Co-Occurring Substance Abuse and Mental Health
treatment - State Substance Abuse Strategic Plan emphasizes
greater use of Evidence-Based and Promising
Practices
11EBP- Early Feedback
- Clinicians excited at positive results with
clients for whom other treatments unsuccessful - Gratified to learn new skills and have new tools
to use with clients - Continuously refining implementation
- Still learning together with purchasers to adapt
models to specific settings, populations,
environments without sacrificing critical
elements of the models.
12Outstanding concerns broad-scale implementation
- Are Federal/State expectations unrealistic?
- Are providers able to deliver this change
expeditiously? - Providers cannot accomplish change alone
- Workforce cannot be transformed overnight- will
take years - General workforce issues add challenges
recruitment, retention, diversity, skills -
Presidents New Freedom Commission urges
workforce strategic plan
13Implementation (continued)
- Current professional training does not address
EBPs or prepare clinicians for new clinical
framework role of universities, medical
schools, professional training programs - Rates must be built around the models
- Hard to accomplish in under-resourced system
- Models must include processes for continued
review of goals/objectives, outcomes, and
financing