Title: Towards a ConsumerSurvivor Research Agenda
1Towards a Consumer/Survivor Research Agenda
Consumer Operated Service Program (COSP)
- Jean Campbell, Ph.D. Jeanne Dumont, Ph.D.
- The 26th Congress of the
- World Federation for Mental Health
- Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
- July 22-27th, 2001
2Consumer-Operated Service Program
Research ought to and can enhance consumer
choice, power, and knowledge
From Consumer/Survivor Mental Health
Research Policy Work Group (1993)
3Outline
- Introduction
- The Well-Being Project
- The Peer Outcomes Protocol Project
- The Crisis Hostel Project
- The Consumer-Operated Service Program Multi-site
Research Initiative - Conclusion
4Self-Help Research
- Numerous research studies have shown that
participation in self-help groups can help people
improve the quality of their lives significantly. - Studies have found that support groups can reduce
the need for medical care and hospitalization.
5Consumer-operated service programs emerged in the
1980s as an alternative to traditional mental
health services.
6Research on Consumer Programs
- Found a decline in both symptoms and concomitant
psychiatric treatment as a result of
participation in consumer-operated services
(Galanter, 1988). - Positive changes in perception of self, social
functioning, decision-making, and symptomatology
linked to participation in consumer-operated
services (Carpinello et al., 1992).
7- In 1979 Prager and Tanaka reported to the Ohio
Department of Mental Health on the results of
involving mental health consumers in evaluation.
They concluded Representing the consumers
perspective on the meaning of mental illness and
the correlates of getting better, the process
of client involvement in evaluation design and
implementation is not only realistic and
feasible it is, we feel, a professional
necessity whose time is overdue.
8Towards a Consumer/Survivor Research Agenda
- The Well-Being Project
- Mental Health Clients Speak for Themselves
- (1986-1989)
9A Landmark Study
- Funded by the California Department of Mental
Health Office of Prevention - First consumer research project Conducted by the
California Network of Mental Health Clients - Jean Campbell, Principal Investigator
- Ron Schraiber, Co-Investigator
10Research Question
- What promotes or deters the well-being of adults
with severe and persistent mental illness in
California?
11Study Design Developed, Administered and
Analyzed by Mental Health Consumers
- State-wide Survey
- Qualitative and Quantitative Methods
- focus groups to develop items
- open-ended questions included
- in-depth interviews
- multiple choice, likert scaled items
12- Triangulation
- clients (N331)
- family members (N53)
- mental health professionals (N150)
- Convenient sample
- Consumer surveyors
- face-to-face interviews
- self-administered interviews (mail)
- group interviews
13Discovering the Consumer Perspective
- Asking New Questions
- negative outcomes identified
- self-management skills revealed
- importance of personhood established
- effects of prejudice and discrimination
quantified - incongruity of values, perspective, and
identified needs between consumers, family
members, and mental health professionals found
14Findings
- 40 of mental health clients surveyed felt that
all or most of the time people treated them
differently when they found out they have
received mental health services - like they are violent (16)
- like a child (21)
- like they dont know what is in their own best
interest (31) - like they are in capable of caring for children
(20) - like they are incapable of holding a job (33)
15Findings
- More than half of the clients surveyed indicated
that they always or most of the time
recognize signs or symptoms of psychiatric
problems and that they can take care of these
problems before they become severe.
16Findings
- 48 indicated that they have avoided treatment
due to fear of involuntary commitment. - 30 reported that they had little or no
control over the kind of mental health services
they receive.
17Peer Support Outcomes Protocol
- Development of an Evaluation Protocol for
Community-Based Peer Support Programs - (1996-2001)
18To survive in an era of evidence-based
funding, peer support programs need to measure
cost, effectiveness, quality, utilization
and appropriateness of the services they provide.
19Purpose of the POPP
- The Peer Support Outcomes Protocol Project
developed, field-tested, and will soon distribute
an evaluation protocol that measures outcomes and
satisfaction of community-based peer support
programs that are operated by mental health
consumers/survivors.
20Consumer-Developed Project
- Protocol developed and tested by the Program in
Consumer Studies and Training at the Missouri
Institute of Mental Health in St. Louis. - Funded by the National Research and Training
Center on Psychiatric Disability at the
University of Illinois-Chicago
21Outcome DomainsSpecific outcome domains
organized into individual modules
- Demographics Services
Hospitalizations - Employment Housing/Community Life
- Social Support Quality of Life
- Well-Being (Recovery, Empowerment Personhood)
- Crime/Violence Program Satisfaction
22Use of the POPP
- Assist the consumer self-help field to assess
program outcomes - Present service outcomes to public funding
authorities and manage-care organizations - Help consumers improve the organization and
delivery of peer support programs
23Phase One (1996-1997)
- National Survey of Data Needs of Peer Support
Programs (N30) - Sorting and ranking of survey items from review
of consumer literature and instruments - Instrument development
- IRB approval
24Phase Two (1997-1998)
- Protocol Field-testing
- Instrument review and refinement
- organization
- clarity of item wording
- respondent burden
- ease of administration
- consumer sensitivity
25Phase Three (1998-2000)
- Development of Interviewer Training Manual
- Development of Q-by-Q
- Psychometric Testing (test N150 retest48)
- reliability
- validity
26Phase Four (2000-2001)
- Tool Kit Development
- Knowledge Exchange
- Plans for APS (application program services)
27Towards a Consumer/Survivor Research Agenda
- Consumer-Operated Service Program
- Multi-Site Research Initiative
- (1998-2002)
28Consumer-Operated Service Program
The Consumer-Operated Service Program
(COSP) Multi-site Research Initiative is a
federally-funded national effort to discover to
what extent consumer- operated programs as an
adjunct to traditional mental health
services are effective in improving the
outcomes of adults with serious mental illness.
29Features of COSP
- Multi-site Study
- Seven study sites located throughout
- the U.S.
- Coordinating Center in Missouri
- Four years of research supported
- 20 million dollars in research funds
- Randomized experimental design
30Consumer-Operated Service Program
Federal Representatives Substance Abuse and
Mental Health Services Administration
(SAMHSA) Center for Mental Health Services
(CMHS) Betsy McDonel, Ph.D., federal program
director Crystal Blyler, Ph.D., government
project officer
- Coordinating Center
- Missouri Institute of Mental Health
- Jean Campbell, Ph.D., principal investigator
- University of Massachusetts Medical Center
- Matt Johnsen, Ph.D., co-principal investigator
31Participating Study Sites
- Maine
- Missouri
- Pennsylvania
- Tennessee
- Connecticut
- Florida/California
- Illinois
32Participating Study Sites
33What is a COSP?
- A consumer-operated service is
administratively controlled and operated by
consumers and emphasizes self-help as its
operational approach
34Consumer-Operated Program Models
- Drop-in Centers
- Educational Advocacy Training Programs
- Peer or Mutual Support Services
35COSP Goals
- Establish the extent to which consumer-operated
services are effective in improving selected
outcomes for consumers of mental health services - Create strong and productive partnerships among
consumers, service providers and service
researchers - Disseminate the knowledge gained
36Target Population
- Study participants are defined as persons age
18 and over who currently or at any time over the
past year have had a diagnosable mental,
behavioral, or emotional disorder of sufficient
duration to meet diagnostic criteria specified
within the DSM-IV that has resulted in functional
impairment which substantially interferes with or
limits one or more major - life activities.
37COSP Big Six Outcomes
- Employment
- Empowerment
- Housing
- Service Satisfaction
- Social Inclusion
- Costs
38Cost Study Questions
- To what extent does participation in
consumer-operated service programs affect costs
for the following - inpatient
- crisis intervention
- emergency room utilization
- offsetting costs in housing, criminal justice,
vocational rehabilitation, physical health care,
and income support
39Research Design
Rigorous Methodology
- Multi-site Design
- Random Assignment
- Experimental
Intervention Consumer-Operated Program
Traditional Mental Health
Services Control Traditional Mental Health
Services Only
40Research Design
- Logic Model
- Common Protocol
- Data Collection
- Baseline, 4, 8, 12 months
- N2,230
41Multi-level, Cross-site Analysis Plan
- Data quality assessment development of measures
- development of composite scores scales
- missing values analysis
- equivalencies
- power effect size
- Baseline Data Analysis
- measures of central tendency dispersion
- factor analysis
- correlations
- study population description
42Multi-level, Cross-site Analysis Plan
- Data Clustering Pooling
- Longitudinal Analyses
- hierarchial linear modeling
- pattern-mixture modeling
- differential loss to follow-up
- random regression
43Measuring Fidelity/Implementation
- Fidelity/Implementation Assessment
- Site Visits
- Common Ingredients (CI)
- Service Matrix
- Service Integration Assessment
- Fidelity Assessment Common Ingredients Tool
(FACIT)
44Common Ingredients
- Structure
- Consumer-Operated
- Participant responsive
- Links to other supports
- Environment
- Accessibility
- Safety
- Informal Setting
- Reasonable accommodation
- Belief Systems
- Peer principal
- Helpers principle
- Empowerment
- Choice
- Recovery
- Acceptance and Respect for
diversity - Spiritual growth
45Common Ingredients
- Education
- Self-management/problem solving
- Education
- Advocacy
- Self-advocacy
- Peer advocacy
- Systems advocacy
- Peer Support
- Peer support
- Telling out stories
- Consciousness-raising
- Crisis Prevention
- Peer mentoring and teaching
46Multisite Data Repository
- Coordinating Center responsibility
- Data electronically transferred via the internet
from 8 sites across the country - Multiple data points in one database
- Over 1700 data elements with 12,566,400
observations - Data consistency capabilities through queries
47Data Repository Specifications
- Database
- Microsoft Access 97 (version 8)
- self documented
- secured (user ID and password)
- encrypted
- Backups
- backup plan required from sites
- daily, monthly rolling backups
- quarterly permanent backups
48Data Trail
Common Protocol
MIMH
Files from 7 Sites
Data Entry
Merged Files
Multiple Files
Transmitted to CC
Data Analyzed
Merged Files
ROW
49Data Entry Program
- Created to allow data entry at the site level
- Missing variables not allowed
- Programmed to allow only in-range responses
- Designed for heads down data entry
- Automated skip patterns
- Required double entry verification
50Data Entry Screen
51(No Transcript)
52Study Progress Monitoring
- Site Reports to Coordinating Center
- Weekly Flash Report
- Track enrollment by condition
- Quarterly Report
- Report on recruitment, enrollment, and attrition
- Report cost data status
- Narrative on site accomplishments, problems
encountered, and goals
53Study Progress Monitoring
- Coordinating Center Reports
- Enrollment
- Engagement
- Cost data
- Projections
- Power analysis
- Baseline equivalencies
- Other summaries
54Quality Control Functions
- On-going monitoring of standardized interviewing
- Interviewer Alerts
- Updates to the Question by Question Manual
- Follow-up windows monitored
- Patterns of missing variables tracked
- Collection of diagnoses monitored
55Key Operational Values
- Consumer Involvement
- Consumer Education
- Extensive Technical Assistance
- Electronic and Interactive Communications
- Collaboration
- Cultural Competency
56Building Partnerships
- Can consumers, service providers, and
researchers - complement each others strengths?
- Do joint efforts yield the most effective
service - delivery model possible?
- Will consumer-operated services have a crucial
role to - play in mental health service delivery system?
57COSP Basic Principles
58Consumer Collaboration
- SC Consumer Involvement
- SC Consumer Representatives
- Consumer Advisory Panel
- Study Sites Consumer Involvement
- Site Consumer Advisory Boards
- Consumer Researchers
- CC Consumer Research Support
- Research Glossary
- Workshops
- Technical Assistance
59Building Trust
-
- Policies to ensure access to project information
- Supportive communications infrastructure
- Defined decision-making process
- Telling our stories
- Use of the language we, our and us
- Voting, focus groups, and ad hoc subcommittee
meetings -
60Building a Learning Community
Learning is the core objective and
this should guide decision- making. Mike
English, CMHS
61Consumer-Operated Service Program
One of the hallmarks of the COSP is the effort
made to use technology to facilitate work and
disseminate information. Visit our
website http//www.cstprogram.org
Consumer Operated Service Program (COSP)
62CONCLUSIONIntegrating Diverse Cultures into the
Conduct of Research
- The failure to include consumers and other
culturally diverse groups within services - research may
- compromise research findings
- hinder the ability of service providers and
policy-makers to understand consumer needs.
63Nothing About Me, Without Me
- Adopting the slogan Nothing about me, without
me, mental health consumers and people of color
have moved rapidly to be involved in the design
and implementation of mental health services
research and evaluation.
64- The growth and acceptance of such partnerships
show the potential for progress when different
cultures work together in relationships of
mutuality and respect. - However, the inclusion of diverse groups within
the conduct of research has presented interesting
challenges that expert-driven models of
research have proven inadequate to address.
65- In particular, the empowerment of mental health
consumers in the administration, design,
implementation, and analysis activities has
necessitated an on-going dialogue between
consumers, consumer researchers, and non-consumer
researchers to reach common ground regarding
issues of - authority,
- expertise,
- and language.
66What Divides Us
- It is important to remember that mental health
programs, including those that are
consumer-operated, function within a political
system in which data are often exercised in
struggles for influence.
67No Common Language
- There is no common language or experiences that
would naturally bring different constituencies
together.
68- Values and goals that arise from culturally
dissimilar experiences, tend to separate people
and polarize discussion.
69Bridging Differences
- Bridging differences between people on a personal
level needs to be supported through group
activities that promote respect, understanding,
and appreciation of the difficulties that
collaboration presents.
70What Is Necessary
- In order to accommodate the diverse cultures that
are now part of the research environment, it is
necessary to pause and encourage critical
discourse, and to incubate new relationships and
ideas as participatory processes are established.
71Looking Within
- Consumer/survivor research has offered the
opportunity to consumers and professionals to
look within, and to re-search in a literal
sense the terrain of a priori assumptions about
how research should be conducted and by whom.
72The Need for Rigor
- Scientific rigor in methods and practices must be
maintained since the weight of disbelief in
public policy will surely demand that researchers
push harder for clarity in research designs and
data quality.
73Meaningful Research
- Ultimately, consumer participation in research
will test the proposition that the integration of
diverse cultures into the conduct of research
ought to and can enhance scientific knowledge
that is useful and meaningful for all participant
groups.