740 likes | 917 Views
NNPHI Involvement in Performance Management. NNPHI ProgramsNPHPSPMLCPHI Involvement 4 of the 5 states selected . Multi-State Learning Collaborative. IOM recommendation in the 2002 report of The Future of the Public's Health in the 21st Century,
E N D
1. Local public health agency accreditation programs managed by public health institutesFeaturing states participating in the Multi-State Learning Collaborative for Performance and Capacity Assessment or Accreditation of Public Health Departments
2. NNPHI Involvement in Performance Management
NNPHI Programs
NPHPSP
MLC
PHI Involvement
4 of the 5 states selected
National Public Health Performance Standards Program
-Collaborative effort sponsored by CDC and 6 partners, including NNPHI
-Assist states with implementing the state, local and local governance instruments
-NNPHI’s role is to:
- facilitate user & partner teleconferences
- co-host trainings and workshops
-provide technical assistance
- update matrix describing the status of NPHPSP implementation throughout the country
MLC
-14 month project that bridges 5 states implementing assessment/accreditation programs with expert consultants and key stakeholders in performance management and accreditation.
Member Institutes
-Many (11) of the MLC applicants were public health institutes or involved PHIs in their program
-PHIs play a fundamental role in 4 of the 5 MLC states National Public Health Performance Standards Program
-Collaborative effort sponsored by CDC and 6 partners, including NNPHI
-Assist states with implementing the state, local and local governance instruments
-NNPHI’s role is to:
- facilitate user & partner teleconferences
- co-host trainings and workshops
-provide technical assistance
- update matrix describing the status of NPHPSP implementation throughout the country
MLC
-14 month project that bridges 5 states implementing assessment/accreditation programs with expert consultants and key stakeholders in performance management and accreditation.
Member Institutes
-Many (11) of the MLC applicants were public health institutes or involved PHIs in their program
-PHIs play a fundamental role in 4 of the 5 MLC states
3. Multi-State Learning Collaborative IOM recommendation in the 2002 report of The Future of the Public’s Health in the 21st Century,
“national commission to consider if an accreditation system would be useful in improving and building state and local public health agency capacities...”
(Available online at www.nap.edu)
Exploring Accreditation Project
Opportunity to share best practices and study innovative efforts of states with established assessment and accreditation programs
4. Collaborative Implementation
Funded by RWJF
Managed by NNPHI and PHLS
Panel of Expert Consultants
7. Participating States
23 states expressed interest in the MLC
18 states applied
5 states selected: Illinois, Michigan, Missouri, North Carolina and Washington
8. Common Characteristics: Reliance on self assessment
Similar periodicity for review process
(3-5 years)
Developed state specific standards
Referenced other work: Core Functions, APEXPH, NPHPSP, MAPP, TP PMC, Operational Definition
9. Areas to be addressed by MLC States Transition from Certification to Accreditation
Accreditation Readiness Instrument
Digital Library of Accreditation Documents
Social Marketing Campaign
Fund for Public Health Improvement
Evaluate Standards
10. Presenters Laura Landrum
Illinois Public Health Institute
Gail Carlson
Missouri Institute for Community Health
Melody Parker
Michigan Public Health Institute
Mary Davis
North Carolina Institute for Public Health
Torney Smith
Spokane Regional Health District
11. Illinois Accreditation Development Project American Public Health Association
December 13, 2005
Laura B. Landrum
Illinois Public Health Institute
12. Purpose of IADP Design an accreditation framework that would transition the IL local public health certification program into a more performance-based program
Contribute to the knowledge base and participate in national dialogue through the MLC
13. Requirements for Certification of Illinois Local Health Departments Before and After 1993
14. IL Certification Process LHD conducts IPLAN process
IDPH reviews IPLAN submission for substantial compliance with Code
LHD submits Certification Application
If Certification Application provides self-affirmation of compliance with all practice standards, then IDPH director grants a 5-year certification to the LHD
15. IPLAN’s Essential Elements, a modified APEX-PH model
16. IPLAN Requirements, every five years… LHD or LPHS self-assessment
Community participation
Assess community health indicators
Set at least 3 priority health needs
Risk and contributing factor analysis
Outcome and impact objectives and intervention strategies
Local Board of Health adoption
17. State’s role in IPLAN
19. Initial Evaluation Results:Improved Local Effectiveness in IL
20. Certification Program Financing and Incentives PHHS Block Grant for state program - - $250,000 annually since 1993
Local activities to maintain certification status
Local sources of funding
Local Health Protection Grant (recipients are certified local health departments)
Estimated local IPLAN costs = $10,000-$15,000 in 1994
21. Forces of Change in IL Split of a single “SACCHO” into three
Northern IL Consortium bill to fund public health by consolidated regions
IDPH’s Enrich and Strengthen strategic planning process to revisit basic issues in governmental public health
increased interest in use of standards
increased interest in accountability, accreditation
22. Evolution of IL Accreditation Components 1984 Roadmap Principles
1990 Project Health
1993 Standards established; IPLAN begins
1994 Certifications granted
1999 2nd Round Certifications
2003 Enrich and Strengthen process 2004 3rd Round Certifications begin
2005 IL Accreditation Project through IL Public Health Institute
23. IL Accreditation Development Project Milestones Convene IL Accreditation Task Force
Adopt a set of performance standards
Develop enhanced measurement instrument for adopted standards
Develop a governance structure/process
Design an evaluation/QI plan
Develop IL Accreditation Resource Plan
Develop an implementation plan
24. Major Issues for IADP Building a new consensus among 3 local public health organizations and IDPH
Increasing state capacity to shepherd and sustain new program
Revitalizing local and state capacity-building activities
Creating a new culture of performance improvement and rigor
Balancing capacity, process and outcomes in performance measures
25. IADP Enhancements:From Certification to Accreditation Descriptive metrics
Minimal standards
Assessment focus
State administration
Pass/fail criteria
Compliance purpose
Objective measures
Optimal expectations
All core functions
Possible third party
Range/tiered criteria
Improvement purpose
26. Michigan Public Health Institute’s Role in Accreditation in Michigan American Public Health Association
Session #4105.0
December 13, 2005
27. Michigan’s Partnerships
28. Standards/Measures Current model based on Minimum Program Requirements (MPRs)
MPRs are constructed through a formal process (Policy 8000)
MPRs must be based in law, rule, department policy or accepted professional standards
221 indicators
29. Programs Reviewed LHD Powers and Duties
Clinical Laboratory
Food Service
Gen. Communicable Disease
Hearing
Immunization
On-Site Sewage Treatment
30. Governance The MDCH is Accreditation’s governing authority
The 3 state agencies are the accrediting body
The Accreditation Commission is the advisory body
31. Steps to Accreditation Step One: Self Assessment
Step Two: On-site Review
Step Three: Corrective Plans of Action
32. Accreditation Status Options Accredited with Commendation
Accredited
Not Accredited
33. MPHI’s Role in Accreditation The Institute provides operational oversight to the process including:
Process coordination among partners
Tracking system development and administration
Reporting system development and administration
Accreditation Commission support
34. Enhancing Accreditation Two goals to continued success:
Enhance Michigan’s Accreditation Program
Objective 1: Assess opportunities for enhancement to current approach
Objective 2: Draft voluntary component to enhance current approach
Objective 3: Develop tools to enhance reviewer team and local health department interface
Objective 4: Develop a model for ongoing awareness, education, and training of local governing entities
35. Enhancing Accreditation Contribute to an interactive learning environment for accreditation
Objective 5: Establish an evolving digital library of Michigan accreditation information
Objective 6: Develop a model to establish a best practices information exchange
36. Michigan Contacts James A. Butler
Public Health Administrator
Mich. Dept. of Community Health
(517) 335-8032
Email: butlerj@michigan.gov
Mary Kushion, M.S.A.
Health Officer
Central MI District Health Dept.
(989) 773-5921
Email: MKushion@cmdhd.org
37. Missouri Institute for Community Health (MICH) Missouri Voluntary Accreditation Program
For Local Public Health Agencies
NNPHI Session at APHA
December 13, 2005
38.
1981-1999 Model standards for LPHAs defined & objectives identified.
2000-2001 Accreditation model established based on core functions & 10 essential services
2001 The self-assessment tool was developed and piloted & guidance document for the model was developed
2002 MICH becomes a 501(c)3 agency & publishes the accreditation standards.
Voluntary Accreditation History
39.
Goals of the Program
40. Current Model Types of Voluntary Accreditation
Primary Accreditation
23 Standards/Criteria
Advanced Accreditation
33 Standards/Criteria
Comprehensive Accreditation
39 Standards/Criteria
41. Current Model
3 Sections of Standards
Performance standards (What do you do?)
Workforce core staff requirements, qualifications, & competencies (Who does it?)
Physical facilities & administrative services (Where do you do it?)
42. Current Model The Voluntary Accreditation process has four steps:
Application for accreditation
LPHA self-assessment
MICH review of LPHA
MICH accreditation decision
43.
Why are we implementing the Accreditation Program?
44. Cause for Celebration!
45.
Governance Structure
46.
Funding & Support
47.
Multi-State Learning Collaborative
48.
Multi-State Learning Collaborative
49. I’m speaking on behalf of a large partnership that has worked together for several years to create and implement the NC Local Public Heath Accreditation system.
I’ll briefly overview the system and our MLC projects. There is a handout that describes the NC process in detail.
I’m speaking on behalf of a large partnership that has worked together for several years to create and implement the NC Local Public Heath Accreditation system.
I’ll briefly overview the system and our MLC projects. There is a handout that describes the NC process in detail.
50. NC Public Health System Decentralized: 85 LHDs in districts and single county HDs
Operates through
Autonomous LHDs
Strong health director networking
State DPH program monitoring, technical assistance, consultation
Accountability through programmatic monitoring
51. Beginning in 2002, NC local health directors began to examine ways to improve public health system accountabilty. Through a series of working groups, the health directors, NC Division of Public Health, and the NCIPH created a framework for a NC LHD accreditation system. In 2003-2004 the Public Health Task convened by the NC DHHS secretary and NC State Health officer recommended a mandatory accreditation process for NC. The Accreditation Committee of this task force developed the initial NC accreditation standards. NC then conducted 2 pilot accreditation projects which were evaluated for feasibility.
In Pilot I, 6 of 6 health departments were awarded accreditation. This pilot revealed areas for improvement of the self assessment instrument.
In Pilot II, 4 of 4 health departments were awarded accreditation. This pilot revealed the need to address process and policy issues
In 2005, the NC legislature passed legislation to create a mandatory, ongoing system with all health departments to go through accreditation process by 2012.
Beginning in 2002, NC local health directors began to examine ways to improve public health system accountabilty. Through a series of working groups, the health directors, NC Division of Public Health, and the NCIPH created a framework for a NC LHD accreditation system. In 2003-2004 the Public Health Task convened by the NC DHHS secretary and NC State Health officer recommended a mandatory accreditation process for NC. The Accreditation Committee of this task force developed the initial NC accreditation standards. NC then conducted 2 pilot accreditation projects which were evaluated for feasibility.
In Pilot I, 6 of 6 health departments were awarded accreditation. This pilot revealed areas for improvement of the self assessment instrument.
In Pilot II, 4 of 4 health departments were awarded accreditation. This pilot revealed the need to address process and policy issues
In 2005, the NC legislature passed legislation to create a mandatory, ongoing system with all health departments to go through accreditation process by 2012.
57. PROCEDURAL
Peer or professional site visitors
Conduct of visit
Requests for additional documentation
Exit conference
Board procedures
Appeals process
Confidentiality of proceedings and “findings”
POLICIES
There has been some confusion as to the criteria for meeting a standard, what documentation counts?
When can additional documentation be introduced—at the site visit, after the site visit, during Accreditation Board deliberations?
How should standards and activities that are in conflict with county policy be treated.
Perception that a health department should try to meet all standards and activities. On the one hand pilot health departments wanted to be seen as doing the best possible, they wanted to be viewed well by their peers. On the other hand, they tried to meet all standards to “hedge their bets.” If they missed a few, but covered the rest, they would still be accredited by reaching the 80% threshold.
POLITICS
1. Buy in from elected officials: county commissioners have expressed reservations about an accreditation system because there is a cost associated with becoming accredited and there are costs to having an accredited health department.
2. Accreditation might increase the cost of public health service delivery for the health department that may not be supported by the state
3. If the state mandates the system, but most funding comes from local county and state provides no money for accreditation, it becomes an unfunded mandate.
PURPOSE
What is the goal of accreditation?
Performance improvement process
Validation process that health department has in place policies and activities to provide essential services
Performance improvement implies nobody fails
All or nothing allows for failure and remediation, some concerned that this might mean elimination of health departments
PROCEDURAL
Peer or professional site visitors
Conduct of visit
Requests for additional documentation
Exit conference
Board procedures
Appeals process
Confidentiality of proceedings and “findings”
POLICIES
There has been some confusion as to the criteria for meeting a standard, what documentation counts?
When can additional documentation be introduced—at the site visit, after the site visit, during Accreditation Board deliberations?
How should standards and activities that are in conflict with county policy be treated.
Perception that a health department should try to meet all standards and activities. On the one hand pilot health departments wanted to be seen as doing the best possible, they wanted to be viewed well by their peers. On the other hand, they tried to meet all standards to “hedge their bets.” If they missed a few, but covered the rest, they would still be accredited by reaching the 80% threshold.
POLITICS
1. Buy in from elected officials: county commissioners have expressed reservations about an accreditation system because there is a cost associated with becoming accredited and there are costs to having an accredited health department.
2. Accreditation might increase the cost of public health service delivery for the health department that may not be supported by the state
3. If the state mandates the system, but most funding comes from local county and state provides no money for accreditation, it becomes an unfunded mandate.
PURPOSE
What is the goal of accreditation?
Performance improvement process
Validation process that health department has in place policies and activities to provide essential services
Performance improvement implies nobody fails
All or nothing allows for failure and remediation, some concerned that this might mean elimination of health departments
58. Health Directors
Wanted it
Sold it
Promoted it
Support it
Political champions
Legislators
County commissioners
Boards of health
Partners and stakeholders
Involved throughout process
Engaged
Wrestled with issues
Supported process
Incentives
Tangible—gaining funds that require accreditations—mental health funding example; maintaining funds that might have been lost
Intangible—health department staff team building, pride in job, improved appreciation for what public health does
Health Directors
Wanted it
Sold it
Promoted it
Support it
Political champions
Legislators
County commissioners
Boards of health
Partners and stakeholders
Involved throughout process
Engaged
Wrestled with issues
Supported process
Incentives
Tangible—gaining funds that require accreditations—mental health funding example; maintaining funds that might have been lost
Intangible—health department staff team building, pride in job, improved appreciation for what public health does
63. The Public Health Improvement Plan PHIP 1993 Health Services Act
Public Health as a part of Health Reform
1993 43.70.520 - required the plan
1995 43.70. 580 - accepted the first plan and specified future work and an ongoing commitment to improve public health
64. PHIP Requirements Establish performance standards
Measure and report on performance
Estimate costs to achieve standards statewide
Biennially, use the PHIP to evaluate the effectiveness of the public health system
Present this work to the legislature
69. The Plan-Do-Check-Act Cycle
70. The Plan-Do-Check-Act Cycle
71. The Plan-Do-Check-Act Cycle
72. Our Vision for Public Health Key health indicators guide investments
Performance standards are used statewide
Financing is stable, sufficient and equitable
Information technology is standardized, secure
Workers receive continuous training
Access is provided for critical health services
Communication about public health is effective
Strong alliances support public health
73. Our Goal A predictable level of public health protection throughout the state
“What every person has a right to expect.”
74. Why is this difficult in Washington? 35 Separate Local Districts and Boards of Health
Wide variation in… Size, Settings, Services, Funding, Philosophy
Categorical funding and piecemeal statutes
Fear of “Rush to the Floor”
75. Enhancement Project Plan Experience increased efforts in the state Department of Health and four local health jurisdictions
Broaden communications and understanding
Promote use of the standards for quality improvement across the public health system in Washington state