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CQI at Franklin County Children Services. Metro Presentation August 15, 2014 Julia Harrison & Linda Peters. Important Foundations. FCCS Board Policy:
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CQI at Franklin County Children Services Metro Presentation August 15, 2014 Julia Harrison & Linda Peters
Important Foundations • FCCS Board Policy: Franklin County Children Services, its Board, advisory committees, and employees are committed to providing the highest quality services and to a continuous quality improvement process • Administrative Support- resources • CQIPlan: • Describes how CQI is integrated into the agency’s work • Highlights CQI services & activities that the PIE (Performance Improvement, IT, Evaluation, Data Mgmt, and Professional Development) Division will provide to the agency
CQI Drivers • Council on Accreditation (COA) • Non-direct service standards: • Administration and Management • Service Delivery Administration • Direct service standards: • Adoption Services • Child Protective Services (Regions & Intake) • Volunteer Mentoring Services • Kinship Care Services • CFSR/CPOE
CQI is Agency-wide • Orientation- CQI introduction for all new employees, personal commitment • Committees are key • “Effective committees can help us bring continuous improvements to our internal agency functioning and to the services we provide children and families. In addition, well-organized committees can help us draw on the talents of large numbers of staff, promote teamwork and enhance coordination across departments within the agency.” • CQI Infrastructure • Strengthens staff involvement in CQI activities- learning environment
FCCS Committees a. Best Practice Council Committee j. Executive Council b. Board and Administrative Policies Committee k. Green Space Committee c. C3 (COA, CPOE, CFSR) Committee l. Information & Technology d. Chairs’ Cabinet (IT) Review Panel e. Child Risk Review Committee m. Multi-Cultural Development • Child Death Review Panel n. Risk Management Committee f. Clerical Committee o. Safety Committee g. Committee Communications Council p. Speaker’s Bureau h. Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) q. Supportive Work Environment • i. CQI Short Term Plan (STP) Workgroups i. Employee Handbook Committee
PIE Support- Evaluation • ROM and CFSR • SACWIS data entry/data quality • Automated data collection, analysis, and measurement consulting to CQI teams • Ad hoc data analysis for BPC and CQI teams • Provider services-placement provider scorecard • Disseminate, analyze, and present the Survey of Employee Engagement (SEE) • Provide reports to Program Services; Screening, Intake, Regions, and Adoptions to monitor performance- FCCS Dashboard
PIE Support – Performance Improvement (PID) • Family Team Meetings; Case planning, 90 Day Reviews, SARs, TDMs, and PRTs • Deceased Child Review Process- internal and external • CPOE review and QIP monitoring • CFSR review and PIP monitoring • Peer Review- transition from QA approach to CQI
PID and Peer Review • Adoption Services - MEPA compliance, process review of pre-matching & conferences • Child Protective Services/Intake - CAPMIS; Safety & Family Assessment timeliness & quality • Child Protective Services /Regions – CAPMIS; Case Plan & Reunification Assessment timeliness & quality • Volunteer Mentoring Services – Process review for provider approval, matching, maintenance, and documentation • Kinship Care Services – Process review for timeframes, quality of documentation, and activity logs for quality • “Cross-pollination” workgroup- CAPMIS Safety Plan timeliness & quality
FCCS “True” Peer Review • Shift from QA style, 3rd party reviews focused on compliance • Identify strengths and areas needing improvement • Aim is to improve practice/outcomes and align with Rule • Involving employees and stakeholders; ensuring staff are engaged and part of the entire process. Focus on supervisors! • Data gathered, analyzed, & reported at case and aggregate levels • Using data, team knowledge, and collaboration to improve decision-making and bring systemic improvements • Link Strategic planning, goal setting and monitoring improvements • Peer reviews for a process, specific tool, program, or case • Useful for individual workers/unit, refresher training, coaching/mentoring • Continuous cycle –repeat the process!
FCCS Steps in Peer Review PIES • PLAN • IMPLEMENT • EVALUATE • next STEPS • SHARE Results • STRATEGIZE • SUSTAIN **CQI STP Workgroups-where the work happens-Program service supervisors, caseworkers, & administrators **Use PID Peer Reviewers to Facilitate **Partner with Evaluations, IT, PDD, others
PLANNING for Peer Review • Select a process, specific tool, program, or a case • Determine what is to be improved. Focus on timeliness, quality, efficiency, accuracy, etc. • Develop a peer review tool from ORC/OAC, CAPMIS/SACWIS, COA, Agency policies & procedures • Create instructions/guides, tool and answer sheet • Determine the pool, sampling, timeframes, etc. • Detail logistics of reviewers, process, assignment, collecting and recording data • Get baseline data to help determine goals • Evaluation plan – measuring, operationalize/define; for quality use; y/n, OR not, substantially, or partially achieved. • Communication plan- how to share results, not punitive, unit level may spur competition, STPs/departments and “BIG” CQI, agency-wide • Think about IMPROVEMENTS and Strategies
IMPLEMENTATION with Peer Review • Get started, per the plan • Use the STP workgroup/committee members as subject matter experts/champions • Be flexible; things will change; tools, instructions; continuous learning • Need oversight, responsibility, keep things moving- CQI timeline • Data and evaluation are key-analyze results, goals, progress • Communicate as you go! Share with CQI Workgroup, BIG CQI, agency-wide • Improvement strategies; policy/procedures, SACWIS, agency processes, training, tools-Red Letter Guides, Q-tips, Reports • Campaigns/competition- reward success!
EVALUATION with Peer Review • Gather data and compare peer review results, baseline and improvements • Automate our process- Scantron & EXCEL • Create reports and charts to show analysis of data- remember your audience! • Report at supervisor level – not worker level, not for performance evaluations • Set goals and benchmarks, determine when improvement is reached • Remember to evaluate the process and implementation as well- satisfaction surveys
Next STEPS with Peer Review • SHARE Results, STRATEGIZE, and SUSTAIN • Share-- communicate results, remember your audience, REWARD success! All levels-individual, supervisor, dept., agency wide. Use FCCS rotator, bathroom posts, “best” peer reviews, campaigns like QTSA, Awesome sauce, Father’s Day cards & Engagement • Strategize--Identify areas for improvement, ideas/strategies to use. Plan for improvements- process, clarification of policies/guides, Q-tips, training/education, measuring/monitoring with reports • Sustain—through accountable processes, use data, SACWIS, reports & monitoring, FCCS Dashboard
Peer Review Highlight-CAPMIS Reunification Assessments (RAs) • FCCS Region CQI STP group worked to improve the timeliness and quality of CAPMIS RAs. Support FCCS PIP activities for more inclusive peer review process, supervisor involvement , CAPMIS tool improvements, and improvements in CFSR 1.1 – Timeliness & Permanency of Reunification. • FCCS Baseline data indicated that RAs were not being completed or used as a tool to drive decision-making. Also inconsistency among Regions, units, supervisors, or workers in the completion and quality of the RAs. • Timeliness and quality had to be defined and operationalized. • Timeliness determined to be completion 0 to 30 days prior to the youth’s discharge. • Quality was determined by thorough review of SACWIS, CAPMIS and the RA tool with changes in agency policies and procedures, creation of instructions, and a Red Letter Guide. • Additional training and quality tips (Q-tips) • Data was instrumental and reports were analyzed and shared so that progress was evident.