Title: The National Evaluation of the PATH Program
1The National Evaluation of the PATH Program
- Pamela J. Fischer, Ph.D.
- SAMHSAs Center for Mental Health Services
- Homeless Programs Branch
Presented at the 2010 PATH Grantee Meeting,
Washington, DC
2 Todays Presentation
- Findings from the 2005 National Evaluation
- of the PATH ProgramPamela Fischer, Ph.D.
- Design and upcoming activities of the current
evaluationPaul Brounstein, Ph.D. - Questions and discussion
3 Congressional Mandate for the National
Evaluation of the PATH Program
- Section 528 of the Public Health Service (PHS)
Act requires the SAMHSA Administrator to evaluate
the expenditures of PATH grants at least once
every 3 years to ensure they are consistent with
legislative requirements and to recommend changes
to the program design or operations - Evaluation design is determined by the Federal
program staff and conducted through a
competitively awarded contract
3
4 Findings from Previous Evaluations
- Outreach is emphasized by PATH providers and is
carried out conscientiously and with quality - PATH program uses funds appropriately and
effectively - Flexibility is widely praised
- High levels of job satisfaction
- PATH not necessarily recognized as a program as
PATH funds represent only one of many small, but
important funding streams received by providers
5National Evaluation of the 2005 PATH Program
5
Conducted during 2006-9 by the MANILA Consulting
Group, Inc. Walter Leginski, Ph.D., and
Caroline Fernandez, Project Directors
6 Evaluation Questions
- Are services appropriate?
- Are services well-administered?
- Are outcome and process goals achieved?
- increases in the number of persons contacted,
enrolled, and receiving mental health services - clients placed in permanent housing
7Focused Analyses
- PATH and rural homelessness
- Effect of local context on PATH performance
- Housing
- Poverty
- Other Federal funding
8Methods
- 5 VPGs informed the evaluation approach
- emphasis on literal homelessness
- active State management
- specific guidance on reporting and definitions
- focus on exemplary practices
- active support of transition to mainstream
services - 2005 selected for analysis due to completeness of
reports - Data sources included administrative data and
contextual information - Design and interpretation guided by Technical
Panel
9Results
- Consistent with the findings of prior
evaluations, PATH demonstrated that it continues
to meet the three objectives of the evaluation
10Appropriateness of Services
- Enrolled PATH clients match the eligibility
profile and intent of the PATH legislation
exceedingly well - PATH providers offer a wide range of services
from the PATH menu - High proportions of enrolled clients participate
in these services - Engagement of clients into services and their
transition to mainstream services are emphasized
11Quality of Service Administration
- Program structure and approach
- Responsiveness of States and providers to
information requested in applications - Program monitoring
- States efforts toward adoption of Voluntary
Performance Goals (VPGs) - Variety of administrative approaches adopted by
providers featuring collaborations that would
expedite clients access to mainstream services
and housing
12Achievement of Identified Outcome and Process
Goals
- GPRA goal achievement was similar to past years
- Housing collaborations developed to assure access
to affordable housing for PATH clients
13PATH Providers in Rural Locations
- Received smaller awards
- Challenges to collaboration with providers in
resource-poor environments - Rural providers perform equally and in some cases
better than providers in metropolitan and mixed
(urban/rural) areas
14Correlating PATH Performance with Poverty Rates,
Affordable Housing, and Other Targeted
Homelessness Funding Levels
- PATH provider performance was strong, even in
locations where high poverty and lack of
affordable housing were evident - Additional sources of Federal homelessness
funding in the same locale as PATH providers did
not detract from PATH performance and supported
the concept that multiple providers function as a
system of homeless services, enhancing PATH
performance
15Summary
- PATH is a critical funding stream
- PATH leverages resources and systemic approaches
directed to the most vulnerable subpopulations of
homeless persons - As populations and policies change in State and
national environments, the triennial evaluations
are ideal opportunities to assess whether
adjustments are needed to sustain PATHs
important contributions to the welfare of
homeless persons with serious mental illnesses
16For additional information contact
- Pamela J. Fischer, Ph.D.Homeless Programs
BranchCenter for Mental Health
ServicesSubstance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration(240) 276-1901Pamela.Fis
cher_at_samhsa.hhs.gov
17The National Evaluation of the PATH Program
- Paul J. Brounstein, Ph.D.
- MANILA Consulting Group
- Project Director
Presented at the 2010 PATH Grantee Meeting,
Washington, DC
18PATH
- Formula Grant to 50 states, D.C., and 5
Territories - To enable States and providers to better allocate
resources and improve service availability,
accessibility and fill gaps in existing service
system to decrease homelessness for individuals
and families affected by serious mental illness
19Key Services
- Community-based outreach
- Screening and diagnostic services
- Habilitation and rehabilitation services
- Community mental health services
- Alcohol or drug treatment services (for people
with mental illnesses and co-occurring substance
abuse disorders) - Case management services
- Supervisory services in residential settings
- Limited housing services and services to help
clients use housing resources
20Most Common Services
- 88 of grantees offer outreach services
- 82 of grantees offer case management services
21Evaluation
- Congress requires triennial evaluation answering
3 questions - Are services using PATH monies appropriate
(Stewart B. McKinney Homeless Assistance
Amendments Act of 1990)? - Are services well-administered?
- Have process and outcome goals been achieved?
22Current Evaluation Plan goes further and assesses
the role of
- Grant Structure
- Organizational Structure
- Level of Collaboration
- Mix of Services
- Populations Served/Characteristics
- Role of Context on Outcomes
- Urbanicity, Poverty,
- Labor and Housing Markets
23Evaluation Process
- Developed initial evaluation specifications in
response to solicitation for proposals - Assembled expert panel
- Multiple telephone conferences to review plan
- Plan finalized and approved by SAMHSA
-
24Data Requirements
- Answers to the multiple questions and purposes of
the evaluation require data from several
different sources - Archival/secondary data (e.g., Annual reports,
State Applications, IUPs, Census data) - Primary data collection (SPC and provider
surveys, site visit assessments and focus groups
with PATH clients) - Data selected to support analysis of Program Model
25 PATH Logic Model
26Other Measures
- Identification of PATH clients
- Sustained engagement of clients
- Linkage of PATH and other services
- Accessibility to and use of housing and MH care
opportunities - Acceptability of services
- Gaps (training, outreach, assessment, services,
linkages, measurement and reporting - Trends in homelessness (populations, mix of
services) - Identification of innovation and use of best
practices
27Data Sources
- Archival/Secondary Data
- 2009 State Applications and Annual Reports
(context, grant/organizational structure,
population and service characteristics, GPRA) - Bureau of Census (American Community Survey), HUD
(HMIS homelessness count), National Survey of
Homeless Assistance Providers (context, community
and population characteristics)
28Primary Data Collection
- 14 Site Visits
- 4 site visits between 12/6/10 and 1/30/10
- Pre-test in-person interview and online survey
data collection instruments and client focus
group questions for comprehensiveness and
usefulness - Interviews w/SPC, at least 2 provider staff and
1-2 clients - 10 assessment visits after OMB approval
- Detailed assessment of grant structure process
perceived outcomes and service gaps. - Recommendations
29Data Requirements
- Site Assessments
- SPC and key state staff
- 1-8 provider Directors and key staff offering
direct service to clients - Depends on size and distribution of provider
network - Focus group with 8-12 clients re acceptability,
quality, gaps.
30Online Surveys
- Developed with recommendations from SAMHSA
staffers, Expert Panel and pre-test participants - Will be approved by OMB
- Focused on assessing grant implementation
process, throughput, outcomes and gaps - 56 SPCs
- 483 Local providers (1/provider agencystaff who
provide direct face-to-face services)
31Online Surveys cont.
- Survey will require about 30 minutes to complete
- Unique password assigned to respondent will allow
completion over multiple sessions - Your cooperation in completing these surveys is
ESSENTIAL!!! Please help.
32Analyses
- Describe PATH implementations
- Look for commonalities in structure, populations
served and service mix - Create a typology of program implementations
- Relate PATH program models to outcomes to see if
there is differential effectiveness - Identify best practices
- Inform SAMHSA about service, training gaps and
inform decisions on technical assistance still
needed
33Evaluation Project Status
- Developed reliable coding and data extraction
procedures for State applications and IUPs - Currently coding both, expect completion by
mid-February - Preparing Annual Report Data to merge with coded
information extracted from Annual Reports and
State Applications - Pilot testing of protocols and instruments begun
on December 6. Will complete around mid January - OMB draft with revised instruments to SAMHSA by
the end of January - Field site assessments and surveys should begin
by July 2011.
34Questions and Comments
- Lisa Kleppel or Paul Brounstein
- MANILA Consulting Group
- 6707 Old Dominion Drive
- McLean, VA 22101
- 571-633-9797