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Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level Robert Landry, Ph.D. Yolo County Department of Alcohol, Drug and Mental Health Contact: [email protected]

Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

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Page 1: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

Robert Landry, Ph.D.

Yolo County Department of Alcohol, Drug and Mental Health

Contact: [email protected]

Page 2: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

Problem• We are charged with helping the most difficult welfare

recipients move from a culture of welfare dependency to independence.

• We must not only address traditional substance abuse and mental health issues. We need to find new ways to facilitate what is essentially a cultural transition.

• There has been little research on how to do this, let alone whether it is even possible.

• This presentation covers Yolo county’s attempt to come to grips with this problem.

Page 3: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

Questions• What percentage of CalWORKs participants are referred for

Alcohol Drug and Mental Health services?

• How many of these participants enter treatment?

• What barriers do they face?

• How are the barriers related to engagement in ADMH treatment and to success in employment services?

• Do clients get better in treatment?

• Does ADMH treatment help clients achieve greater financial independence?

Page 4: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

What percentage of CalWORKs participants are referred for Alcohol Drug and Mental Health

services?

26%

Page 5: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

How many of these participants enter treatment?

Page 6: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

What barriers do clients face?

• In a program with a broader mandate than simply treating mental health problems, we found it necessary to summarize the clients’ employment barriers.

• We developed an Employment Barriers Checklist.

• We also measured the clients’ symptom distress with the BASIS 32 and their social functioning with the

CA-QOL.

Page 7: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

Percentage of Clients with Barriers

Mental Health 85.3 Alcohol/Drug 60.6 Domestic Conflict 55.8 Attitude 35.5 Education 32.9 Children 30.4 Work 25.6 Medical Problems 22.4 Housing 19.6 Legal 16.8 Transportation 15.9

Page 8: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

Client Reported Symptomatology and Quality of Life

• The Basis32 and the CA-QOL were administered during assessment (n = 288).

• The BASIS32 is a symptom inventory completed by the client.

• We compared the means of our sample to that of the normative female in-patient group at discharge .

• The CalWORKs group is slightly worse than the in-patient group at discharge, indicating CalWORKs ADMH clients are reporting serious pathology.

Page 9: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

How are the barriers related to engagement in ADMH treatment and success in employment

services?

Method Tasks:

• Collapse the ADMH termination status into a treatment and no treatment group.

• Collapse the CWES disposition (what the client was does after termination) into a participation and no participation group.

• Decide which barriers, or independent variables, we will measure.

Page 10: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

57%

43%

Page 11: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

69%

31%

Page 12: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

Frequency of Cancellation/No Shows For Clients Who Start Treatment

MISSEDAPPOINTMENTS

PERCENT

0 51.31 or 2 37.3

3+ 27.4

There was a significant relationship between the number of no shows and starting treatment.

(Pearson’s Chi Squared 17.599 df = 2 p < .001)

Page 13: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

Frequency of Cancellation/No Shows For Clients Who Participate in CWES

MISSEDAPPOINTMENTS

PERCENT

0 46.11 or 2 47.3

3+ 24.6

There was no difference between the 0 missed session group and the 1or 2 missed session group. However, there

was a large difference starting with 3 missed sessions (Pearson’s Chi Squared 11.147 p = .004)

Page 14: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

Client Reported Symptomatology and Quality of Life

• The Basis32 and the CA-QUAL were administered during assessment (n = 288).

• There was no relation found between client reported symptomatology or quality of life and participation in either treatment or employment services.

Page 15: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

Percentage of Clients Who Participate in CWES By Number of Barriers

NUMBER OF BARRIERS

PERCENT

2-4 50%5-6 40%7+ 14%

Page 16: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

Barriers associated with starting

treatment:

• Anxiety

• Depression

• Interpersonal/Axis II Problems

• No High School Diploma

• Diagnosed Chronic Physical Disability

Page 17: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

Barriers associated with a lack of participating in CWES:

•AD abuse

•Poor Attendance

•Past Domestic Violence (inverse relationship)

•Unstable Housing

• Never Worked.

Page 18: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

Conclusions about Barriers and Starting Treatment or Participating in CWES

• The presence of barriers increases the chances of starting treatment and decreases the chances of participating in CWES.

• Assessment no shows were associated with poor participation in both treatment and CWES.

Page 19: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

Do clients get better in treatment?

• Tracking therapeutic and quality of life changes is essential for determining the impact of treatment on employment.

• The BASIS 32 and CA-QOL are readministered every 15 sessions and at termination.

• Significant symptom reduction was indicated by the BASIS 32 and significant improvements in quality of life were indicated on 3 of the 9 CA-QOL scales.

Page 20: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

How Does Starting Treatment Affect the Chances That a Client Will Participate in CWES?

Started Treatment

Probability of CWES

Participation

NO 36%

YES 58%

(Pearson’s Chi Squared p < .001).

Page 21: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

Is there a causal relationship between treatment and success in employment?

•Experimental designs provide the most powerful proof of causality, but can be ethically and legally problematic.

•We recommend A B designs and other time study designs.

•We tracked quarterly change in treatment completion and found the percentage of clients who completed treatment increased by 38% over 2 years.

•The percentage of treatment completers who participated in CalWORKs and found employment stayed constant at 56-58%.

•This indicates there is a causal relationship between treatment and employment.

Page 22: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

Conclusions: Outcome Research

• The clients self report high levels of symptomatology.

• The degree of symptomatology within the group referred for treatment

is not a good predictor of participation in treatment or CWES.

• Therapy drop out rates are very high.

• Most clients report they improve in therapy.

• There is a relationship between starting treatment and participation in

employment services.

Page 23: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

Conclusions: Program Implications

• More than 2 missed assessment appointments warrants flagging for alternate

interventions.

• Never employed participants need alternate interventions.

• There needs to be a high degree of integration of therapy and other components in

order to address interrelated issues.

• Therapy should have a significant focus on motivating clients to overcome their life

barriers.

• Intensive case management may be needed to engage the most intractable clients.

• Once the most intractable clients are engaged there needs to be graduated

pathways towards increasing responsibility, or an effective SSI advocacy program if

indicated.

Page 24: Doing Effectiveness Research at the County Level

The Prerequisites For Outcome Assessment

• A manager committed to outcome assessment.

• A user friendly database that makes life easier for staff by:

– Simplifying standard case management paperwork tasks.

– Collects most data as a bi-product of what they are doing anyway.

– Provides the staff with quick access to useful information.

• A commitment of resources to the start up process.

• Someone familiar with research to help with the design and number

crunching.