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2014-17 Multi-Sector Service Accountability Agreement (M-SAA) - An Overview

2014-17 Multi-Sector Service Accountability Agreement (M-SAA) - An Overview. Webinar January 22, 2014. What is an M-SAA? Core lever for Health Service Provider (HSP) accountability and performance management.

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2014-17 Multi-Sector Service Accountability Agreement (M-SAA) - An Overview

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  1. 2014-17 Multi-Sector Service Accountability Agreement (M-SAA) - An Overview Webinar January 22, 2014

  2. What is an M-SAA?Core lever for Health Service Provider (HSP) accountability and performance management • A tool to bring all the various contractual agreements between community HSPs and the LHINs into one document • Required under the Local Health System Integration Act, 2006 (LHSIA) and the Ministry-LHIN Performance Agreement (MLPA) • 2009 – 2011 – Initial M-SAA Agreement/Indicators Executed • 2011 – 2014 – Agreement/Indicators Updated and Executed • 2013 – 2014 – Indicator and Target Refresh • 2014 – 2017 – Agreement Updated and Indicators Refreshed

  3. LHIN/Sector ResponsibilitiesAdvisory Committee and Work Group Mandates M-SAA Advisory Committee • Established to provide advice to the LHIN CEOs and support for the completion of the 2014-17 M-SAA template agreement and schedules in alignment with provincial strategic directions. M-SAA Indicators Work Group • Established to support the M-SAA Advisory Committee. Based on direction from the LHIN CEOs, the Work Group is responsible for producing a series of documents and recommendations including a list of recommended M-SAA indicators, technical specifications, target setting guidelines and education materials. M-SAA Planning & Schedules Work Group • Established to support the M-SAA Advisory Committee. Based on direction from the LHIN CEOs, the Work Group is responsible for producing a series of documents and tools, including M-SAA Schedules, Community Accountability Planning Submission (CAPS) forms and guide and educational documents.

  4. M-SAA StructureComprehensive Consultation through Multiple Tables M-SAA INDICATOR SUPPORT: HEALTH SYSTEM INDICATOR INITIATIVE M-SAA LEGAL COUNSEL SUPPORT: LHIN LEGAL SERVICES BRANCH M-SAA SECRETARIAT SUPPORT: LHIN COLLABORATIVE LOCAL M-SAA IMPLEMENTATION: LHIN M-SAA LEADS

  5. Process for Finalizing New M-SAAAt a high level, how was the M-SAA developed and finalized? • LHINs revised the language in the 2011-14 M-SAA that required updating or would benefit from greater clarity as a draft 2014-17 M-SAA for sector feedback. • Three 3-hour M-SAA Advisory Committee meetings occurred to review and discuss comments and suggestions on the draft 2014-17 M-SAA. • 175 sector comments were received and individually addressed. • Committee endorsed 2014-17 M-SAA and Schedules on December 17, 2013. • Pan-LHIN commitment to reduce, align and enhance consistency of local indicators. • Committee will continue to meet throughout the life of the agreement to advance M-SAA related priority issues.

  6. Summary of Main ChangesWhat are the key changes between current and new M-SAA?

  7. Summary of Main Changes ContinuedWhat are the key changes between current and new M-SAA?

  8. Summary of Main Changes ContinuedWhat are the key changes between current and new M-SAA?

  9. 2014/17 Planning and Negotiations Approach • The CAPS is a three-year planning document that facilitates the negotiation of the M-SAAs between the LHIN and each HSP. • In the absence of definitive funding targets, CAPS will be based on a planning assumption of 0% base adjustment with a goal of maintaining service levels within the 0% planning assumption. • The M-SAA Schedules will be refreshed in the Fall of each year (and quarterly by the Central East LHIN to confirm the current year’s planning assumption and to update the agreement’s performance and explanatory indicators.

  10. 2014/17 Planning and Negotiations Approach - Central East LHIN • LHIN staff, with sector expertise, will review a group of HSPs within a sector and negotiate targets based on: • CAPS submissions • Review of prior year-end data plus YTD SRI submissions • Any performance factors, or previous issues • Dashboards • Provider Issue Escalation and Risk Reports • Involvement with Integrations • Internal consultation with staff • Provincial benchmarking tools

  11. LHIN/HSP Accountability RelationshipHow do the various CAPS/M-SAA components fit together?

  12. Indicator Work Group Focus & Approach • Review current indicators and develop recommendations to reduce the number of indicators • Develop recommendations regarding the definition and target setting approach for the administrative indicator calculation • Align existing indicators with pan-LHIN imperatives

  13. Performance IndicatorsPan-LHIN Performance Indicators and LHIN-Specific Obligations The Performance Schedule (Schedule E) contains the following two indicator sections: 1. Pan-LHIN Indicators are developed through the M-SAA Indicators Work Group using the Health System Indicator Initiative (HSII). (Core indicators relevant to all LHINs and all community sector HSPs. Sector-specific indicators are only relevant to a specified sector). • Performance Indicators are measures of HSP performance for which a Performance Target is set; Technical specifications of specific Performance Indicators can be found in the “M-SAA 2014-17 Indicator Technical Specifications” document. • Explanatory Indicators are measures of HSP performance for which no Performance Target is set.Technical specifications of specific Explanatory Indicators can be found in the “M-SAA 2014-17 Indicator Technical Specifications” document. 2. LHIN-Specific Performance Obligations: A section where each LHIN adds specific performance objectives and obligations for their HSPs is included. LHINs are committed to minimizing any undue burden placed on providers with respect to performance management by focusing on a limited number of outcome indicators aligned with local priorities.

  14. Performance Indicators ContinuedHow are Indicator Targets and Corridors Determined? • Following the submission of the CAPS, LHINs and HSPs discuss indicator targets that are appropriate to each organization and its local circumstances. Targets are expected to reflect performance and drive continuous improvement. • To complete the targets and corridors for the performance indicators, the following principles will be employed: • Where provincial targets and corridors exist, the LHINs and HSPs will take these into consideration • Where appropriate, use past experience from M-SAA and MLPA indicators • Incorporate analyses of historical variation to inform corridor recommendations • Use percentage range for financial and volume indicators

  15. Performance ManagementHow are Performance Factors Addressed? • How a LHIN chooses to deal with an indicator outside the corridor depends on a number of factors, including: • What is the realized and/or potential impact on the clients served? • Is this the first blip on an otherwise clean performance record? • Is this a unique event and unlikely to recur? • Are other areas of the organization or other HSPs affected? • What is the LHINs confidence in the HSPs ability to manage performance going ahead? • Depending on the above, the LHIN could choose to start with a less formal tact. The formal process is always available...and can be triggered at any point.

  16. Overview of M-SAA Indicators Consists of: • Core Indicators • Community Health Centres (CHC) Indicators • Community Care Access Centres (CCAC) Indicators • Community Service Sector (CSS) Indicators • Mental Health & Addiction (MH&A) Indicators

  17. Core (All Sectors)Performance Indicators • Balanced budget - Fund type 2 • Proportion of budget spent on administration • Variance forecast to actual expenses • Percentage total margin • Service activity by functional centre • Variance of forecasted to actual units of service • Number of individuals served • Percentage of Alternative Level of Care (ALC) days

  18. Core (All Sectors)Explanatory Indicators • Cost per individual serviced by program/service/functional centre • Cost per unit of service by functional centre • Client experience (New Category) Details: • Moved from being only an explanatory indicator for the Mental Health and Addiction sector • Indicators Work Group identified need to enhance linkage with quality and patient experience for all sectors

  19. Summary of Indicator Changes

  20. Summary of Changes

  21. Community Care Access Centres (CCAC)Performance Indicators • Access: Wait time 1 - From Hospital Discharge to Service Initiation (Hospital Clients) • Access: Wait time 2 - 90th percentile Wait time from Community Setting to Community Home Care Services • Percentage of people registered with Health Care Connect who are referred (Retired – no longer an indicator) Details: • Reporting obligations are already in place with the Ministry

  22. Community Care Access Centres (CCAC)Explanatory Indicators • Access: Wait time 1 - From hospital discharge to service initiation (hospital clients) by population groups (short stay, short stay rehab, long-stay complex) • Access: Wait time 2 - 90th percentile wait time from Community setting to community home care services by population groups (short stay acute, short stay rehab, long-stay complex) • Average monthly cost per episode (adult short stay, adult long-stay complex, end of life, children medically fragile) • Clients with MAPLe scores high and very high living in the community supported by CCAC (New Category) • Clients placed in LTCH with MAPLescores high and very high as a proportion of total clients placed (New Category)

  23. Community Care Access Centres (CCAC)New Category Explanatory Indicators • Clients with MAPLe scores high and very high living in the community supported by CCAC • Clients placed in LTCH with MAPLe scores high and very high as a proportion of total clients placed Details: • Moved from CCAC performance indicator category • Indicators fit this category and provide valuable information about how the system is functioning and the opportunities for change • Indicators are not a good measure for performance as targets are set locally by each LHIN

  24. Community Care Access Centres (CCAC)Developmental Indicators • Percentage of clients with a new or existing pressure ulcer that failed to improve (Retired) • Medication safety (Retired) • Percentage of home care clients who say they have fallen in the last 90 days (Retired) Details • Indicators retired as developmental • Indicators were not identified by HQO as on the Common Quality Agenda

  25. Community Health Centres (CHC) Performance Indicators • Cervical cancer screening • Colorectal Screening rate • Inter-professional diabetes care rate • Influenza vaccination rate • Breast cancer screening rate • Periodic health exam • Vacancy Rate (for NPs and Physicians) • Access to primary care clinical service (New) • Individuals served by functional centre (Retired) Details: Already a Core indicator

  26. Community Health Centres(CHC)Explanatory Indicators • Emergency visits best managed elsewhere (New) • Client satisfaction – Access (New) • Clinical support staff per primary care provider (New) • Cultural interpretation (New) • Exam rooms per primary care provider (New) • New grads/new staff (New) • Number of new patients (New) • Non-Primary Care activities (New)

  27. Community Health Centres(CHC)Explanatory Indicators Cont’d • Number of registered clients (New) • Specialized care (New) • Supervision of students (New) • Third next available appointment (New) • Non-insured clients (New) • Repeat unscheduled emergency visits within 30 days for mental health conditions (Retired) • Repeat unscheduled emergency visits within 30 days for substance abuse conditions (Retired) Details: • Data is a challenge as the cell size is small

  28. Community Health Centres (CHC) Developmental Indicator • CHC clients hospitalized for Ambulatory Care sensitive conditions

  29. Community Support Services (CSS)Explanatory Indicator • Number of persons waiting for service (by functional centre)

  30. Community Support Services (CSS)Developmental Indicators • Average number of days waited for first service (by functional centre) (New Category) Details: • Moved from CSS Explanatory indicator category as the data is not yet available • Move to explanatory in years 2 or 3 • Repeat unscheduled emergency visits within 30 days for mental health conditions (Retired) • Repeat unscheduled emergency visits within 30 days for substance abuse conditions (Retired) Details: • Indicators are difficult to measure as cannot follow clients between the hospital and the community

  31. Community Mental Health & Addiction (CMHA)Explanatory Indicators • Number of days waited from referral/application to initial assessment complete • Average number of days waited from initial assessment complete to service initiation • Repeat unscheduled emergency visits within 30 days for mental health conditions (New Category) • Repeat unscheduled emergency visits within 30 days for substance abuse conditions (New Category) Details: Moved to Explanatory indicator • Client experience (Retired) Details: Moved to Core indicator

  32. Community Mental Health & Addiction (CMHA)Developmental Indicator • OCAN/GAIN Indicator

  33. M-SAA Content - Articles Article 1 Definitions & Interpretation Clarifies terminology used throughout the document. Article 2 Term and Nature of the Agreement Defines the term of the service accountability agreement as April 1, 2014 to March 31, 2017 . Article 3 Provision of Services Describes how services will be provided in accordance with legislation, applicable policies, e-health/IT compliance and the terms of this agreement. Discusses subcontracting services and conflict of interest. Article 4 Funding Outlines conditions of funding, payment and provision limitations. Procurement and disposition of goods and services are also described. Article 5 Repayment and Recovery of Funding Defines circumstances under which funding may be adjusted and/or recovered

  34. M-SAA Content - Articles continued Article 6 Planning & Integration Discusses multi-year planning CAPS requirements in alignment with LHIN IHSP and priorities. Article 7 Performance Discusses the need for ongoing performance improvement and the mitigating process in the event of performance factors (non-performance). Article 8 Reporting, Accounting and Review Describes the obligations of reporting and record maintenance, French language requirements, disclosure of information, transparency and reviews. Article 9 Acknowledgement of LHIN Support HSP publications are required to note LHIN support, be approved by the LHIN, and indicate views do not necessarily reflect those of the LHIN or Government. Article 10 Representations, Warranties and Covenants Confirms the HSP’s ability to enter into the agreementand carry out the funded services with the appropriate governance, personnel and documentation.

  35. M-SAA Content - Articles continued Article 11 Limitation of Liability, Indemnity & Insurance Outlines the limitation of liability and indemnification for the LHINs and the required insurance provisions for the HSP. Article 12 Termination of Agreement Describes the parameters for termination of the agreement by the LHIN and by the HSP. Article 13 Notice Details how notices to a party must be provided. Article 14Additional Provisions Identifies additional provisions to the agreement. Article 15Entire Agreement Defines the agreement as constituting the entire agreement, superseding all prior agreements.

  36. M-SAA Content - Schedules

  37. Timelines

  38. Contacts – System Finance & Performance Management (SFPM) Emily Van de Klippe, Lead – SFPM Ritva Gallant, Team Lead – SFPM Chad Gyorfi, Senior Consultant – SFPM Sherry Harvey, Senior Consultant – SFPM Usha Cithiravel, Analyst – SFPM Sheila Stirling, Analyst - SFPM

  39. For more information For materials www.centraleastlhin.on.ca/Page.aspx?id=20302 For M-SAA Related Inquiries Emily Van de Klippe, Lead, SFPM (905) 427-5497, ext213 For General Inquiries Sheila Stirling, Analyst (905) 427-5497, ext215

  40. Appendix A – Provincial Process

  41. 2014-17 M-SAA ApproachLHIN Negotiating Team, Mandate and Processes • In May 2013, Louise Paquette (CEO, NE LHIN) was confirmed as Chair of the M-SAA Advisory Committee and Scott McLeod (CEO, CW LHIN) was confirmed as Vice-Chair. • The mandate and scope of authority of the negotiating team was established through dialogue with the LHIN CEOs and was confirmed in July as follows: • Working with LHIN Legal Services, identify opportunities to revise language that either requires updating or would benefit from greater clarity • Working with community sector representatives, invite and review sector feedback • Finalize a 3-year M-SAA by the end of 2013 to enable local execution by March 31, 2014. • Each and every suggestion submitted by the Sector and MOHLTC was reviewed by LHIN Legal and revisions were incorporated where appropriate. Ongoing updates were provided to the LHIN CEOs and specific issues were brought forward to the CEOs for input and resolution.

  42. M-SAA Development PrinciplesEnabling close ongoing collaboration with the Community Sector • The M-SAA Advisory Committee is co-chaired by Louise Paquette and Scott McLeod and brings together senior executives from M-SAA sector associations, community HSPs and the LHINs to provide a central forum for enabling dialogue on provincial M-SAA issues • The Committee is guided by the following principles: • The process is undertaken with a spirit of trust and collaboration among the province’s community HSPs, sector associations and the LHINs. • The M-SAA will align with provincial health system priorities and be consistent with MOHLTC policy, legislation and regulations. • The M-SAA will strive to streamline processes, minimize administrative burden and provide clarity for HSPs where possible.

  43. LHIN/Sector ResponsibilitiesWhat are the responsibilities of the LHINs and the HSPs? LHINs are responsible for: • Training and supporting HSPs through the CAPS and M-SAA processes • Negotiating performance targets within the context of a provincial framework • Monitoring the achievement of specific performance goals under the M-SAA and ongoing performance management HSPs are responsible for: • Ensuring governance and operations that support high quality care • Promoting leading performance improvement approaches • Providing access to high quality health services and coordinated health care in an effective and efficient manner • Identifying integration opportunities and engaging the public and stakeholders in any planned service changes.

  44. M-SAA Advisory Committee Membership

  45. M-SAA Advisory Committee Membership continued

  46. M-SAA Planning & Schedules Work Group Membership

  47. M-SAA Planning & Schedules Work Group Membership continued

  48. M-SAA Indicators Work Group Membership

  49. M-SAA Indicators Work Group Membership continued

  50. M-SAA Indicators Work Group Membership continued

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