New York State DSRIP Evaluation Design
- Slides is also available in Portable Document Format (PDF)
Informational Webinar
June 23, 2014
Tom Melnik and Mark Sharp
Office of Quality and Patient Safety
Evaluation Design Requirements
- The New York State Department of Health will be responsible for developing the DSRIP Evaluation Design for CMS approval.
- The Evaluation Design will meet the prevailing standards of scientific and academic rigor.
- Public engagement in the development of the Evaluation Design.
- An Independent Evaluator to be selected through a competitive RFP to conduct the evaluation.
- Interim and summative evaluation reports will be submitted to CMS.
Introduction
- To assess program effectiveness on a statewide level with respect to the MRT triple aim of improved care, better health, and reduced cost.
- To obtain stakeholder feedback regarding the DSRIP program and the services provided.
DSRIP Logic Model
Incentive Payments for Achieving Project Progress Milestones | Incentive Payments for Improvement Milestones | |||||
Resources
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DSRIP Activities Performance Provider Systems Established: Projects selected from 3 Domains:
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→ | Short–Term Outcomes Health Care Safety Net Transformation
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→ → |
Intermediate Outcomes Reduced Avoidable Hospital Use
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↓ | ||||||
Long–Term Outcomes Reduced Health Care Costs
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Methodology
- Interrupted time series design will be used to assess DSRIP´s effects on health care in New York State.
- Involves calculating a summary measure of the outcome variable (e.g., average quarterly per person pharmacy costs) at equal time intervals prior to DSRIP's implementation, followed by a series of the same summary measure after DSRIP is implemented.
- Look for a change in the pattern of the outcome measurement at the time of implementation.
Methodology Interrupted Time Series
- A control group will be added to this design, if available and appropriate.
- Segmented regression analysis will be used to evaluate changes in level and trend of the outcome before and after DSRIP implementation.
- Allows for the control of serial autocorrelation (correlation of consecutive outcome values) and seasonal fluctuation in the outcome.
- Since the unit of analysis is a summary measure (e.g., average per person pharmacy costs), individual-level predictors (e.g., sex) cannot be included in the model.
Methodology Measurement & Date Sources
- Domain 2, 3 and 4 measures, used in the incentive payment process, will be used in the evaluation to the extent possible.
- Most of the measures are used in Medicaid quality improvement (QARR/HEDIS), developed by known measures stewards such as NCQA and AHRQ.
- These measures are based on a number of existing data sources:
- Medicaid claims
- SPARCS
- BRFSS
- Vital Statistics
- CAHPS
- US Census
- HIV Surveillance
- Uniform Assessment System
- Medicare claims
DSRIP Evaluation Objectives
- Evaluate the extent to which performing provider systems achieve health care system transformation (Domain 2).
- Expected changes:
- Improved system integration.
- Increased availability and use of primary care.
- Greater access to health care.
- Improved care transition protocols.
- Increased Medicaid spending on primary care services.
- Decreased Medicaid spending on ER and inpatient services.
- Expected changes:
- Evaluate the extent to which health care quality is improved on a statewide level through clinical improvement (Domain 3) in the treatment of selected diseases and conditions.
- Improvements expected in:
- Behavioral health care.
- Care for cardiovascular disease.
- Diabetes care.
- Asthma treatment.
- Palliative care.
- HIV/AIDS Care.
- Perinatal Care
- Renal Care
- Improvements expected in:
- For purposes of determining incentive payments, multiple existing quality measures for each condition are included in the set of metrics for this domain.
- To reduce the number of individual pre- and post-DSRIP analyses, aggregation of measures for each condition, or selection of a key measure for each, will be considered.
- Evaluate the extent to which population health (Domain 4) is improved as a result of implementation of the DSRIP initiative.
- Improvements expected in:
- Population health status (e.g., reduction in premature deaths, increased percentage of adults with health insurance).
- Chronic disease (e.g., reductions in obesity, cigarette smoking).
- HIV/STD´s (e.g., reductions in newly diagnosed case rate of HIV, gonorrhea, syphilis, per 100,000).
- Health of women, infants, & children (e.g., reduction in preterm births, reduced maternal mortality).
- Mental health and substance abuse (e.g., reduction in suicide death rate, reduction in adult binge drinking).
- Improvements expected in:
- Aggregation of measures or selecting a key measure under each population–wide outcome will again be considered.
- Assess the extent to which avoidable hospital use is reduced as a result of DSRIP using four measures:
- Potentially preventable ER visits.
- Potentially preventable hospital readmissions.
- Prevention quality indicators – adult & pediatric.
- Evaluate the impact of DSRIP on health care costs.
- It is expected that Medicaid expenditures will be reduced, or the growth slowed, with the implementation of DSRIP.
- Assess the degree of improvement in care quality for specific diseases and conditions under Domain 3.
- Analyses will involve comparison of care quality for the Domain 3 diseases/conditions between PPS´s that select a particular disease/condition to address (e.g., diabetes) vs. the PPS´s that do not choose that condition.
- It is anticipated that larger increases in care quality for a particular condition will be observed among PPS´s addressing that condition as compared to PPS´s that did not.
- Comparisons to be made are contingent upon the final selection of PPS´s.
- Compare major program outcomes across Performing Provider Systems.
- Since sustainability of program activities are an important consideration in the program´s development, comparison of strategies will address the question of which tend to be more effective.
- It is anticipated that PPS´s will vary on characteristics such as the number of projects selected (a minimum of 5 and a maximum of 10) and the diseases/conditions that are chosen for care improvements.
- PPS´s will be grouped on these characteristics, and differences in avoidable hospital use and care costs will be examined.
Qualitative Component
Qualitative data will be collected to obtain stakeholders´ experience and perceptions regarding DSRIP at both the implementation and operational stages of the program.
Questions that may be addressed:
- What difficulties were encountered in developing a PPS?
- How was rapid cycle evaluation used in developing PPS projects?
- How did the learning collaboratives support system change?
- How was DSRIP received by the community?
- What care improvements have been most notable?
Qualitative data sources:
- Key informant interviews.
- Focus groups.
- Web–based surveys.
- Planning, implementation, and/or financial documents.
DSRIP Evaluation Timeline
- Aug. 14, 2014: Submit draft of evaluation plan to CMS.
- Sept. 14, 2014: Receive feedback from CMS on evaluation plan.
- Oct. 14, 2014: Submit revised evaluation plan to CMS.
- November 2014: Begin procurement process for independent evaluator.
- Fall 2016: Independent evaluator begins work.
- March 31, 2019: Interim evaluation report due to CMS.
- June 30, 2020: Preliminary summative evaluation report due to CMS.
- December 28, 2020: Final summative evaluation report due to CMS.
Contact Information
Tom Melnik
Phone: 518–486–9012
Email: tom.melnik@health.ny.gov
Mark Sharp
Phone: 518–486–9012
Email: mark.sharp@health.ny.gov
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