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REQUEST FOR APPLICATIONS NYS DEMENTIA GRANTS PROGRAM

REQUEST FOR APPLICATIONS NYS DEMENTIA GRANTS PROGRAM. INFORMATION MEETING October 27, 2006 Krause Center 2212 Burdett Avenue Troy, NY 12180 1:00 - 4:00 PM. TIMEFRAMES. Letters of intent (11/10/06) Application deadline (1/27/07) NOTE DEADLINE CHANGE TO 1/27/07

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REQUEST FOR APPLICATIONS NYS DEMENTIA GRANTS PROGRAM

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  1. REQUEST FOR APPLICATIONSNYS DEMENTIA GRANTS PROGRAM INFORMATION MEETING October 27, 2006 Krause Center 2212 Burdett Avenue Troy, NY 12180 1:00 - 4:00 PM

  2. TIMEFRAMES • Letters of intent (11/10/06) • Application deadline (1/27/07) NOTE DEADLINE CHANGE TO 1/27/07 • Application review and scoring (2/07 -- 6/07) • Award announcement (8/07) • Contract assembly and execution (8/07 - 11/07) • Contract start date and term (1/1/08 - 12/31/10)

  3. WHO IS ELIGIBLE TO APPLY? ONLY NYS Article 28 nursing homes are eligible to apply. NHs that currently have dementia grant awards or have been awarded dementia grant funds in the past are still eligible to apply

  4. SUB-CONTRACTORS Applicants may sub-contract with other nursing homes, organizations, consultants, etc., and pay them grant funds.

  5. AWARD CAPS • Three year contracts • Capped at an average of $300,00/year • Total grant award cannot exceed $900,00 • Paid through an adjustment to your Medicaid rate. • Same rate add-on for all three years

  6. PROGRAM OBJECTIVES 1. Disseminate evidence-based best practices into NHs that have not yet adopted them such that the NHs sustain the best practice over time.

  7. PROGRAM OBJECTIVES, Cont’d. 2.Develop an evidence-based best practice.

  8. OPTIONAL DELIVERABLE High quality training and implementation materials: • in-service training materials for all staff • implementation guidance • implementation documentation forms • etc.

  9. CHANGE TO RFA: REQUIRED DELIVERABLE Projects are required to participate and present in the biennial statewide dementia conference

  10. EVALUATION • Must be done regardless of which objective your application addresses • Is worth 30 of the 75 technical points • Is a critical component of your project • Must focus on measureable resident outcomes • Should include a solid CEA

  11. MEASUREABLE RESIDENT OUTCOMES • Required by the RFA • Application must make the case that the intevention or best practice will produce the measureable resident outcomes • May also measure staff and family outcomes • If resident outcomes are process measures, such as number of ER or hospital visits, must still specify resident outcomes that address why such decreases are a desired outcome. For example, is there a decrease in infections and other preventable conditions?

  12. RESIDENT SAMPLE Can include only residents with dementia, although other residents can participate in the project Clarification to RFA: a cognitive impairment screen can be used to identify residents who possibly or probably have dementia

  13. SUGGESTED READING • Journal of Clinical Epidemiology, 2006. Scaling the Mini-Mental State Examination using item response theory, J. Teresi. • Neurology 54(4):827, February 22, 2000.Memory impairment on free and cued selective reminding predicts dementia. Grober, Ellen PhD; Lipton, Richard B. MD; Hall, Charles PhD; Crystal, Howard MD. • Research on Aging 22(6), November 2000, 738-773. Applications of Item Response Theory to the Examination of the Psychometric Properties and Differential Item Functioning of the Comprehensive Assessment and Referral Evaluation Dementia Diagnostic Scale Among Samples of Latino, African American, and White Non-Latino Elderly. J. Teresi, M. Kleinman, K. Ocepek-Welikson, M. Ramirez, B. Gurland, R. Lantigua, D. Holmes.

  14. MEASUREMENT ISSUES • Determine resident outcome variables • Review the literature and select the best measures for each variable • Review the data collection tool for each measure • Determine required qualifications for those who will collect the data for each measure • Train data collectors to pre-determined standards on the data collection tools

  15. INSTITUTIONAL REVIEW BOARD • NHs whose projects require IRB review and approval cannot use the DOH IRB • If approval is denied, the project cannot be funded • If appropriate, structure your project as a quality assurance or quality improvement project

  16. BUDGET AND ALLOWABLE COSTS • Expenses already reimbursed through your Medicaid rate are not allowable • Indirect rate - not allowed for nursing homes - must be itemized and justified • Managing consortia and administering grant funds within a consortium • IRB • Fixed and movable capital • Training materials

  17. SCORING CRITERIA Interventions that will result in lower scores: • weak or unclear causal relationship w/ resident outcomes • NHs wouldn’t implement absent outside funding • will benefit very small sub-sets of the NH population w/ dementia

  18. SCORING CRITERIA, CONT’D • Project and evaluation work plans • Project and evaluation staffing • Sustainability

  19. PREFERENCE POINTS • Up to 5 points for training and implementation materials • Up to 5 points for consortium of facilities (i.e., NHs and ACFs)

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