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MCH Needs Assessment: Capacity to Competency

MCH Needs Assessment: Capacity to Competency. Donna J. Petersen, ScD, MHS MCHB Partners Meeting February 26, 2009. Imagine this.

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MCH Needs Assessment: Capacity to Competency

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  1. MCH Needs Assessment:Capacity to Competency Donna J. Petersen, ScD, MHS MCHB Partners Meeting February 26, 2009

  2. Imagine this . . . • A state MCH program produces an elegant needs assessment filled with tables and tables of data but there is little analysis, little stakeholder input and no discussion of what the state might do about the problems suggested by the data

  3. Imagine this . . . • A state MCH program produces an elegant needs assessment complete with data and information gleaned from constituents with clear areas of focus identified but the state priorities bear little relation to these areas of need and instead look suspiciously like the organization chart of the state MCH program

  4. Imagine this . . . • A state MCH program produces an elegant needs assessment complete with quantitative and qualitative data, a full analysis of the nature and scope of needs, a set of priorities clearly derived from this analysis, but no change in structure or function of the central office, no change in resource allocation, no clear plans to engage in any new efforts

  5. Do we have to imagine this? • Have any of us been in these situations? • What do these have in common?

  6. What do these have in common? • One thing, I would argue, is that they possibly reflect a lack of capacity to engage in the full range of activities related to needs assessments, from gathering and analyzing data, to engaging constituents, to setting priorities, to devising plans to action, to acting on those plans in meaningful ways

  7. Needs Assessment in MCH • We recognize • That our mission as MCH professionals is to secure for the families in our states all that they need to develop, grow and thrive • That we shape this mission by pursuing information on the nature of those needs • That needs are revealed both through data collection and through open discussion, listening and observation

  8. Needs Assessment in MCH • We further recognize • That the authors of OBRA 89 put in place a mechanism to assure we had the means to conduct comprehensive needs assessments • But that needs assessment is an ongoing, continuous process, not just every five years • AND, that that process does not stop with the compilation of “needs” but with the articulation of priorities and the development and execution of a plan of action

  9. Needs Assessment . . . • Since 1989, we collectively have made tremendous progress in our ability to collect, analyze, manage, disseminate and optimize data and information • Most state MCH programs now have expert staff, data or policy analysis units, data sharing agreements with other agencies, automated collection systems for our grantees and partners, and a system for qualitative information gathering

  10. . . . to Action in MCH • Where we have difficulty is in • Identifying strategies to combat problems • Achieving consensus on direction • Making the tough decisions • Garnering political will • Managing change • Executing the plan of action

  11. Why is This Difficult? Over-committed staff Lack of political will Committed to present activities Previous planning failures Limited expertise No readily available solution Insufficient resources Competing priorities/desires thanks, Bill Sappenfield

  12. Disconnect between Desire and Reality • Perhaps the biggest challenge we face is reconciling the vision - the wishes and hopes generated by a comprehensive needs assessment - with the practical reality of what we actually have the ability to accomplish

  13. A Need does not a Priority make • If you’ve been with me before, you’ve heard me champion the idea that you must have a solution to address an identified need that you believe may work, that won’t cost you the bank and that will be acceptable to the public and to policy makers • Without a reasonable strategy there is little point in selecting the need as a priority . . .

  14. New Step in the Needs Assessment Process? • Perhaps in addition, we need to more deliberatively assess, as part of our comprehensive assessment of needs, • our ability to achieve the dream • the elasticity of our resources • the level of political will that exists for change • our true ability to adapt to a new direction • Even where a solution exists!

  15. Opportunities . . . • We don’t always take them • Why? Because we’re pragmatic • If you have no one to nominate to the new task force on x, you’ll decline • If you have no one with the right expertise to write the grant, you won’t apply • If you know you can’t act on the promise, you won’t make the promise • It’s a matter of capacity

  16. Capacity • Capacity • The ability to hold, receive, store or accommodate • A measure of content • Maximum production or output • Legal qualification, competency, power or fitness • Power to grasp and analyze ideas and cope with problems • Position or character assigned or assumed

  17. Capacity Assessment • What, in the starkest light of day, can we really do to move in a new direction? • How can we objectively assess our reality? • How do we measure our capacity for success? • Our ability to accommodate • Our competency and fitness • Our power to cope with change • Our positional authority

  18. Capacity Assessment 101 • This would be a whole lot easier if there was some kind of guidebook that clearly stated what every state MCH program should look like • But it is one of our great strengths that we are allowed to organize and function in response to the needs and circumstances of our states • “if you’ve seen one MCH program, you’ve seen one MCH program”

  19. Capacity Assessment • The tremendous variability in our states . . . geographic, demographic, historic, economic, social and cultural, environmental, behavioral, etc adds to the complexity of attempting to characterize sufficient “capacity” for a state MCH program • Not to mention the different ways we choose to structure our state governmental agencies

  20. Capacity Assessment • Where is MCH in the health department hierarchy? Is CSCHN with MCH or somewhere else? • What else is aligned with MCH? Family planning? WIC? Immunizations? Lead? Injury prevention? Tobacco? Mental health? School health? Home visiting? Substance abuse? • What else is/is not within the health department? • Where is Medicaid? Early Intervention? Environmental health?

  21. Capacity Assessment • Like everything else we do, this we do not do alone in isolation • We are masters at building partnerships, forming coalitions, persuading others to do what is right for children and families, seeking and securing support for our broad efforts • So let’s think about what we need in order to better meet the needs of our populations

  22. Capacity Assessment 101 • Internal to the central office • Within the home agency • Within related state agencies • Within local jurisdictional offices • Within local communities • Usual suspect partners • Non-traditional partners • Within decision-making bodies

  23. Capacity Assessment 101 What are you looking for? • Skill sets • Resources (money is not the only currency) • Time • Talent • Support/Partners/Infrastructure • Interest

  24. First Exercise • SKILL SETS • Think about the skill sets you would like to have in your ideal state MCH central office • Don’t worry about the number, just brainstorm the skills you would like to have available to you • Think about the entire needs assessment process (which, we have already established, is in effect your entire program planning ,advocacy, implementation, evaluation, communication process for MCH activities in your state)

  25. First Exercise • Think of these as “fixed assets”, skill sets you need regardless of the direction of your programs • Feel free to advocate for what you believe while imagining the ideal team • DO NOT worry about where these will come from • Select someone at your table to report back your consensus conclusions

  26. Skill Sets Report Back

  27. If you don’t have these skill sets in the MCH central office, where else might you find them? First think about your governmental partners • Other units within your agency? • Other state agencies? • Local agencies? Then think about other partners • Grantees? • Community organizations or groups? • Academic institutions?

  28. Second Exercise • Now we have to get a little real . . . • Brainstorm for awhile where you might find the skill sets you identified • Think first about whether it even exists, where, and then rate your ability to gain access to it • Relatively easily, maybe, probably not • Is training available in the skill set? • Select a different reporter from the table

  29. Sources of Skill Sets Report Back

  30. Capacity Assessment • Note that we have made no attempt to link these desired skill sets to any particular set of needs, or programmatic initiative • That’s because you need to know the full menu of possible assets in order to determine whether you have the capacity to respond to a particular challenge • Needs change, your efforts will change, your capacity to change will change . . .

  31. Capacity Assessment: Resources • Resources • Yes, it would be lovely to have more money • And you should definitely be thinking about that as you evolve your plans in response to needs and your growing knowledge of your capacity to respond • Who might fund this? The legislature? A federal agency? A national foundation? A local foundation? Can you partner with another agency who may fund portions of the effort? • The big question: Can you stop funding something else in order to fund this?

  32. Resources • Also important to figure out where any extra time may be stashed away . . . • This refers to your own staff • Others with the skill sets you need • Local grantees • Community partners • Do you have capacity where you no longer have need? • You may have skill sets that are no longer relevant • C H A N G E . . . is really hard

  33. Delivery or Deployment Capacity • Do you have networks through which you can deploy new initiatives? • Do you have local agents? • Do you have accessible media markets? • Do other agencies have local offices? • Can you work through schools? Through health care providers, hospitals, clinics? • Are there academic institutions outside the metro areas?

  34. Resource Inventory • Identify local service delivery capacity • Reveal gaps in services from lack of availability, access, continuity, appropriateness • Reveal underutilized capacity as well • Help you clarify who is currently or potentially capable of meeting the service delivery needs you have identified, typically at the local level

  35. Resource Inventory • These can be conducted in several ways • Via a survey (paper, telephone, on-line) • Via an audit • Via information provided at the time of application for funding or preparation of an annual report (for those agencies you fund)

  36. Resource Inventory • Typically want to learn: • Type of services offered • To what client mix • At what level of intensity (quantity) • At what level of coordination across providers • With what type of follow-up • At what cost (or eligibility limits) • At what location, over what hours • By what types of providers

  37. Resource Inventory • Coupled with a good assessment of need, resource inventories help fill in your ‘capacity map’ or are part of an assets inventory • These inventories can give you clues into not only where you might have obvious gaps but also where you might have potential to add a service, link services, or modify client/service mix

  38. Changing the Resource Inventory • If you find areas in need of “enhancement” the next question is, of course, how do you get these agencies to change what they’re doing • Remember, they don’t like change any more than you do

  39. Change • If you fund them, you may have some leverage • Best not done without some serious conversation • They will surprise you if you give them a chance to help you work through these issues • Often better done as a carrot and not a stick, i.e. if you will do x, I will also let you do y (or stop doing z, which they’ve never liked)

  40. Change • If they are somehow accountable to you (the ‘royal you’ in this case) you might be able to back into it by changing the performance measures • If they are told they must achieve a certain level of performance or reach a certain outcome, they will have to adjust their efforts to accomplish that • Again, better done as a carrot, i.e. reward them for doing it rather than punishing them for not

  41. Change • A little bit of money goes a long way • If you have no other “authority”, trying offering some funding, either seed funding through a competitive mechanism, or a small amount of planning money to get something going • i.e., $1 per birth in a county or locality to gather information, analyze it and develop a plan to improve pregnancy outcomes

  42. Case Exercise

  43. Case Exercise Report Back

  44. Capacity Assessment: Interest • Policy theorists and analysts often speak of “policy windows”, i.e. the moment of opportunity when a policy agenda has the greatest likelihood of being adopted • They also speak of the “softening up” process and suggest that the time-lag between when an issue is clearly identified and when action is actually taken, can be quite long indeed

  45. Capacity Assessment: Interest • Kotelchuck and Richmond wrote of three necessary elements for policy action: • Knowledge base (data, science) • Effective strategies • Political will

  46. Capacity Assessment: Interest • Part of your capacity assessment has to be judging the relative political will for action around the issue(s) you have identified • Part of this depends on the issues themselves • What “issues” might be more difficult to champion? • Part of it depends on competing priorities • Is something else going on that detracts attention from your issues? (gee, does this ever happen?!)

  47. Capacity Assessment: Interest • But part of it also depends on how prepared you are to seize a policy window • Have you accumulated sufficient evidence, both scientific and political, to support your agenda? • Have you sustained a coalition of support? • Have you engaged in that “softening up” process using your ability to educate and inform elected officials? • Are you on the look-out for those focusing events that draw attention to your issue?

  48. Capacity Assessment: Interest • So, interest refers to the willingness of elected officials to support your agenda and perhaps stick their necks out • But before this, it also speaks to the interest of the public (the sine qua non of your ability to label something a true “need”) • AND the interest of those you work with, partner with and fund

  49. Capacity Assessment: Interest • Thankfully, these all come together as part of the usual suspect needs assessment efforts you have been putting forth for nearly 20 years • You know the data alone does not indicate need • You know you need to engage your constituents • You know you need to form strong stakeholder coalitions to move the full agenda forward • You know to gauge the political will on the issue

  50. Capacity Assessment: Interest • So while this may have seemed the most difficult to get a handle on, it may in fact be easier • It’s a test of your political savvy to know when the winds are blowing for change and to seize those moments • The challenge, interestingly enough, usually is back home at the office

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