Improving the Jobs of Direct Care Workers in Long Term Care: Findings from the Better Jobs Better...
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Transcript of Improving the Jobs of Direct Care Workers in Long Term Care: Findings from the Better Jobs Better...
Improving the Jobs of Direct Care Workers in Long Term Care: Findings from the
Better Jobs Better Care Demonstration
Penn State Evaluation Team: Peter Kemper, Diane Brannon, Brigitt Heier, Amy Stott, Monika
Setia, Joseph Vasey, Jungyoon Kim, and Candy Warner
June 8, 2008
Presented at the annual meeting of AcademyHealth. We thank The Atlantic Philanthropies, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation for funding.
(Contract No. HHSP23320044303EC)
BJBC Demonstration
• Goal: Improve direct care workers’ job quality and reduce turnover
• Direct care workers: Provide help with personal care • Interventions: BJBC training and technical assistance
intended to improve management practices • Where:
– Five state projects– 124 providers– Skilled nursing, assisted living, home care, adult day service
BJBC’s Intended Effects:Basic Framework
BJBC Interventions
Providers
• Implementation
• Management Practices
Direct Care Worker
• Job outcomes
• Turnover
Intervention IA NC OR PA VTTop Management Training √ √Supervisor Training √ √ √Team Building √ √ √ √DCW Career Development √ √ √ √Caregiving Skill Development √ √ √
BJBC Interventions:Technical Assistance and Training
Approach to Evaluation
• Evaluation not designed with a control group– Before-after evaluation design and data– Sought methods of strengthening design
• “Let a thousand flowers bloom” demonstration interventions not standardized or known– Measured range of management practices– Developed measures of extent of implementation
Methods for Estimating Effects
• Basic approach– Before-after comparison of means– Post-intervention trends compared with national
trends
• Difference-in-difference: Compare changes in:– States with and without specific interventions– Providers that did and did not implement
Analyses Presented
BJBC Interventions
Providers
1. Implementation
2. Management Practices
Direct Care Workers
3. Job outcomes
4. Turnover
Methods Used in Impact Analyses
Before-After or Trend
States with and without Intervention
Providers that did and did not
implement
Management Practices √ √
Job Outcomes √ √
Turnover √ √
Data
• Telephone interviews with project managers• Survey of clinical managers• Survey of frontline supervisors• Survey of direct care workers• Hiring and termination information system
Data Used in Analyses
Practice Manager
Clinical Manager
Supervisor Direct Care
Worker
Hiring and
Termination
Implementation √ √ √
Management Practices √
Job Outcomes √
Turnover √
Measuring Implementation in Formative Evaluations: Using Data from Multiple Perspectives
Peter KemperBrigitt Heier
Joe VaseyDiane Brannon
June 8, 2008
Presented at the annual meeting of AcademyHealth. The authors are grateful for support from The Atlantic
Philanthropies, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and
Evaluation (Contract No. HHSP23320044303EC)
Motivation
• Variation in implementation observed in early site visits
• Mid-course correction: Add implementation measures
• Goal: Develop a summary index of extent of provider implementation for use in impact analysis
Measures from Three Perspectives
• Practice Manager (state project level)
• Clinical Manager (provider level)
• Frontline Supervisors (provider level)
Practice Manager Perspective
• “Make a mark on the scale that best describes this provider’s current degree of implementation”– 0 - Implementation of interventions has not yet started – 100 - Interventions are fully implemented and sustainable
Clinical Manager Perspective
• “Indicate the level of progress your organization has made in implementing the most important intervention”– 0 - Implementation of intervention has not yet started– 10 - The intervention is fully implemented and sustainable
• “The programs that are part of BJBC have been well executed in your organization”– Five point scale from strongly disagree to strongly agree
Frontline Supervisor Perspective
• “The programs that are part of BJBC have been well executed in your organization”– Five point scale from strongly disagree to strongly agree
• Averaged across supervisors in each provider
Methods
• Exploratory factor analysis – Principal components extraction method– Extracted component with an eigenvalue greater than 1– Included items if the factor loading was .6 or greater
• Imputed values when one or two items missing using maximum likelihood procedure
• Sample size: 92 providers
Factor Loadings
Measure Loading
Implementation score (Practice Manager) .70
Implementation score (Clinical Manager) .76
Execution of BJBC programs (Clinical Manager) .80
Execution of BJBC programs (Frontline Supervisor) .76
Factor has an eigenvalue of 2.2 and explains 55% of variance
Distribution of Factor Scores
Mean: .00Median: -.05Minimum: -2.84Maximum: 2.18Skewness: -.19
Factor ScoreRe-scaled to 0-1 Range
Mean: 0.56Median: 0.56Minimum: 0.00Maximum: 1.00Skewness: -.23
Implementation Index Is Related to Underlying Measures
Y= -1.85 + .032X
How We’ll Use Index in Analyzing Effects
• Difference-in-difference approach– Divide providers into two groups: above and below
median implementation– Compare difference between the two groups in differences between Time 2 and Time 1
• Extend to continuous measure in regression• Note: Method does not identify effects but
may identify absence of effects
Summary
• Assessments of implementation from three perspectives are similar
• Summary index was developed successfully• Uses of implementation index
– Will be used to strengthen analysis of BJBC effects– Most useful in confirming absence of effects– Could be used to analyze factors affecting implementation