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Measuring the outputs of low level services

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How we might define and measure outcomes for people using social care ... E.g. actual level of socialising ... E.g. whether socialise as much as they want. Problems: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Measuring the outputs of low level services


1
Measuring the outputs of low level services
  • Julien Forder

2
Outcomes in social care
  • How we might define and measure outcomes for
    people using social care
  • Some early results for day care services
  • How outcome information can be used
  • Draw on
  • Treasury funded project with Office of National
    Statistics Quality Measurement Framework -
    QMF
  • DH funded project Outcomes of social care for
    adults - OSCA

3
QMF projectContext and overall aims
  • Methodologies for assessing the value added of
    public services
  • Mechanisms for efficient measurement of the
    provision of public services
  • A toolkit usable by authorities and providers to
    assess and monitor performance, and guide
    commissioning

4
General Approach
  • How do we assess the quality of services?
  • ... By measuring the improvement in outcomes they
    confer
  • How to measure outcomes for service users?
  • Ask people to rate their current situation in a
    number of relevant outcome attributes i.e.
    activities and opportunities regarding our
    quality of life
  • e.g. Enough good food, feeling safe, social
    life..
  • Ask people to rate one of 3 levels for each
    good, adequate, poor..
  • Apply relative importance weights (from
    preference analysis)

5
General Approach (cont.)
  • How to measure the effect of services and
    support. What is the counter-factual?
  • What would peoples situation be in outcome terms
    in the absence of the service?
  • Ask this directly... by interview
  • it is more difficult and time-consuming than
    asking about current outcomes
  • ... But interviewing cannot be done routinely
  • Instead find important markers of expected
    outcomes that we can use to infer those outcomes
    in self-completion questionnaire

6
Application and limitations
  • Application
  • Day care services for people over 65
  • Care homes for older people and adults with LD
  • Information and advice services
  • Limitations
  • The quality of services may be greater than the
    impact on service user outcomes alone
  • E.g. Outcomes for staff, for the wider community
    etc.

7
Outcomes - What to measure?
  • The impact of services on outcomes
  • fundamental motives
  • Quality of life, Utility, happiness or
    well-being
  • But directly measurable? Instead, inferred
  • peoples functioning states
  • being clean, being fed, being safe
  • but also feeling in control, meaningful social
    life, being occupied, dignity
  • Capability to achieve improved functioning
  • not just processes
  • Whose values?

Resources opportunities
Capability
Service choices
Functioning
Utility/well-being
8
Capabilities or functioning?
  • Functionings tend to reflect what people actually
    do
  • E.g. actual level of socialising
  • Capabilities ask whether people can do the things
    they want to do
  • E.g. whether socialise as much as they want
  • Problems
  • Capabilities may reflect expectations/ adaptation
    to poor circumstances
  • Functioning does not pick up respondents views
    may not be sensitive enough

9
Methods
  • Interviews and focus groups with service users
  • ... to capture users views on what outcomes we
    should measure
  • Cognitive testing with service users
  • ... to test the understanding of questions about
    outcomes
  • Self Completion Tool (SCT)
  • Questions encompassing outcome domains as
    identified in focus groups/interviews and
    previous work
  • ... to collect information on
  • (a) current outcomes
  • (b) markers of outcomes in the absence of
    services
  • Face to face interviews with users
  • More comprehensive bank of measures (e.g. EQ5D)
  • ... for validation/comparison of outcome measures
  • ... to ascertain the best markers of outcomes in
    the absence of services

10
Self Completion Tool
  • Comprised of 22 questions
  • Age, Sex, Living circumstances
  • Need indicators
  • ADLs
  • IADL dealing finances/paperwork
  • Informal care and equipment
  • Services used
  • Nine outcome domain...
  • Format of outcomes questions....

Personal cleanliness Safety Meals and
nutrition Activities/occupation Control over
daily life Social participation Home
cleanliness and comfort Anxiety Dignity and
respect
11
Self Completion Tool
  • Example outcome domain questions
  • Thinking about your home, which of the following
    statements best describes your present situation?
  • Please cross one box only ?
  • My home is as clean and comfortable as I want ?
  • My home is less clean and comfortable than I
    want ?
  • My home is not at all as clean or comfortable as
    I want ?
  • Which of these statements best describes your
    present situation?
  • Please cross one box only ?
  •  
  • I have as much control over my daily life as I
    want ?
  • Sometimes I dont feel I have as much control
    over my daily life as I want ?
  • I have no control over my daily life ?
  • Which of the following statements best describes
    your social situation?
  • Please cross one box only ?
  • By social situation we mean keeping in touch with
    people and spending time with people that you
    want to be with.
  •  

12
Fieldwork
  • 961 SCT questionnaires from sample of 135
    providers
  • Asked providers to hand out SCTs
  • 224 Face to face interviews
  • Sub-sample of consenting SCT respondents
  • Total of 29 local authorities took part
  • Who provided a list of day care providers

13
Study population
  • SCT Data 961 cases
  • Age
  • 40 aged 75 to 84
  • 33 aged 85
  • Sex
  • 31 Male, 69 female
  • Living arrangement
  • 64 living on their own
  • 36 living with someone else

14
Study population
  • Face to Face Data 224 cases
  • Age
  • 81 aged 75 or over (n181)
  • Sex
  • 32 Male (n71) 68 female (n153)
  • Ethnicity
  • 88 White British or White other (n198)
  • 11 Black or minority ethnic groups (n25)
  • Self-reported health in general
  • 23 reported their general health as either bad
    or very bad (n53)
  • 36 reported this as either good or very good
    (n77)

15
Need - ADLs
  • Getting dressed and undressed
  • Getting in and out of bed or a chair
  • Washing your face and hands
  • Preparing hot meals
  • Walking at least 10 minutes

16
Outcomes
  • Estimated from the interview data
  • 92 completed whole task
  • Current outcomes (on a 0-worst to 1-best scale)
    averaged 0.74
  • 11 had outcome of 1
  • 14 had outcome of less than 0.5
  • Outcome gain Current outcomes - expected
    outcomes

17
Outcome gain measured
  • Outcome gain due to Day Care
  • Mean 0.18

18
What relates to the size of outcome gains?
19
Adaptation
  • Some evidence that people adapt
  • Peoples subjective views about their ability to
    achieve the level of functioning they want..
  • .. is greater than a more objective measure of
    their functioning
  • .. When their capability is low
  • E.g. Older people adapt to a lower level of
    social contact with people they are fond of.

20
Why measure outcomes?
  • Knowing outcomes, rather than just outputs, tells
    us about the value of social care services
  • a measure of value is needed for
  • Providers to best target resources
  • Focus efforts on services that are most
    cost-effective
  • Outcomes-based commissioning
  • Moving away from needs based or historical
    allocations
  • Regulation
  • Moving away form a focus on inputs and processes
  • National Accounting
  • Moving away from cost-weighted measures
  • Value information to guide deployment of
    services to give people what they really want
    from those services

21
Aims of this work...
  • To develop an Adult Social Care Outcomes Toolkit
    (ASCOT)
  • Able to measure the outcome improvement produced
    by services
  • Components
  • Validated and robust self-completion, interview
    and observational techniques
  • Surveying techniques
  • Data interpretation tools
  • Draw-down of existing data

22
Why prefer ASCOT?
  • Most quality toolkits about process
  • A common metric
  • Allows comparison across services
  • Potential for continuity when changing routine
    data
  • Variety of users and purposes
  • Distinguishes what services could do and are
    doing
  • Validated approach
  • Incorporates population preferences
  • Low burden?
  • Designed to be easy to use/answer. Uses markers
    existing data where possible e.g. Inspection data

23
Risks
  • ASCOT will not be perfect! Expectations?
  • How good will relationships be?
  • Evolution of methodology
  • Measure has moved on e.g. Better ways to assess
    adaptation
  • Changing context
  • Standards/quality rating basis changing
  • CSCI -gt CQC
  • Personalisation agenda and commissioning
  • Used for performance indicators
  • But what are incentives for exaggerated responses

24
Future work needed..
  • Incorporating carer outcomes
  • Dealing with proxy respondents aided
    self-completion
  • Validation of final measure(s)
  • Making this practical and useable
  • Making people aware of this work

25
Next steps
  • Find markers of expected outcomes in the data
  • Continue with validation of outcome measures
  • Refine SCT in light of findings
  • Assess best method for administering SCT in
    practice
  • Elaborate on how this outcomes information can be
    used
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