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1. State DD Systems Administration on Developmental Disabilities
Technical Assistance Institute
June 10, 2008
2. Part 1 The Challenges We Know
3. Where and with whom people Live
4. Home Sizes Getting Smaller
5.
Where are we?
7. Why Do So Few People Have a Community Life? We’ve had IEPs and IHPs
Self determination is the goal even of
ICFs/MR
Why aren’t we Person-centered ?
8. It’s Not Easy We have to ask people about everything –
no decisions about them without them
It takes more time than doing it the old way… “when we knew best.”
Their decisions & preferences require us to do things that are hard
Risk taking requires us to think and behave differently
We are drawn into family dynamics
Money no longer controlled by providers
Requires more complex strategies in order to listen to the person and meet assurances
9.
10. NASDDDS Communities of Practice What State Systems are Learning Community of Practice– like minded people who form to share what they know and to learn from one another regarding some aspects of their work.
Building Person-Centered Organizations: Fulfilling the Promise of Person Centered Planning
Supported Employment Leadership Network
11. Building Person-Centered Organizations: Fulfilling the Promise of Person Centered Planning Real Choices System Change Grant
$2.1M for three years
Six States:
Virginia Georgia North Carolina
Oregon Tennessee South Dakota
Partners
Michael Smull
Nat. Assoc. State Directors of DD Services
Virginia Commonwealth University Center for Excellence
12. Three Levels of Change Level One: changes in day to day practice that impact persons’ lives and their relationships with formal and informal supports;
Level Two changes in provider agency management and leadership affecting organizational policy, practice, and program outcomes;
Level Three changes in service delivery system infrastructure statewide resulting from changes in regulation, state policy and system design.
13. The Role of the Partners NASDDDS will:
a) coordinate activities and share lessons learned through the development of a dynamic “Community of Practice” (CoP) among the participating states,
(b) assist in the preparation, publication and dissemination of project materials and outcomes, and
c) provide technical assistance
VCU will conduct the evaluation
14. Focus- Three Levels of Change Level One: day to day practice that impact persons’ lives and their relationships with people
Level Two: provider agency management & leadership affecting organizational policy, practice, and program outcomes;
Level Three: system infrastructure statewide resulting from changes in regulation, state policy and system design.
15. Supported Employment Leadership Network – SELN Sixteen States:
Washington, Oregon, California, Texas, Colorado, Louisiana, New Mexico, Michigan, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, West Virginia, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Hawaii
Funded by the member states
Third year
Partners
University of Massachusetts Institute on Community Inclusion
16. What States are Learning Clarity of Goals
Shared value system
Leadership- key players with shared values
System Level Strategies
Flexible policies – employment first policies
Flexible funding – support innovation, incentives
Using data to communicate goals and progress
Training programs that diffuse innovation throughout the state
17. Part 1 The Challenge Before Us
18. Demographic Shift = America’s Care Gap
19. U.S. Demand for Workers Projections [2002 – 2012] 637,000 new home care workers by 2014
Total US employment growth…14.8%
LPNs…20% RNs 27%
CNAs 34% Personal Care attendants 40.5% Home Health aides 48%637,000 new home care workers by 2014
Total US employment growth…14.8%
LPNs…20% RNs 27%
CNAs 34% Personal Care attendants 40.5% Home Health aides 48%
22. Waiting for Residential Services
23. Service Cost Comparisons
24. Reality
We can’t afford to pay for 24 hr. residential services for everyone.
We can’t staff 24 hr. residential services even is we could afford to.
If we could, would we want to?
25. An Emerging Paradigm: More Adults are Living with their Families
26. Supporting People Living with Their Family – What Does it Mean?
27. It Means that…..
People live in the context of family
or an alternate shared living arrangement
Personal outcomes will be influenced by the people the person lives with
Choice; self direction; relationships; a job; etc.
The provision of community services will have to include
Support to the family/shared living
Involvement in family dynamics – supporting the person in the context of their family
28. The individual’s identity, personal preferences
and dreams must be primary
Families and care givers need support,
training and information
Training
Case managers must plan for the person within the family context
Staff must be trained to work with others at home to support the person with a disability
The person with a disability must have opportunities outside of home...support self advocacy.
29. What is the New Paradigm?
Types of services?
What should system infrastructure look like?
Program Policies?
Training needed?
How is quality assured?
Risks or problems with these services? How can they be managed?
Reimbursement methods?
Legislation needed?
Who gets 24 hr. residential services?
30. Part 3
31. Mission and Principles Mission:
To assist member state agencies in building person
centered systems of support for people with
developmental disabilities and their families.
Guiding Principles: Individuals with developmental disabilities have the right to:
Be treated with respect and dignity
Be independent and make individual choices
Participate in family and community life
Have opportunities to maximize their full potential
Receive outcome based services
32. Current Reality
We can’t afford to pay for 24 hr. residential services for everyone.
We can’t staff 24 hr. residential services even is we could afford to.
33. Challenge: Designing the New Paradigm Serving people in the context of family –
it’s not just family support.
Define the services: are families service recipients?
Determine how much service is needed to avoid the need for 24 hr. residential services
Honor self determination
Rethink the role of case managers
Define and measure quality
Identify the risks and how are they managed
Financing and reimbursement methods
Establish self-advocacy as a part of the service system
34. Challenge:Designing the New Paradigm
Determining who gets 24 hr. residential services
Developing and expanding non-24 hr. service options for those who no longer live with nuclear families:
Extended families
Shared living/host home
35. Other Environmental Influences Interest in Self-Direction Continues to Grow
Especially among families supporting family members at home
Self-directed services can be cost effective
Self-Advocacy Needs Support
As more and more people live with family into adult hood, the need for peer support and opportunities to develop personal self advocacy skills becomes more critical
Self advocacy organizations cannot sustain themselves without reliable financial and organizational support
36.
Increased Emphasis on Measuring Quality and
Increased Reliance on Collecting & Using Data
Deficit Reduction Act requirements
1915 (C) Waiver Application requirements
Utilization of Managed Care
Environmental Influences cont.
37. Environmental Influences: Advances in Health Care and Technology
Smart Houses
Self-monitoring health devices
Electronic supervision
Mobility and communication devices
Medications to treat mental illness
Post traumatic stress treatments
Research on the impact of the environment and food on behavior
38. Environmental Influences: State and Federal Initiatives to Restructure Long Term Care Systems
Agency consolidation and/or reorganization
Single points of entry
Managed care contracts
Use of information technology to standardize practice across systems
39. Environmental Influences: Leadership Turnover in State Agencies
19 new state directors in 2007
6 new state directors in 2008
Retirements of many senior managers
40. Environmental Influences: Economic Challenges
$9 trillion federal deficit
25 states face total budget shortfalls in 2009; 6 others expect budget problems
2008 election – new administration
Cost of oil rising
Unemployment
Recession
Federal deficit
Rising obligations in Social Security and Medicare
Foreclosures
Costs of the wars
Health Care Insurance Crisis
Environment – global warning
41. Part 4 States Need Your Help
42. Government Leaders Can…. Do what people want – lead them where they want to go
Do what people won’t object to – Show Them the Way!
Do what people don’t want as long as there aren’t enough of them or they aren’t powerful enough to stop the process
43. State MRDD Director Pressure Points
44. State MRDD Director Pressure Points
45. What States Need Help With
Changing to a new paradigm: to develop effective systems of services that support people living with their families or in alternative family/community options
Developing the capacity to monitor and improve quality
Learning about and applying advances in health care and technology
Responding to initiative to restructure long-term care service systems
Developing responsive financial management strategies
Developing and using of information technology
Leadership development programs
46. How Can You Help? Build a Relationship with the Director
Decide to work on the “inside” – not from the “outside.”
Ask how you can help
Keep directors informed and provide information they don’t have access to
Offer to do what the DD Agency can’t do:
Fund pilot/demos to achieve mutual goals
Support self advocates
Hold listening sessions with stake holders
Publications
47. Examples of DD Council/State Agency Partnerships Ohio; Project Search; Dual Diagnosis Project
Georgia – Project Search
Penna.- Strategic Planning; Developed Independent Monitoring Teams
Vermont - Facility Closure; Training Programs
Illinois – Research and Strategic Planning
North Carolina – Systems Change; Self Advocacy
48. Opportunities Systems Transformation and Money Follows the Person
SELN Project – 16 states http://www.seln.org/
Nevada DD Council pays membership feel
California
Person Centered Organizations Projects
Tennessee DD Council funds participation
National Core Indicators - measuring quality - 30 States http://www.hsri.org/nci/
49. What States Need Help With
Changing to a new paradigm: to develop effective systems of services that support people living with their families or in alternative family/community options
Developing the capacity to monitor and improve quality
Learning about and applying advances in health care and technology
Responding to initiative to restructure long-term care service systems
Developing responsive financial management strategies
Developing and using of information technology
Leadership development programs
50. National Project Partnerships Virginia Commonwealth University - Person Centered Organizations
University of Mass. Institute on Community Inclusion - Supported Employment Leadership Network ; Publications; NASDDDS Research Committee
University of Minnesota Institute on Community Integration - Publications: NASDDDS Research Committee; Analysis of National Core Indicator data
University of Delaware - Leadership Institute
Human Services Research Institute HSRI - National Core Indicators; NASDDDS Research Committee
Michael Smull - Person Centered Organizations