| MCH Needs Assessment and its Uses in Program Planning: Promising Approaches and ChallengesSeptember 2004 Table of Contents (for on-line viewing only) Printer friendly version (Adobe/.pdf) Background and IntroductionThe Needs Assessment Process The Components of a Needs Assessment Putting Needs Assessment Findings into Practice Challenges and Lessons Learned Appendix A Appendix B Chapter I Introduction and Overview The Title V Needs Assessment, a requirement of the Maternal and Child Health (MCH) Block Grant application, is a critical element of the MCH program planning process. State Title V agencies are required to conduct needs assessments every 5 years and to use the findings of the assessment to identify priorities and to guide resource allocation and program planning. Despite this long-standing requirement, States have varied widely in the rigor, comprehensiveness, and usefulness of their needs assessments. To gain a better understanding of this variation and to identify promising approaches among the States, the Maternal and Child Health Bureau (MCHB) conducted an analysis and evaluation of the States' Title V needs assessment processes. This analysis includes several components:
This report presents the findings of these analyses. It is based on a three-step exploration of the process and outcomes of needs assessments in 15 study States. First, the States' 2000 needs assessments were reviewed and abstracted. The abstraction tool, included in Appendix A, was developed by a contractor and is based on a review of the literature and the 2000 Block Grant guidance, describing the structure of the needs assessment. It includes information about the process used to conduct the needs assessment; the quantitative and qualitative indicators of need; the assessment of system capacity; and the priorities selected based on the needs assessment. Next, the States' 2004 Block Grant applications were reviewed and abstracted, in order to analyze the relationship between the needs assessment findings and the services provided and funded through the MCH Block Grant. These reviews were followed by in-depth interviews with State officials regarding the process of needs assessment, priority setting, and planning and resource allocation. The interview guide used for these discussions is included here as Appendix B. The 15 study States were chosen based on interviews with representatives of the 10 HRSA Field Offices to determine which States in each region were best positioned to offer lessons, examples, and promising practices to other States. The goal, therefore, was not to identify the “best'needs assessments or to rate the assessments' overall quality; rather, it was to identify geographically and demographically diverse States from across the country that were likely to offer ideas and practices that would be useful to others. The 15 States selected for the study were: Alaska, California, Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Puerto Rico, Rhode Island, Virginia, Washington, and Wisconsin. However, three of these—Alaska, Minnesota, and Puerto Rico—were unable to participate in the last phase of the study (the follow-up interview) because of bureaucratic reorganizations, staff changes, and other factors. Therefore, the findings presented here are primarily confined to the remaining 12 States. While States have made great progress in the development of their needs assessments and many have promising practices to offer, many components of the needs assessment are consistently challenging. This report reviews a number of these issues, summarizing our findings across the study States and highlighting those States that reported innovative solutions to these challenges. The next chapter describes the structural aspects of the needs assessment process, including establishment of leadership, involvement of stakeholders, inclusion of local-level needs assessments, and coordination with other systems within the State. The following chapter examines specific components of the needs assessment, including data sources, data analysis methods, assessment of capacity, and establishment of priorities. Chapter IV discusses how the findings of the needs assessment are applied in planning and policymaking, and finally, the report concludes with a summary of the lessons learned by and recommendations of State officials regarding the needs assessment process. CHAPTER II The Needs Assessment Process While a strong substantive analysis of needs and resources and a clear linkage of priorities to current needs comprise the core of a needs assessment document, the key to a successful outcome that garners support for MCH needs is the process established to carry out needs assessment. In other words, the process is as important as the product. Granted, a continuous focus on how the needs assessment is conducted and who is involved may complicate the seemingly straightforward process of producing a needs assessment report. However, the literature and the experience of the Title V States we interviewed shows that the following five process elements can make the needs assessment findings more comprehensive, applicable, and acceptable to the families and communities they will ultimately affect.
Few of these process elements were described in the States 2000 and 2004 updated needs assessment reports. We learned most about the processes States used in the development of their 2000 needs assessments and the process plans they have for 2005 through the follow-up intensive telephone interviews. A. Clear Leadership, Responsibility, and Oversight Several States described the use of a leadership or management team to oversee their needs assessment process. For example, in Oklahoma, an MCH/CSHCN Leadership Team oversaw the State's needs assessment. In Virginia, the process was led by the Management Team of the Office of Family Health Services, which oversees the MCH and Preventive Health Services Block Grants. Since the 2000 MCH needs assessment, many states have established an ongoing needs assessment team within the Title V agency that annually reviews needs and priorities and works together to develop a plan for the more comprehensive 5-year needs assessment in 2005. For example, beginning in January 2004, a team from Florida's Division of Family Health Services developed a step-by-step Title V Needs Assessment workplan with clear assignments of roles and responsibilities for the 5-year needs assessment, including how the State advisory group and other stakeholders' views would be incorporated into the process.
B. Technical Expertise States' 2000 needs assessments rarely described the technical resources used to conduct data analyses, although a few mentioned the use of both internal and external sources of support. Colorado's 2000 needs assessment referred to the use of an MCH Information Specialist to assist in the analysis an interpretation of data. New Jersey's 2000 assessment described the use of the State's Center for Health Statistics and the MCH Consortium's Data Work Group. The Kansas Title V agency, which depended on technical expertise of an outside consultant group for its needs assessment analyses from 2000 to 2003, has recently hired in-house staff with epidemiological expertise and plans to conduct most, if not all, of the data analysis and interpretation of the data internally, using outside experts only to assist staff and stakeholders in setting priorities. C. Community Involvement All States recognize that involving key stakeholders in the MCH needs assessment process is beneficial to their goals. State officials report that they strongly believe that the involvement of diverse perspectives—such as those of consumers, providers, representatives of public and private organizations with potential resources, MCH researchers, elected officials, and advocates for women and children—enables the process of identifying needs setting priorities to be more collaborative and responsive to the public and other stakeholders. The involvement of stakeholders also educates the community and builds a constituency among providers, consumers and others involved in improving the well-being of mothers and children. The involvement of outside stakeholders in States' Title V needs assessments has varied in the past. Most collected at least some information from consumers or providers through onetime special data collection efforts for the 2000 needs assessment. All study States reported that consumers and stakeholders were at least involved in the review of the MCH needs assessment document or reviewed a summary of the data to provide input on which needs which be Title V priorities. Most State officials thought this was an area of needs assessment process that they could improve upon for 2005. The major avenues for stakeholder involvement in State needs assessments included the following:
Many States reported soliciting input from a range of perspectives. In their most recent needs assessment, for example, California officials involved a variety of stakeholders in a Title V planning group, held interviews with stakeholders, and conducted surveys of providers and parents of children with special health care needs. At the same time, a few States advised that involving stakeholders at the State or local level in the MCH needs assessment and planning process must be done with caution. Their involvement may raise unrealistic expectations if the State does not have the capability to address the needs or problems raised. However, another State suggested that involving stakeholders during a time of limited resources is critical so that the stakeholders are involved in a process that is designed to reach agreement on priorities for expenditure of limited public funds. D. Creating a Local-Level Process to Inform Statewide Assessment Most of the study States are playing an important role in supporting local needs assessments and planning by providing their local or regional health agencies with guidelines, access to data, and technical assistance for conducting local level needs assessment. These public entities are asked to involve consumers, providers and other stakeholders in the needs assessment process, with some States more successful in this effort than others. Examples of the types of local entities that are asked to conduct needs assessment include:
As part of the State MCH needs assessments, in each of these examples, the Title V agency works to incorporate the local-level assessments into a statewide picture of the services available and current MCH needs, and uses the local information to target and tailor technical assistance and training. However, some States cautioned that it is difficult to systematically present and incorporate the local assessments because they contain a large amount of qualitative information on needs and system capacity. To remedy this for the 2005 needs assessment, one of these States was considering the use of qualitative analytic software to analyze the content of the local assessments. E. Coordination with Other Systems A few of the study States described how an integrated approach to planning across State agencies has helped garner and maintain support for MCH programming. For example, in Rhode Island, the director of the Title V agency participates in an executive-level interagency body called the Children's Cabinet. The Cabinet, which was created by legislative mandate and reports to the Governor, is composed of the directors of each State agency serving children and families along with a representative of the State's largest private children's advocacy and resource organization (RI Kids Count). The Cabinet members work together to plan and monitor State policies and legislative initiatives affecting children. They have established a common set of goals and performance measures for all State agencies working to improve the health and welfare of children. The Title V director indicated that his agency's involvement in the Cabinet is critical to improving MCH in Rhode Island and the goals and priorities developed by the Cabinet drive MCH policy and program planning in the State. Their active participation in the Cabinet has increased the profile of MCH issues and systems and has helped the health department to think "out of the box" of public health. Their participation has also built support across both public and private agencies and in the State legislature for the maintenance of existing MCH systems and services, and has increased support for seed money toward the development of new infrastructures for emergent MCH health needs. Another example of the integration of State MCH needs assessment into a broader planning process comes from Iowa. In this State, the MCH needs assessment process is tied to the goals and actions steps outlined in Healthy Iowans 2010, a State companion to Healthy People 2010. Because State MCH staff and stakeholders have been involved in documenting the State's MCH needs and defining priority MCH-related goals for Healthy Iowans 2010, the State's Title V MCH priorities have always been consistent with and drawn from this broader State public health planning document. At the same time, the State Title V leadership in Iowa, which directs an ongoing MCH needs assessment process, is incorporating issues that have emerged since the first publication of Healthy Iowans 2010 into the revised version to be released in 2005. Virginia's Title V agency works collaboratively in a State-level interagency planning committee focused specifically on MCH issues. The committee comprises representatives of the State Medicaid agency, Title V agency, Social Services and Mental Health that meet quarterly to address MCH issues that cut across program lines. They have worked together on a volunteer basis to successfully alleviate barriers to Medicaid enrollment for pregnant women. The group is now examining how the State can improve screening for substance abuse, domestic violence and maternal depression by private providers. These examples illustrate how a systematic needs assessment process that has clear roles and leadership, includes staff with technical analytic expertise, involves diverse community stakeholders, and that is integrated with other local and State planning efforts for the MCH population may greatly enhance the potential for the needs assessment findings to be translated into program planning for the development of an effective MCH system. There are two broad substantive component areas that are essential to any needs assessment: assessment of needs and the capacity of the system to meet identified needs, and establishment of priorities. In the following chapter, the contractor identified criteria for a successful assessment in each component area, analyzed the abstracts of 15 States' 2000 Title needs assessments in accordance with these criteria, and reviewed new directions or methods that under consideration by the States for their 2005 needs assessments. CHAPTER III The Components of a Needs Assessment A public health needs assessment does not stand alone; rather it is a critical step in a larger process of program planning and evaluation. As Stevens and Gillam (1998) note, "the purpose of needs assessment in health care is to gather the information required to bring about change beneficial to the health of the population." Within this broader framework, acknowledging that the components of a needs assessment cannot be separated from the processes used to develop it and the presentation and application of its findings, in this chapter we focus in on the needs assessment process itself, particularly three components:
The following sections of this chapter discuss these three broad components of needs assessment. In each section, criteria for successfully carrying out each component are identified, based on the literature and lessons learned from the contractor's abstraction of the study States' Title needs assessment and planning documents and follow-up telephone interviews with most of these States. Also included are examples drawn from the experiences of the States that may be useful or applicable to other State and local MCH needs efforts. A. Assessment of Health Needs 1. Indicators of Need One of the elements of a successful needs assessment is the use of a range of health indicators of the three priority MCH populations: pregnant women, mothers, and infants; children; and children with special health care needs. In addition, crosscutting measures of the health of the population as a whole can reveal needs that affect MCH populations. These health indicators can expose the strengths and weaknesses of a population and reveal health issues that need to be addressed. In order to achieve this, a thorough needs assessment should include the following criteria:
The indicators commonly reported by States are displayed in Table 1 below. Very few States addressed all of the above criteria in their needs assessments; more commonly, States were thorough in particular areas. Although none of the States included data on all 18 of the national performance measures, twelve States did address at least two or more. The most commonly addressed were “the rate of birth for teenagers aged 15 through 17 years' and “the percent of very low birth weight infants among all live births,'each measured by nine States. Also common were “percent of 19- to 35-month-olds who have received the full schedule of age-appropriate immunizations' and “percent of children without health insurance,'each measured by eight States. “Percentage of mothers who breastfeed their infants at hospital discharge'was measured by seven States, and “the rate of suicide deaths among youths 15-19 and “percent of infants born to pregnant women receiving prenatal care beginning in the first trimester” were each measured by six States. Many of the needs assessments included demographic data to provide an overall view of the State's population. Some of the statistics that were commonly mentioned by States include: population characteristics, poverty rate, Medicaid and/or SCHIP eligibility, insured rate, and Head Start enrollment. Every State also included typical health status indicators for the MCH population. Some of the frequently mentioned indicators for pregnant women, mothers, and infants include: rate of tobacco, alcohol, or drug use before or during pregnancy; prevalence of domestic violence during pregnancy; rate of birth defects (especially neural tube defects); and rate of LBW/VLBW births. Some common health status indicators for children include: occurrence of overweight/obesity; youth alcohol, drug, and tobacco use; seatbelt use among youth; and the prevalence of weapons and violence in schools. States included far fewer indicators of health status for CSHCN. Some that were measured include: asthma occurrence and hospitalization rates, common conditions/diagnoses, severity of conditions, ability to perform age-appropriate activities, and availability of specialty providers. Every State also included outcome measures as indicators of need in their assessments. The number and type of outcome measures varied widely among states, and very few states included outcome measures for CSHCN. Although many States included outcome measures for pregnant women, mothers and infants, there was little commonality among states in the measures that were chosen. A few of the most common include infant mortality rate, maternal mortality rate, and perinatal mortality rate. The outcome measures for children were slightly more homogeneous among States and include: child and teen death rates, injury-related death rate, adolescent homicide rate, motor vehicle crash death rate, and total number of drowning deaths. Some of the outcome measures for CSHCN include asthma death rate, infant mortality rate by birth defect, and the percentage of births affected by fetal alcohol syndrome.
Seven States included qualitative measures, although most included data for only one or two indicators. Florida included five qualitative health indicators, most of which were measured through consumer feedback. Two Florida indicators were measured through consumer focus groups (the factors affecting poorer pregnancy outcomes for black women and possible medical reasons for racial disparities in infant mortality), and two were measured through a consumer survey (stability of CSHCN health, and overall rating of the health status of CSHCN). The Wisconsin needs assessment included key informant interviews of county health department directors, tribal health center directors, and the director of the Milwaukee City Health Department. These interviews enabled State officials to obtain qualitative data on health care access, child care availability, dental access for children, and the increasing number of special needs children in the State. Many States moved beyond general population data and typical MCH health indicators in their needs assessments, and also used a variety of interesting and original indicators to measure the health status of their MCH populations. For instance, the Alaska needs assessment included a measure of the percentage of women receiving breast exams or pap smears, the percentage of WIC participants with anemia, and the percentage of mothers who binge drink after delivery. Colorado included the percentage of women with inadequate weight gain during pregnancy, the percentage of mothers who put their infants to sleep on their backs, and the percentage of WIC clients who are classified as obese. The Iowa needs assessment included the percentage of safety seats that are properly installed, and Minnesota included several interesting indicators such as the percentage of adolescent pregnancies that end in abortion and the percentage of parents who read or tell stories to their children three or more days a week. The New Jersey needs assessment included the percentage of pediatric cases of vaccine-preventable illness, as did Virginia, which also included the rate of non-induced pregnancy terminations and the proportion of women eating more than five servings of fruits and vegetables a day. Overall, the Rhode Island needs assessment addressed all of the criteria mentioned above. It included half of the national performance measures, as well as a qualitative measure of the knowledge, attitudes, and practices of adults with regard to their relationships with their teenagers, obtained through a statewide telephone survey of parents. Other interesting Rhode Island indicators were: the prevalence of open neural tube defects, the type of contraception used by women at family planning clinics, the percent of children who did not visit a dentist in the past year, reasons for childhood hospitalizations, and children's use of safety seats, safety belts, and bicycle helmets. A number of indicators for CSHCN included: the rate of babies born with birth defects, the ten most frequent congenital anomalies among newborns, and the number of children hospitalized for brain-related injury (and of those, the proportion requiring institutional or professional at-home care). The Kansas needs assessment included an array of indicators and addressed all of the above criteria except for qualitative measures. Kansas addressed almost all of the national performance measures. Their variety of indicators included: the percentage of children from WIC households who are overweight, the rate of safety equipment use among children, and the percentage of CSHCN patients who had to travel more than 100 miles to receive services. The indicators chosen focused on the MCH population without clouding the assessment with an excess of generalized data. 2. Data Collection and Analysis Process Key to the construction of a successful Title V needs assessment is the identification and use of available data sources to describe the elements of MCH needs. Also important is the development of additional sources of data when need can not be adequately analyzed and presented with what is most readily available. The critical components of the data collection and analysis process include:
Most of the study States were able to use a combination of State level and more geographically targeted data. Several States (e.g., Colorado, California, Florida, Iowa, Minnesota, and Oklahoma ) were able to use State-level data from national data collection efforts such as PRAMS, the BRFSS, the YRBS, and the Youth Tobacco Survey. Many States used State Health Department data for their needs assessment that was captured on the county or health district level. States also had access to or developed specialized State-level data collection efforts that were able to report generalizable data on a more local level. In Colorado, a State marketplace analysis was conducted, while in California exclusive breastfeeding was reportable on a sub-State level because the results were taken from their Maternal and Infant Health Assessment Survey. In Florida, the KidCare survey provided local level data and the same was true in Oklahoma from the Toddler Survey. While all needs assessments reflected the use of quantitative data, some needs assessment documents relied very little on qualitative data. For the most part, however, needs assessments reflected a combination of quantitative and qualitative sources. In Florida, for example, in addition to the quantitative data, information and results from Healthy Start Coalition service delivery plans, the Family Voices Survey, and a key informant survey on State MCH needs were incorporated into the needs assessment. Kansas conducted interviews and Minnesota included results from an Urban Institute family survey, while New Jersey incorporated data from FIMR teams and the Family Voices survey. Iowa conducted focus groups on children's mental health care needs. New Mexico used interviews and focus groups pertaining to transition services for youth with special health care needs for the needs assessment and Washington utilized results from focus groups with parents of children with special health care needs. Oklahoma conducted focus groups around the State with 125 recipients of assorted Title V services.
Wisconsin represented a bit of an anomaly. They used some quantitative data but very little. The quantitative data they presented was chosen to illustrate the concerns expressed in key informant interviews that were conducted in order to find out what needs should be focused on. Many States used data from sources other than their health department. Some of these were governmental and some were extra-governmental. Predominant among other departments was education, often the focal point for the collection and analysis of YRBS (middle and high school) data. Additionally, California reported using Family Voices data as well as Police Record Reports. Florida used the Florida KidCare survey as well as well as the Family Voices survey; New Jersey also used the Family Voices survey as a source of data. Rhode Island used KidsCount data, while Iowa , working with the Department of Social Services, utilized the results of newly enrolled SCHIP families regarding dental care access. In Kansas, data were obtained from KS Dept of Human Resources, the KDHE Injury Prevention Program as well as from Medicaid claims, the State departments of Education, Office of Judicial Administration, Social and Rehabilitative Services, and Transportation. Kansas' s data were also obtained from the Kansas Hospital Association and the physician licensure database. Minnesota, in addition to using public safety data, worked with the State planning agency as well. They also obtained data from Abbott Labs and the Urban Institute. Oklahoma worked with the Health Care Authority as well as the Department of Public Safety, while Virginia used reports obtained from the Department of Social Services as well as the State police.
3. Identifying New and Innovative Data Sources In discussing their plans for the Title V 2005 needs assessment, State officials expressed confidence about their ability to analyze quantitative data and enthusiastic about new quantitative and qualitative data sources available to them, including a new emphasis in some States on gathering information from consumers and providers. Major new sources of note included:
A number of States also hope to utilize data from other programs to assess the needs of their MCH populations, although accessing such data can be problematic due to confidentiality concerns. One State plans to use Food Stamp Program data, while another has tried to access Medicaid/SCHIP data without success. 4. Capacity Assessment For strategic program planning, a state's assessment must examine not only the trends and emerging health issues among the maternal and child health population, but also include an assessment of the services and resources that are available and needed to help the Title V agency address those issues. A comprehensive analysis of MCH capacity should answer five assessment questions:
While none of the State documents reviewed addressed all of these five components of capacity assessment within the needs assessment portion of their block grant application, they each addressed at least one. The strength of the States' capacity assessments fell primarily in their analysis of the availability of health care and related enabling services for the target MCH populations. Overall, these assessments were weak in assessing the needs for core public health services and their internal capacity to carry out these functions. Further, while several States appropriately linked their analysis of capacity to their ability to address their identified priority health needs, most did not. Hence, the goal of capacity assessment -- i.e., to analyze the ability of the current MCH systems and services to address the MCH's population's service needs at all levels of the MCH pyramid, was often overlooked in the Title V Year 2000 needs assessments. The sections below provide a flavor of the types of capacity assessment, the relative depth of these analyses, and examples of data sources that were used when analyzing MCH capacity in the States. 5. Assessing Availability of Resources and Services The majority of States' needs assessments included some level of analysis of the availability of health providers and direct health care services for specific MCH target populations. As illustrated in Table 2, the states varied considerably in the number of services and types of providers that were the focus of their assessment. a. Direct Health Care Services Nine States analyzed the availability of primary care providers (physicians and/or allied health professionals) and mapped or listed the federally designated health professionals' shortage areas (HPSAs) within their State. The availability of dentists to serve low-income children was a significant capacity indicator in six State needs assessments. These States measured dental provider availability using one or more of the following measures: the proportion of dentists and clinics providing some Medicaid dental services for children, the number of dentists serving children at outpatient dental clinics, and federally designated Dental HPSAs. The majority of States also examined the number of MCH services available through one or more types of institutional providers or service settings. When writing up this part of their needs assessment, most States simply described the size of the service capacity, as measured by the number of particular services or clinic sites and in some cases the numbers of clients receiving a particular type of service. However, only a few States looked at the geographic distribution of services and analyzed areas with gaps in services. Fewer still had data comparing the amount of available services to the size of the population in need of those particular services.
As illustrated in Table 2, seven States focused their service capacity assessment on the availability of specialty and subspecialty services for CSHCN, a population group for which assurance of comprehensive coordinated service is a key performance measure for State Title V agencies. Four States looked at the availability of a primary care, medical home for CSHCN, an important measure of service availability for CSHCN. In California, availability of a medical home was able to be assessed as a proportion of all CSHCN in the State system, based on service data input into the CSHCN program database. The other three States based their findings on the availability of a medical home using data from surveys and focus groups with parents of CSHCN. Because the majority of States have moved away from the provision or administration of direct primary care services for the MCH population, only four States' needs assessments assess the supply (number and geographic distribution) of publicly subsidized outpatient primary health care services for the MCH population. These States happen to be ones that partner with community health clinics and free clinics for the provision of direct MCH primary care services. A smaller number of States assessed the availability of several other types of direct health services. For example, two States assessed the availability and accessibility of high-risk neonatal intensive care services and birth centers, based on the geographic distribution of those services and data on the proportion of VLBW infants who were delivered at high risk neonatal intensive care facilities. Three States looked at the existing service capacity to provide mental health services for children. Two States analyzed the availability of publicly subsidized family planning services for low-income women and teenagers. This was measured by comparing the number of women receiving subsidized family planning services to the population in need, using a standardized formula developed by the Alan Guttmacher Institute to determine the size of the population of women in need. Other States examined capacity by looking at genetic services and school health services. Eleven of the needs assessments identified remaining gaps in health insurance coverage and benefits for women and children and selected improving access to health care services as a priority need. Given the recent implementation of SCHIP in 2000 (when these needs assessments were submitted), most of the documents reviewed included a discussion of recent expansions in eligibility for public insurance programs, the specific eligibility criteria for Medicaid, SCHIP and other State child health insurance programs, and how children identified as having a special health care need were covered in these programs. Most States included available data on the number and rate of uninsured children. One State, Washington, looked specifically at the uninsurance rate among CSHCN. Iowa, Rhode Island, New Jersey, New Mexico, Colorado, Washington and Virginia looked not only at the size of the newly eligible populations but also calculated the number of eligible women and children not enrolled in public insurance programs. They also emphasized the need for new or improved efforts to link these women and families to insurance programs. b. Enabling Services In addition to monitoring insurance coverage for women and children and providing outreach to promote enrollment in public insurance programs, many of the States are still providing case management or enabling/supportive services. These come though local health departments and grants to other public or private organizations for targeted services to high-risk groups. The size of the programs and various types of services provided in the States were described in six States' needs assessments.
Eight of the State needs assessments examined the availability and unmet need for family support services to families of CSHCN, including respite care, service coordination, case management and parent-to-parent networks. This measure of capacity was usually assessed descriptively with data on the number of each type of service available and number of clients served, supplemented with information from parent surveys regarding the perceived availability and unmet needs for family support. Minnesota included an assessment of the size of the unmet need for crisis respite care services, based on the average number of families on the waiting list for respite care services. Four States included an assessment of the capacity of the WIC program using data on the numbers and proportion of the eligible population unable to be served in the most recent year. One of these States, Washington, also noted the number of children receiving health and nutrition screening services at Head Start and State-funded early childhood programs. c. Population-Based Services Documenting capacity and unmet needs for population-based services is a more difficult task compared to that for direct or enabling services because there are less data available on the size of the population reached and the population in need. In fact, the needs assessments reviewed provide little analysis of the existing capacity in population-based services. Instead, most include a listing of many population-based services they provide or contract out for, such as lead screening, newborn biochemical screening, newborn hearing screening, injury prevention programs, oral health education and screening programs, SIDS public education, and folic acid education campaigns. Only in a few cases are data provided on the numbers reached or unmet need for population-based services, for example in the area of childhood immunizations. While not analyzing the capabilities or reach of existing population-based services, many States have identified priority health needs that could be addressed through enhanced population-based services. For example, based on extensive survey data showing limited use of dental services by low-income children, Florida identified the need for expanded publicly funded dental screening programs for children. Similarly, using key informant and parent survey data, Minnesota and Rhode Island identified the need for enhanced early identification and tracking systems for infants and toddlers, special education services for school-age children with disabilities, and transitional services for adolescent CSHCN. In light of alarming indicators regarding substance abuse among pregnant women and domestic violence in Puerto Rico, the Commonwealth's needs assessment identified a need for new population-based screening services for substance abuse among pregnant women and other public awareness, screening and intervention programs to address the issue of domestic violence. Minnesota's needs assessment highlighted data on poverty, hunger and homelessness as risk factors associated with poor health and mental health problems for the MCH population. Minnesota identified a need for new population-based health education approaches that focus on promotion of healthy community conditions and family support to address the underlying causes of poor health outcomes, and raise awareness of mental health problems and resources. d. Infrastructure-Building Services While all State Title V needs assessments - at least briefly - mention their involvement in infrastructure building services, only nine States (New Jersey, Minnesota, Iowa, Kansas, Florida, Colorado, Rhode Island, Washington, and Virginia) incorporated any analysis of their capacity and unmet needs in this important core MCH public health function. Each of these States looked at their data collection systems and ways in which the quality and types of information collected can be improved. They looked at ways to integrate or link multiple datasets for assessing the MCH's populations needs and examining causal associations between client characteristics and their health status and outcomes. Many also looked at the need to build local infrastructure for data collection and analysis, as well as local planning. The second most commonly examined infrastructure-building service was the State's quality assurance functions. Florida, California, Washington, Minnesota, Virginia and Iowa examined one or more of the following aspects of quality assurance: standards of care, quality monitoring and quality improvement efforts, and performance-based contracting and accountability. These six States and Rhode Island also looked at the need for training of health care providers and in some States there was a focus on health and safety training for childcare providers. New Jersey, Kansas, Rhode Island, Minnesota, and Washington identified the need for the State to continue, expand or initiate consumer engagement, at the community level and in Statewide quality review and planning functions. While several States discussed the need for broad consumer participation and engagement, many focused more specifically on the inclusion of communities of color, new immigrant groups, and on supporting parent-to-parent networks with families of CSHCN. 6. Assessing Accessibility and Quality of Available Services The majority of States did not assess the accessibility and quality of available services. Of the group that did, the most information was available on accessibility and quality of services for CSHCN. Florida, Minnesota, Virginia and Washington incorporated extensive information in their needs assessment on access issues for CSHCN. These included the accessibility of: primary care, specialty services, appropriate tertiary care, and assistive technologies in various geographic regions of the State, as well as parents' perceptions of provider attitudes and quality of the primary care and care coordination services available to their children. Data from local capacity assessments provided a rich source of data for Florida to assess factors affecting the accessibility of prenatal and pediatric care. Iowa conducted a special needs assessment to examine factors affecting the accessibility of mental health services for children. The cultural competency and accessibility of MCH services to minority and multicultural groups was the focus of qualitative data collection efforts in Iowa , Florida Wisconsin, Minnesota, New Mexico and New Jersey and Virginia. Minnesota, New Mexico and Virginia conducted surveys of service providers at publicly funded clinics and consumer focus groups on the issue of cultural competency and ways to improve accessibility of MCH services for families from other cultures, including communities of color. 7. Examining Structural and Environmental Factors Leading to Change in Title V Capacity Needs The environmental factors and policies with the most effect on Title V in recent years were the expansion of Medicaid and SCHIP and the shift to managed care and their potential effect on Title V services and health care. Seven States looked at the changing role of Title V as most Medicaid eligible women and children have been required to participate in a managed care arrangement. Capacity-related issues raised include: the need for ensuring MCH interests are addressed in State Medicaid contracts with managed care organizations, potential legal controversies regarding population-based MCH data collection and monitoring in a managed care environment, involvement of local health departments as contractors in the provision of primary care, the State's continued role in quality assurance and monitoring, the continued need for assurance of care coordination for CSHCN, the need to focus on enabling and population-based services to reduce racial disparities in healthcare access and outcomes, and the need to improve cultural competency of the existing system serving women and children. Several States also discussed the changing demographics of their MCH population as a result of recent influxes of immigrants from many different parts of the world. Given that the new immigrants were coming from many cultures and speak many different languages, these States highlighted the need to focus on improving the multi-cultural competency of staff. Secondly, they focused on the importance of using multi-cultural competency as a standard in designing and reviewing the quality of direct, enabling and population-based MCH services. 8. Assessing Internal Organizational Capacity The definition of capacity assessment in public health includes and internal organizational assessment, that includes an assessment of a health department's management, legal authorities, infrastructure, staffing, inter and intra-organizational relations, its cultural competency and other organizational resources. While the tools for assessing MCH internal capacity are still in the developmental stage, we assessed the extent to which internal organizational needs were documented as part of the needs assessments and thus could be used to inform the strategic planing process and decisions about allocation of resources. As noted in the section above on infrastructure-building services, most of the States examined their internal capacity for data collection and data analysis. Specific enhancements to State data systems and capacity included the need for infrastructure changes to allow MCH link databases and to make data more available and usable by local health departments and researchers. A few States discussed the need for specialized data collection efforts including PRAMS, maternal mortality reviews, fetal and infant mortality reviews, child mortality reviews, and special surveys to allow the State to better assess concerns such as domestic violence, perinatal substance abuse, and youth-risk and health-promotion behaviors. Several States identified specific gaps in internal staff capacity, e.g. in the area of monitoring the quality of care for CSHCN in managed care, in MCH epidemiology, and staff, interpreters and resources to conduct outreach, translate materials and adapt culturally specific health assessment or treatment approaches. Finally, while most States provided long lists of Title V agency partnerships and advisory committees, only a few States assessed the weaknesses or gaps in their collaborative relationships. For example, Washington and Minnesota cite the need for Title V to enhance its role, in collaboration with the Department of Education, for the planning and assurance of transitional services for adolescents with special health care needs. Virginia cites the need for improved coordination between the Departments of Health and Mental Health, Mental Retardation and Substance Abuse Services as well as the need for improved coordination and integration of various public and private systems of care for CSHCN. 9. New Directions for States' Capacity Assessment While capacity assessment was not a focus of many States' needs assessments in 2000, it is of growing interest to many of the study States. For instance, in Rhode Island, the Title V agency is looking more closely at ways to measure the capacity of systems to provide a medical home for all children. In addition, since 2000 all of the study States have received State Early Childhood Comprehensive Systems (SECCS) Planning Grants funded by MCHB. States have used these grants to assess capacity at the system level using a variety of data sources, including primary data collection (interviews and focus groups) with stakeholders, resource mapping, program and provider data, and other State and local data sources. Several State officials told us that they would be incorporating these findings into their 2005 needs assessment. Some States are also beginning to look at the capacity of the existing systems to provided needed oral health care for children, particularly uninsured children and those with public coverage. Internal capacity assessment has taken on a greater importance as State Title V agencies continue to evolve from providers of direct service to the public health functions of education, infrastructure building, assurance and monitoring. Many of the study States have or are planning to utilize the recently revised and streamlined Capacity Assessment for State Title V (CAST-5) tools in this effort. Florida and Colorado, for example, were pilot States for the complete set of revised CAST-5 instruments, and California, New Jersey and Virginia have used or are planning to use a number of the revised CAST-5 tools for their 2005 needs assessment. Colorado officials particularly appreciated being able to select the modules of the tool that were the most useful to them; their analysis highlighted needs in the areas of data capacity and staff capacity in particular. While CAST-5 provides a useful tool for assessing internal capacity, many States reported assessment of capacity across the system as a whole to be a challenge. Washington State officials noted that, since their agency does not provide direct services, they have no influence on the capacity of the system to serve patients. In addition, although they were able to discuss issues such as the effect of environmental changes such as managed care and welfare reform on access to care, they did not have clear measures of the accessibility, availability, and affordability of services. California officials also noted that they relied on anecdotal reports regarding access to providers, particularly for CSHCN, in the absence of quantifiable measures. New Mexico has access to a number of traditional capacity indicators due only to the unfortunate fact that a majority of their counties are designated as health provider shortage areas. Table 2: States' Assessment of Supply and Availability Of Direct Health Care and Enabling Services for MCH Populations B. Setting Priorities and Putting It All Together The next step in the development of a successful needs assessment is synthesizing the findings of the various analytical efforts into a unified, coherent statement of the State's MCH priorities. This is a complex task, as it involves balancing and integrating information from various sources, along with the less empirically-based preferences and priorities of a wide range of stakeholders. The presence of the following elements may help to simplify this task.
Few of the State needs assessment documents reviewed incorporated all of these criteria. The first, the use of local-level input, was discussed in several of the assessments reviewed. For example, the Montana State Needs Assessment work group conducted special surveys to assess State, local, private health, education, and social work providers' as well as consumers' opinions concerning priority MCH needs for children with special health care needs and for the larger MCH population. They included the results of these surveys in the final prioritization process. Similarly, in Wisconsin, local health department directors were asked, “What new needs have emerged as a priority over the last 5 years?'This information was tabulated, compared to prior years' results, and ranked according to the frequency the priority was mentioned. The resulting priority needs were arranged in a table, marked according to the type of service, and the MCH population affected. For example, the first priority, dental access for children, is recorded as an enabling service involving children and CSHCN. Several States described the use of a specific protocol and a series of criteria to guide the selection of priorities. In general, the criteria used reflect the impact of the health issue (including prevalence rates, total numbers of people affected, and effect on morbidity and mortality, and the economic impact of the problem); its susceptibility to intervention (including the existence and feasibility of interventions to address the issue and the existence of known risk factors for the problem); and practical concerns about monitoring and addressing the need (including the ability to track and measure the indicator and the availability of resources to address the problem). The processes and criteria used by several of the study States to select priorities are described in more detail below.
The State held four of these retreats, each including experts from DOH, the LHJs, State universities, advocacy groups, parents, other State agencies, and other stakeholders. The first three retreats focused on the specific priority populations of mothers and infants, children and adolescents, and children with special health care needs. At each retreat, participants were presented with needs assessment findings and asked to rank the health indicators according to the Hanlon-Pickett prioritization method. This method involves rating the size and seriousness of each health issue, the effectiveness of available interventions, and the State's political, economic, and logistical ability to address the issue in order to assign a priority level to each indicator. These initial retreats produced a set of seven to ten ranked priority health needs for each population. Finally, a retreat was held in November 1999 to distill these three priority lists into a single list of 15 State priorities for OMCH using a similar process. From this list, the final list of ten priorities for the Block Grant was chosen. The criteria used to make this final selection included: -the prevalence of the problem both in terms of rates and absolute numbers of people affected -the seriousness of the issue in terms of morbidity and mortality -the economic impact of the issue and the extent of resources available to address the problem. Finally, the participants at the retreat decided to prioritize issues that were precursors to other problems, in order to focus on preventing the problems that were farthest “upstream.'Using these criteria, the final list of ten priorities was selected.
The planning group members then individually scored each problem in the pool for each of the five criteria (based on a three-point scoring scale for each criterion). Then the group's grand total scores were added up for each problem and the problems were numerically ranked. The MCH Planning Group gathered to discuss the quantitative results and decide by consensus if there were any changes needed and if other considerations needed to be taken into account in determining the final list of priorities. The CSHCN planning group utilized a second, primarily qualitative process. A group of 14 key regional and central office staff engaged in a brainstorming exercise to identify specific areas of CSHCN services that needed improvement, based on the quantitative data and their own expertise and experience. The group then used a two-stage voting process to prioritize the new pool of capacity needs in each level of the MCH Pyramid. To finalize the list of five CSHCN priority needs, after the voting process the group discussed the results to determine if any additional factors needed to be considered and a consensus process resulted in some changes to the vote-determined list.
A few States effectively integrated the capacity assessment analysis with the assessment of priority needs. The New Jersey Needs Assessment workgroup did a very thorough job merging these two concepts throughout their document. Throughout the capacity assessment analysis, including direct health care, enabling, population-based, and infrastructure building services, they include the service structures that are in place to target the nine State priorities. For example, targeting the improvement of access and utilization of preventive and primary care health services (priority need #1), the State depicts the expansion of enabling services such as NJKidCare, a service system supplementing Medicaid within the State. Other programs including Healthy Mothers/Healthy Babies programs, HealthStart, and Healthy Start are also in place to reduce the barriers to health care. As required by the Block Grant guidance, all of the States included a list of priorities developed through the needs assessment process. The States' priorities varied in scope and specificity: some were broad, overarching priorities while others applied to a specific issue. Most of the States' priorities can be categorized into three broad areas: (1) health status; (2) access to care; and (3) capacity. Table 3 below shows the priorities that were most commonly mentioned by the study States.
A needs assessment must not be seen simply as a document, but as a step in a process of systems development. The needs assessment should ideally result in the development of alternative interventions to address the priorities and the selection and implementation of appropriate and viable interventions, the allocation of resources and development of systems to support those interventions, and the establishment of a performance measurement system to evaluate the impact of the chosen approaches. The next chapter focuses on how the study States have applied the results of their needs assessment, with specific examples of what contributed to their successes in applying needs assessment priorities to program planning, as well as the factors that pose challenges to the States who wish to shift resources to new priorities and emerging needs. Chapter IV Putting Needs Assessment Findings into Practice A major product of the needs assessment process is the list of 10 priorities that is submitted to MCHB on Form 14 of the Title V Block Grant Application. While these are a required element of the block grant, States vary in their approaches to measuring and using the priorities for planning and resource allocation, a critical step in their ability to put the findings of the needs assessment into practice. This chapter discusses the study States' strategies for measuring their progress on the priorities, through State and national performance measures, and allocating resources based on their priorities. The information is derived from a review of their 2004 Title Block Grant Applications and from the follow-up in-depth telephone interviews conducted with the State officials about their past efforts to establish priorities, how they have measured and evaluated performance on their priorities in the past, planned changes for 2005, how their budgets and staff resources breakout by MCH priority areas, and overall how they put their needs assessment findings into practice to shift, target or refocus program resources. A. Identifying and Measuring Priorities Section IV.B. of the Block Grant application asks States to link their priorities to specific State-identified or national performance measures. In practice, these are linked with varying degrees of precision; for example, Colorado attached a table listing the State's priorities and the specific State and national performance measures associated with each. California, on the other hand, divided its priorities according to the four pyramid levels and listed the national and State performance measures that addressed each level, but did not specifically link the measures to the priorities. Florida and Rhode Island each listed at least one national and one State performance measure for each priority (although Florida had one priority with no measures), while New Mexico linked its priorities to the levels of the MCH Pyramid but not to any specific State or national measures. Some priorities lend themselves to measurement through the National Performance Measures more easily than others. For example, many States identified priorities relating to reduction of adolescent pregnancy or birth rates (National Performance Measure 8) or oral health (National Performance Measure 9). Priorities related to perinatal care are generally mapped to National Performance Measures 15, 17, and 18, while those relating to systems of care for CSHCN link to Measures 2 through 6. However, many States listed at least one priority that was not reflected in the set of national performance measures, and several had more than one. The types of priorities that were not linked to national performance measures included the following:
In cases where no national performance measure addresses a priority, States generally developed or applied their own performance measures. For example, Washington's priority of decreasing family violence is measured through an indicator of the percentage of pregnant women who are screened for domestic violence at prenatal visits. Colorado's priority on reduction of overweight in children is associated with a State performance measure addressing the proportion of WIC children who are obese. Florida's priority on reducing the incidence of infections during pregnancy is measured through an indicator tracking the percentage of pregnant women screened by Healthy Start, the State's program for high-risk pregnant women. In all of these examples (as in others found in other states), however, the State performance measure focuses on a subset of the population included in the priority goal, subsets for which State-level data are more readily available than for the population as a whole. This analysis illustrates the complexity of monitoring and measuring progress on the issues that are important to State MCH agencies. The national performance measures focus on the traditional concerns of MCH: developing and maintaining systems of care for CSHCN, immunization, injury prevention, oral health, and perinatal health. To a large degree, data sources for these indicators are available to the States, and new sources—such as the National Survey of CSHCN—have been developed as a result of the importance of these indicators. An area of particular interest in the States is the development of quantifiable measures to assess the quality of children's care. Some examples include:
In developing their priorities, however, States have expanded this list of concerns to include mental health and substance abuse, obesity, violence, and health disparities and some have begun to include concerns about MCH data infrastructure as a priority along with individual health issues. These new priorities reflect the critical issues that affect children and families and are appropriate priorities for State MCH agencies. As the list of priorities becomes more varied, however, the challenge of measuring progress toward these goals increases. State-level population-based data on these issues is rarely available, so States rely on proxy measures, often based on program data (such as WIC or Florida's Healthy Start program). These provide information on subpopulations, often those in greatest need of services. While this information is useful, it does not address the status of the population as a whole. Some States have gone a step further and established priorities that reflect the MCH agency's role in systems development and infrastructure-building. These do not lend themselves to quantitative measurement, so States have developed qualitative indicators for them or left them without performance measures. For example, Kansas' s priority to “increase data infrastructure, epidemiological capacity, and products of analyses for improved State and community problem-solving'is monitored through a qualitative assessment of “the degree to which the MCH program addresses data capacity.'Florida's similar priority, to improve State MCH data and epidemiological analysis capacity, is not associated with any national or State performance measures. Most of the States interviewed said that the performance measures they report for Title V are their primary indicators for annual assessments of needs and progress on their priorities and they ues these data also to report on performance for internal State planning purposes (often supplemented with additional measures reported only to the State). At the same time, some State MCH officials cautioned against over-reliance on quantifiable performance measures in States' assessment of progress toward MCH goals and priorities and for State program planning. They indicated that a focus on performance measures relies primarily on quantifiable health status measures that can measure only broad—and sometimes long-term—changes. They suggested that other qualitative or capacity indicators should be tracked on an ongoing basis to gain a better understanding of the factors contributing to changes in health status or health access measures and thus assess what aspects of the system need to be expanded, curtailed or improved. B. Allocating Resources Based on Priorities In the block grant application, activities and accomplishments are organized around the performance measures, not the State's priorities. Therefore, priorities that are not linked to a performance measure do not have a logical place in the application unless States choose to list additional activities. Moreover, if States have not clearly tied their priorities to the performance measures, it can be difficult to determine whether activities are being conducted and funds allocated to address the priorities. The MCHB form limits the States to 10 priorities, and most report that this limit does not present a problem. In fact, officials in Colorado felt that if anything, they had too many priorities, not too few; other States, such as New Jersey, listed fewer than 10 priorities. Of the study States, only New Mexico and Rhode Island reported that they had created additional priorities. Of the two additional priorities, one ("reduce medical services funding gaps for children in NM, i.e. children who are non-Medicaid eligible, children with orthopedic/rehabilitative needs, and children in need of catastrophic medical funding such as organ transplants") did have activities associated with it, while the other ("establish infrastructure in NM to support the development of a system to respond to genetic breakthroughs and their implications") does not. Aside from the absolute number of priorities, the breadth and generality of the priorities that are chosen affects how easily they can be measured and linked to programs. Some States developed broad priorities, so as to assure that all of their programs and funds could be demonstrably linked to the priorities; others crafted specific priorities, so as to be able to measure progress; and still others focused on new or emerging issues, so as to draw resources to new areas. However, each of these approaches has drawbacks as well. For example, one of Colorado's priorities is “reduce overweight, addressing physical activity and nutritional habits.'While this is specific and measurable, it is not linked to any of the national performance measures, and State officials reported that they have not succeeded in allocating resources to address the priority. Other priorities are cast more broadly, such as Washington's first priority, “improve access to comprehensive prenatal care.'This easily encompasses a range of programs, so it can clearly be shown that resources are being applied to the issue. Florida officials reported that casting their priorities broadly made them easier to measure as well; New Jersey, on the other hand, eliminated one of their priorities (“improve access to and utilization of preventive and primary care health services' ) because it was too broad and difficult to measure. In addition to the 10 MCH priorities reported to MCHB, Rhode Island's MCH agency uses a second set of priorities that are developed annually as part its broader strategic planning efforts with all divisions in the State health department and across State agencies participating in the Governor's Children's Cabinet. These priorities are what Rhode Island's Title V director considers its high profile priorities for maternal and child health. They focus more broadly on child development, children's readiness to learn in school, family security, and family stability--priorities that are clearly affected by multiple agencies, have a broad array of potential indicators, and whose achievement would require coordination of services across agencies. As discussed in Chapter II, the Title V agency has works in collaboration with other State agencies serving children and families and RI Kids Count to develop performance measures for these priorities, that include health, socioeconomic, behavioral and educational outcomes and risk factors. They have also most recently developed "system indicators" designed to assess child access and system capacity in achieving these broad priorities. To further examine the study States' allocation of resources to their priority issues, we extracted from the 2004 Block Grant applications information about the programs and services implemented by the State Title V agencies and their association with both the States' priorities and the levels of the MCH Pyramid. In many cases, the association between program activities and the priorities was tangential; the activities were described in the context of the State and National Performance Measures, and the measures were linked to the priorities, but the activities are rarely discussed in the context of the priorities. Overall, in most States, one-half to two-thirds of the MCH activities described in the Block Grant fell into the “infrastructure-building'category, while fewer than 10 percent were classified as direct services. Nearly all activities could be associated with one of the ten priority needs; for most States, 10 percent of activities or fewer were not related to any of the priorities (in one State, however, 38 percent of activities were not related to any of the priorities.) Likewise, nearly all of the priorities had at least one activity associated with them; only two States had priorities with no associated activities. Our analysis confirmed State officials' reports that broader priorities could encompass a greater number of activities. For example, Oklahoma's priority to “decrease adverse pregnancy outcomes' covered 22 percent of the State's activities, and Minnesota's goal of “promoting family support and healthy community conditions' covered 21 percent. In contrast, more specific priorities generally only had one or two activities listed, such as Florida's priority to “improve the State's maternal and child health data capacity and capacity for epidemiological analysis,'or California's goal of “continuing to expand the CCS statewide automated case management and data collection system, CMSNet, to improve tracking and monitoring services outcomes for CSHCN,'each of which represented one activity. Several States reported that including an issue as a priority can provide justification for allocating resources to a program that might otherwise not receive funding. Washington, for example, intentionally focused their priorities on issues that the State has traditionally not had the resources to address, such as oral health, mental health, nutrition, and systems of care for CSHCN. State officials felt that including these issues as priorities would raise their visibility and help to justify the allocation of new resources to these issues. To some degree, this has been successful: the State MCH agency has hired staff with responsibility for mental health and nutrition when positions have become available. Iowa reported taking a similar approach, including in their priority list only “emerging issues' rather than those for which the State maintains ongoing programs. While most of the State's MCH funding is based on historical allocations, the remainder can be devoted to these new issues. In addition to their efforts to use priorities to direct funding decisions on the State level, several States reported using the priorities to guide contracts with and workplans of local health jurisdictions.
In Wisconsin, the work plans of local public health departments are determined based on the needs assessment findings as well. Other States also direct most of their funds to local health agencies, but the allocation of these funds is not driven by the priorities. In Washington, for example, local health jurisdictions' work plans are based on the 10 essential public health services, not on the MCH Pyramid or priorities. Despite these efforts, rational planning can frequently be stymied by the competing demands of political realities and bureaucratic intransigence. In the real world, MCH agencies cannot completely revamp their budgets each year, or even every 5 years, regardless of the data and reasoning behind their stated priorities. Existing positions and programs are generally continued unless there is a pressing reason to terminate them, and funding for new positions and programs can be difficult to find. In addition, a substantial proportion of MCH funds are often passed on to local health jurisdictions, whose decisions about allocating these funds may or may not be linked to the State's priorities. Therefore, new programs or positions can only be established when new funding or staff slots become available. Several States reported taking advantage of retirements and resignations to redirect their staff positions and assure that newly-hired staff have the skills needed to build the MCH infrastructure. Kansas, for example, reported revising position descriptions to include data expertise and computer literacy whenever vacancies occurred. Even more frustrating to State officials is the role of political considerations in the allocation of funds and development of programs. Officials in one State reported feeling constrained even about mentioning programs or issues that might cause controversy, such as adolescent pregnancy prevention, even when these were listed as State priorities. This clearly hampered the State's ability to address these priority needs. Officials in another State reported that the priorities of the Governor's office routinely pre-empted those identified through the needs assessment, leaving MCH officials frustrated. A third State specifically mentioned the challenge of funding programs for adolescents, who are less politically appealing than pregnant women and young children. Overall, States reported that they can be successful in allocating resources to their priority needs when they can show both a clear need, through needs assessment data, and program success, through evaluations. Having access to sources of funding outside of the MCH Block Grant is helpful as well, as is having staff and involved stakeholders who are passionate about the issues. And while political constraints can hamper progress toward some priority objectives, others can find crucial support from gubernatorial Children's Cabinets and advocacy groups concerned with children's and families' issues. C. Analysis of Budget Information To further assess States' ability to allocate funds to their priority issues, we requested from each State information from their most recent budget on funding allocations by program, arrayed according to the State's priorities or the performance measures (which could then be mapped to the priorities). Only three States were able to provide this information, indicating that while the priorities are important, and the performance measures provide the context for the discussion of activities, these structures are rarely used in the analysis of resources and their allocation. Table 1 below shows the distribution of expenditures by priority in the three States that submitted budget information. (As the table shows, these three States presented their expenditure information in varying levels of detail.)
Some priorities received large proportions of MCH funding. In State A, Priority #9 (having to do with outreach for MCH programs) received funding from all sources, while priority #5, regarding family support, received the largest proportion of funds, primarily State funds. In both States B and C, priorities regarding access to and quality of health services were associated with the bulk of resources. Others received much smaller percentages of allocated funds. Some of the priorities in these States that received no funds or small proportions of funds included issues such as dental disease, childhood obesity, health and safety in child care, parenting skills, substance use, and injury prevention. (It should be noted that one of the priorities listed here that has no funds attached addresses the nutritional status of children and families, but this table does not account for WIC funds.) In addition, one of the three States devoted a large proportion of its available funding to programs that were not linked to any of the State's priorities. These primarily included infrastructure-related and administrative activities. Although this analysis is by no means exhaustive, it does illustrate the challenge of associating MCH agencies' expenditures with their priorities, especially since this analysis is not required as part of the block grant application. In addition, it shows that although the States' priorities address a wide range of MCH issues, their actual activities and expenditures may be focused on more traditional MCH programs and services. Chapter V Challenges and Lessons Learned As this review of the process and content of Title V needs assessments shows, the study States varied widely in their approaches to needs assessment how and to what degree they address each of the elements of health needs and capacity assessment, and the areas of focus of the assessment. States also vary considerably in the degree to which their reported MCH priorities drive program planning and the allocation of resources within their Title V programs and MCH programs overall. Despite this variation in State documents and experiences, the review of State documents and interviews with State MCH officials regarding Title V needs assessment and planning reveal a number of consistent themes. States face common challenges as they try to integrate needs assessment into their program planning efforts and their experiences reveal lessons for all State and local MCH needs assessments. They also have made important suggestions regarding the guidance and tools they receive from MCHB on needs assessment. A. Challenges The challenges State Title V agencies faced as they approached the needs assessment process in 2000 and many face again in 2005, include the following:
1. States' Recommendations for Title V Needs Assessment Guidance and Tools Most States have similar needs and suggestions for making the Title V process and tools more useful. Most of the themes that arose during the interviews involve the timing and process of the needs assessment, the barriers to performing capacity assessment, and the effect of political constraints on program planning and resource allocation. In addition, several State officials had suggestions regarding the guidance and tools they receive from MCHB on needs assessment. Some MCH officials also offered constructive comments about the needs assessment cycle in their States. Many States, including Florida, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Rhode Island reported performing ongoing needs assessment. As one MCH director noted, “any State with a good epidemiology program should do ongoing needs assessment.'Similarly, Washington officials felt that it would be helpful to them to have a more regular needs assessment cycle; they would like to make it a systematic part of their work, not a process that they undergo only once every 5 years for the Block Grant. Officials in that State would like to receive their needs assessment tools sooner so that they can begin needs assessment earlier in the cycle. Wisconsin is one State that does perform needs assessment only once a year (unless there is an initiative that requires additional needs assessment); however, they define it as “integral'to their work. While many of the State officials interviewed felt that the guidance they receive from MCHB is a useful template, several suggested improvements. Some felt that more specific guidance that clearly spells out the information required, with examples and models of effective approaches, would be useful. In California, State officials noted that they have begun to give more directive guidance to their local Health Departments for their assessments, and they would like the same from the Federal government. In contrast, other State officials felt that it was important that the guidance allow for variation across States. New Mexico officials, for example, felt that while a blueprint of the requirements is helpful, each State is different and should ultimately be allowed to do what is best for them. They would, however, like more guidance on how to incorporate qualitative and policy information (such as laws, regulations, and resources) in their analyses. Colorado officials also felt that the needs assessment guidance should be more general because the Block Grant represents only one element of their planning process. Finally, several others also noted that the guidance could be “more succinct,'and two noted that it would be useful to have the guidance earlier in the needs assessment cycle so that the assessments could be more effectively integrated into the agency's day-to-day work. Despite any concerns that States may have regarding the Title V Guidance, most found the regional training sessions to be very helpful. Officials felt that they were an excellent format for learning new skills, sharing information, and inspiring new ideas for the needs assessment process. 2. Lessons Learned While the needs assessment process presents a number of challenges to States, several lessons can be learned from their experiences in producing the 2000 Needs Assessment. In general, the needs assessment can be most effective if it is seen as a process, not a product, and if the assessment itself is an element in a broader strategic planning effort. Thus, Title V agencies should plan for the process as a whole, from the development of indicators to the identification of priorities, and designate clear sources of leadership, responsibility, and oversight for this process. Just as important as high-level leadership is the involvement of a range of individuals with diverse perspectives and expertise throughout the process. This includes not only the perspectives of community-based stakeholders and consumers, but also the contribution of experienced and creative analysts who bring knowledge, interest, and new ideas about data sources and indicator development. A third lesson is the importance of a systems approach to the assessment process. The needs of children and families do not limit themselves to one program or funding source, and the assessment of needs and capacity should likewise take a broad view of the systems that serve the MCH population. This approach will help to assure that the capacity assessment in particular takes account of all of the resources available to address MCH needs. Finally, as has been discussed earlier, the findings of the needs assessment must be linked to the identification of priorities and allocation of resources. This is the final, critical step in the planning process and should involve consistent criteria and be based on the empirical findings of the assessment efforts. In summary, States are committed to the process of needs assessment for the MCH target populations, but need ongoing assistance, particularly in assessing both their own internal capacity and that of MCH systems. In addition, while needs assessment is clearly an important part of the MCH planning process, it is evident that translating the priorities that emerge from these assessments into resource allocation decisions is a significant challenge. This could be addressed on the Federal level with guidance that incorporates the priorities more explicitly into the structure of the Block Grant application, perhaps including a specific format for linking priorities to performance measures and program activities. Overall, however, many States appear to have taken seriously the conduct of a comprehensive needs assessment and the development of their priorities, and use them as consistently as they can, within the budgetary, bureaucratic, and political constraints that they face, to shape systems of care for children and families. Appendix A: Needs Assessment Abstraction Tool Maternal and Child Health Needs Assessment and Block Grant Abstraction Forms and Interview Template State:
Definitions:
Organization of the Assessment — State Level:
Organization of the Assessment — Local Level: What, if any, local county health departments, Councils, Regional Planning Groups were involved in the NA process? How were they involved in the NA process? What is their role in using NA information? How were consumers involved in the needs assessment process?
LIST OF STATE'S PRIORITY NEEDS Appendix B: Telephone Interview Guide Title V Needs Assessment Interview Guide: Follow-up Telephone Interview with State MCH Directors A. I would like to begin with a broad overview question, to get your experience and your perspective generally on how helpful the Federal Title V Needs Assessment Requirement is: Please tell me how the Title V Needs Assessment process and final product are really used in your State. B. More Detailed Questions on State MCH Needs Assessment Process
I have reviewed the 2004 updated Needs Assessment and the text you included on the process for updating and analyzing data. I would appreciate being able to include a little more detail on this process.
(If different processes were used for MCH and CSHCN, for questions 6-9 obtain different responses regarding each process)
D. Translating State MCH Priorities into Program Planning and Resource Allocation Decisions
E. State Performance Measurement
F. Overview of MCHB Title V Needs Assessment Requirement
G. Looking Ahead to the 2005 Needs Assessment
H. Budgetary Information*** From a detailed review of your 2004 BG Application, I have compiled the list of each of the activities you list that address one or more of your 10 MCH Priority Need areas. For our report, we now need to document the primary funding source and the amount of Federal and State expenditures budgeted for each of these activities in FY 2004; We will then need to compare the these budgeted expenditures to the total budget (Federal and State dollars) for MCH activities in your State. After we talk on the phone, I will ask you to send or provide me budget information/details that would enable me to conduct this analysis.
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