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Accessibility and Community Involvement and the Role of Residential in Systems of Care Bruce Kamradt Cathy Connolly July 19, 2007.

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Presentation on theme: "Accessibility and Community Involvement and the Role of Residential in Systems of Care Bruce Kamradt Cathy Connolly July 19, 2007."— Presentation transcript:

1 Accessibility and Community Involvement and the Role of Residential in Systems of Care Bruce Kamradt Cathy Connolly July 19, 2007

2 Values That Guide Accessible Community-Based Care  Individualize the Provision of Services to Meet The Child’s and Family’s Unique Needs  Provide Access To A Comprehensive Array of Services and Supports  Strength-based approaches work best  Services and Treatment are provided in the community whenever possible  Child and Family Team Guides Treatment and Service Planning no matter where the child resides  Success determined thru Measurable Outcomes

3 What Is Wraparound Milwaukee- I.Organized as a Unique Type of Public Care Management Organization--HMO II.Defined Populations for Enrollment—children at immediate risk of Institutional placement—640 enrollees III.Operates with Pooled Funds--$37 million—single payor of all services for SED youth  Child Welfare  Juvenile Justice  Mental Health  Medicaid IV.No Formal Contracts -- Utilizes A Comprehensive Fee for Service Approach with Extensive Provider Network—Residential Treatment is a network service V.Employs Care Coordinators who facilitate Child and Family Teams—one family and one plan Continued

4 Wraparound Milwaukee - What Is It? VI.Strong Mobile Crisis Services—24/7 VII.Strong QA/QI and Single internet-based Information System Serves All 230 Provider Agencies VIII.Organized Family Advocacy and Support System Partners with Families Continued

5  Daily Living Skills - Training  Independent Living Apt.  Parent Aide  Child Care  Housekeeping  Mentoring  Tutor  Life Coach  Recreation  After School Programming  Specialized Camps  Discretionary Funds  Supported Work Environment List of Available Services in Social / Mental Health Plan  Case Management  Referral Assessment  Medication Management  Outpatient Individual/Family  Outpatient - Group  Outpatient - AODA  Psychiatric Assessment  Psychological Evaluation  Mental Health  Assessment/Evaluation  Inpatient Psychiatric  Nursing Assessment/Managemen t  Consultation with Other Professionals  Group Home Care  Respite  Respite - Foster Care  Respite - Residential  Crisis Bed - RTC  Crisis Home  Foster Care  Treatment Foster Care  In-Home Treatment (Case Aide)  Day Treatment  Residential Treatment  Transportation  Crisis 1:1 Stabilizers/Aides

6 Utilization of Residential Services Within Our System of Care  Average of 80 youth in Residential Treatment Centers and 75 youth in Group Homes-Out of Average Daily Enrollment of 640 youth  Average about $1800 per month per enrollee for above services or 45% of Service Costs  4 of our 9 Care Coordination Agencies are Residential or Group Home Providers  Overall Utilization of Residential Tx. has Decreased Over past 12 years from 375 Average RTC placements to 80 and Length of Stay from 12 months to 3.5 months

7 Best Practice Approaches for Residential Treatment In A System of Care  Residential Care should and can be Short-Term (30 – 90 Days)  Residential Care should be Pre-Authorized by the Purchaser  Integrate Residential Plan into Community Plan—Residential Care Is Part of A Strategy To Meet A Need  Involve and Engage Parents  High Risk Youth Need a Good Safety Plan

8 Best Practice Approaches for Residential Treatment …. continued  Outcomes should be Clear, Measurable and Time-Limited  Residential Staff should Participate with Community Professionals, Neighbors, Informal Supports on the Care Planning Team—The CFT Designs and Oversees The Care Plan Regardless of Where The Child Resides  Discharge should Occur When Immediate Needs are Met and Community Resources Put in Place to Meet longer Term Treatment Needs

9 Challenges For Purchasers And Providers  Political Support for Changing Role of Residential Care  Legal Support for Changing Role of Residential Care  Learning To Share The Same Values, Approaches and Goals  Expanding Array of Community Services Residential Centers Provide While Often Reducing The Physical Infrastructure  Training and Technical Assistance Required

10 Challenges For Purchasers And Providers …continued  Familiarizing Residential Centers and Other Agencies with Managed Care Techniques –Participating in a Provider Network –Fee-For-Service –Prior Authorization  Establishing Outcomes for Youth in Residential Care—We May Each Be Evaluating Progress In Different Ways With Different Timelines

11 St. Charles: Brief History  Established in 1920 by Archdiocese as single service organization on 57-acre campus in Milwaukee, Wisconsin  Exclusively boys residence for 65+ years  Children were generally referred by family & others for “delinquency”

12 A Business Case for Change 3-4 years  Typical residential stay in 1960s-1970s was 3-4 years in length 1 year  By 1980s, typical stay fell to 1 year with ability to extend an additional year 30 days 3-6 months  Since Wraparound began, the initial commitment is generally 30 days with average stay being 3-6 months

13 Strategic Internal Questions St. Charles had to question itself in the face of change:  Who would we be if we were no longer defined by the facilities we had invested in over decades?  What would we do with all those facilities if multi-year residential stays were not going to return?

14 Elements of Immediate Change  Mission  Internal “Self-Image”  Name  Residentially Focused Staff  Abundance of Residential Facilities  Excess Land

15 Change Forces New Vision  We would no longer be facilities- driven…we would serve youth & families wherever they might be  We would embrace the trend away from residential services, and transform ourselves to meet new market As a result of strategic planning:

16 Planning Meets Reality Completing Strategic Planning & Visioning, and making initial changes were just the start …. The transition to deal with the new realities raised significant challenges.

17 The Challenges of Change 1.DECISION-MAKING: From “experts” role exclusively making treatment decisions to “team members” providing input

18 The Challenges of Change 2.STRENGTH-BASED: From managing behavior to facilitating self- management

19 The Challenges of Change 3.PERFORMANCE: From individual definitions of performance and quality to standardized community-wide indicators

20 The Challenges of Change 4.RESIDENTIAL POPULATION: From nearly 500 area youth receiving residential services to only 50

21 The Challenges of Change 5.SERVICE DELIVERY: From on-site residential treatment to in-home and community-based service delivery

22 The Challenges of Change 6.WORKFORCE DIVERSITY: From emphasis on residential staff/staff training to seeking/training for more diverse skills sets

23 The Challenges of Change 7.FINANCIAL PRESSURE: From full beds and balanced budgets with 1+ year stays to greater financial uncertainty and need to diversify funding sources

24 The Results of Embracing Change  Agency grew from $3 million to $13 million in annual revenues  Staff grew from 25 to 300  Most importantly, positive results for youth & families Much has improved as a result of embracing change:

25 The Results of Embracing Change  Wraparound Care Coordination  Safety Services  Medical Day Treatment  Alternative Education  Intensive Family Development Services St. Charles transitioned from a single service to a wide range of programming, including:

26 The Results of Embracing Change  Mentoring  Residential Treatment  Shelter Care  Family Preservation  First Time Juvenile Offender Program  Alternatives to Incarceration St. Charles transitioned from a single service to a wide range of programming, including:

27 St. Charles: Programming Today Today, St. Charles Youth & Family Services is a well diversified service provider with no more than 20% of revenues being received from a single source.


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