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Personal Experience Survey (PES) Michigan Model. Measuring the Quality of Services in the MIChoice Waiver Program. PES not PEZ. What is the PES?. Created under a CMS contract by MetStat Defines “Quality” as services and supports delivered as written in the participant’s care plan.
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Personal Experience Survey (PES) Michigan Model Measuring the Quality of Services in the MIChoice Waiver Program
What is the PES? • Created under a CMS contract by MetStat • Defines “Quality” as services and supports delivered as written in the participant’s care plan. • Does not define “Quality” from participant’s wants and desires.
PES Components • 4 Domains • Access to Care • Choice and Control • Respect and Dignity • Community Integration • 66 Standard Questions • Additional six Michigan questions
Michigan Model • Consumers hired to collect data • First round collections at 5 sites • Second round collection at 3 of 5 sites • Telephone interview follow-up
Interviewer Training & Support • Consumers identified by host site • MDRC provided one day on site training • PES User Guide assists in training • Support provided by MDRC & local site • MDRC managed reimbursement • Interviewers as contract employees
Interviewer demographics • 3-6 consumers hired at each site • Seniors and People with Disabilities • Collectively targeted 40 interviews per site (199 interviews in aggregate) • Paid $20/hr. plus travel expense • At two sites consumers did data input • 3 sites MDRC did data input
Quality Indicators: Selected DataFirst Round Interviews • Access to Care • Bathing • Toileting • Groceries • Respect and Dignity • Staff Listening • Choice and Control • Choice of Staff • Community Involvement • Community integration
Bathing Questions • Is there any special help that you need to take a bath or shower? • Needs Help from Another person • Does not need help from another person • Unclear response • No response • Do you ever go without a bath or shower when you need one? • Is this because there is no one there to help you?
Bathing Positive 148 respondents
Toileting Questions • Is there any special help that you need to get to or use the bathroom? • Are you ever unable to get to or use the bathroom when you need to? • Yes • No • Unsure • Unclear • No response • Is this because there is no one there to help you?
Toileting 57 Respondents
Grocery Questions • Is there any special help that you need to get groceries? • Are you sometimes unable to get groceries when you need them? • Is this because there is no one there to help you? • yes • No • Unsure • Unclear • No Response
Groceries 184 Respondents
Questions: Respect of Staff • Do the people paid to help you treat you respectfully in your home? • Yes • No • Sometimes • Unsure • Unclear Response • No Response • No staff in home
Respect of Staff 198 respondents
Question, Choice of Staff • Do you help pick the people who are paid to help you? • Yes • No • Unsure • Unclear Response • No Response • No personal care staff
Choice of Staff 126 respondents
Community Integration/Inclusion • Is there anything you want to do outside your home that you don’t do now? • Yes • No • Unsure • Unclear Response • No Response • What would you like to do? What do you need to make this happen?
Community Involvement 199 respondents
Compare Sites: Community Involvement 199 respondents
Church Volunteer Cultural Activities Get Outside Shopping Senior Center Exercise Library Fishing Visit Friends & Family Garden Visit the sick Sports Make Happen Accessibility Transportation Companionship Money Out of Home Activities
Employment Questions (If respondent is under 65 ask question) • Are you working right now? (Yes, No, Unsure, Unclear Response, No Response) • What kind of work do you do? • Did you help pick the job you have now? • Do you like your job? • Do you want to work?
Demand for Employment 47 respondents
Comparison of Indicators 201 respondents
Second Round • Collected 6 to 12 months after first round collection • Will be completed at the end of March.
Recommendations - Data Use • Individual sites Review data with Care Managers and with Provider Agencies • Work in partnership for improvement • Agree upon 2-3 Indicators to improve • Discuss in Quality Collaborative improvement methods for identified indicators • Create impact plan • Share learning with collaborative
Managing Data • Limited to measuring quality of services from consumer point of view • Good design of questions – Simple language, Simple questions • No ability to adjust the language • Easy to manage the data input • Difficult to uniquely manipulate the data • Can add questions but not put them into the data base.
Costs – First Round • 199 interviews (aggregate) • Average $78/interview • Hourly: $14,078.49 • Mileage: $1,711.60 • Accommodation: $397.61 • Data input: $ 750.00 • Other costs: training, internal supervision of interviewers, data input.
Quality of Interviewers • Telephone Survey of 12% of people who had been interviewed twice • Results: • 100% felt respected and fully open to consumer interviewers • Only 1 of 27 indicated a preference for a waiver agency employee • 3 of 27 people would not participate again
Cost Recommendations Keep total costs to average $30/interview • $25 per interview • Continue to pay travel expense • Pay $10/hr for data entry, or data entry in organization. • Build competent cadre of interviewers at local site (over time less supervision needs)
Quality Recommendations • Use PES in local quality plans • Use consumer interviewers • Sites nurture cadre of seasoned interviewers • Statewide training program (at MDRC or elsewhere) • Maintain third party data collection • Sites integrate quality improvement system for interviewers
David Youngs DYNS Services, Inc. 517-927-7255 303-200-8392 (fax) 941-744-5732 www.dynsinc.com For more information contact: Carolyn Lejuste MDRC 517-333-2477 ext. 21 517-333-2677 (fax) clejuste@gmail.com This initiative was funded by a CMS grant to the Michigan Department of Community Health, and implemented by Michigan Disability Rights Coalition (MDRC).