1 / 48

Seeing the Forest AND the Trees: Customer Satisfaction and Comprehensive Family Services

Seeing the Forest AND the Trees: Customer Satisfaction and Comprehensive Family Services. November 14, 2003 Child Welfare League of America “Tools that Work”. Authors. Blake Jones, MSW, LCSW, ABD (Social Work) ( bljone00@pop.uky.edu ) University of Kentucky

mauli
Télécharger la présentation

Seeing the Forest AND the Trees: Customer Satisfaction and Comprehensive Family Services

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Seeing the Forest AND the Trees: Customer Satisfaction and Comprehensive Family Services November 14, 2003 Child Welfare League of America “Tools that Work”

  2. Authors • Blake Jones, MSW, LCSW, ABD (Social Work) (bljone00@pop.uky.edu) • University of Kentucky • Ruth A. Huebner, PhD, Child Welfare Researcher (Rutha.huebner@mail.state.ky.us) and • Sissy Cawood, MA, Director of Service Region • Kentucky Cabinet for Families and Children

  3. Topics • Rationale for Comprehensive Family Services • Review of supporting literature • Description of Comprehensive Family Services • Customer Satisfaction as an Outcome Measurement • Program Evaluation of CFS • Results • Discussion

  4. Rationale for CFS • New paradigm for engagement of families and “community partners” > Solution-focused vs. punitive (Christensen, Todahl, & Barrett, 1999) > Strengths-based vs. deficit-based (Powell & Batsch, 1997) > Collaborative vs. insular (Brun & Rapp, 2001) > Principles of Effective Family Focused Interventions (Kumpfer & Alvarado, 2003)

  5. Studies of CFS-type Approaches • Family-centered, strengths-based approach increases attachment, parental knowledge, and enhanced interaction among family members (Caro & Derevensky, 1991). • Linkages to social services, health care, housing, and employment increase self-sufficiency • (Lie & Moroney, 1992) • Community-based approach to child protection is touted as one of the most effective way to “reform” CPS (Waldfogel, 2000)

  6. Comprehensive Family Services Putting It All Together

  7. CFS: A Philosophy • Community-based • Strength-based • Prevention-focused • Partnership-driven • Integration of CFC services • Everyone A Leader

  8. CFS IS NOT: • A Program • An Initiative • A Team Meeting • Dependent on a facilitator • “Levels” • Only for “some” families

  9. CFS IS: • The way we think about our families, our co-workers and ourselves.

  10. CFS IS: • Treating our families, our co-workers and ourselves with respect and dignity.

  11. CFS IS: • Believing that our families, our co-workers and ourselves have strengths.

  12. CFS IS: • Believing that families and co-workers can contribute to the success of our work.

  13. CFS IS: • Partnerships with the community, other CFC agencies and our clients.

  14. CFS IS: • Actively listening to and respecting the opinion of others.

  15. CFS IS: • Focused on families rather than programs.

  16. CFS IS: • A belief that families can make good decisions about keeping children safe and being self sufficient.

  17. CFS IS: • The way we do business.

  18. Implementation • Co-house family support and Protection and Permanency • Establish Levels of CFS • Universal – strength based assessment • Targeted – referrals within the agency • Intensive – Family team meetings with community partners • Roll out the program county by county as ready. • Reinforcement and mentoring at all levels

  19. Comprehensive Family Services Putting It All Together

  20. CFS Videotape

  21. Discussion • What did you observe that was similar between the two stories? • What was different? • How was the client treated and what was the worker’s philosophy of intervention? • How is this different from typical treatment in child protection and family support? • What were outcomes?

  22. CFS Summative Evaluation Are These Services Effective?

  23. Challenges in Program Evaluation • CFS is complex involving multiple practices • CFS varies for each person, but all customers should be treated as partners with a belief in strengths • CFS is universal - all customers • CFS is targeted - needing resources • CFS is intensive - needing full partnerships

  24. Customer Satisfaction • Involve Customers in Guiding Practices • Consider clients as customers • Empowers people to ask their opinion • Satisfied customer worker harder, achieve better outcomes, and spread the word. • Council on Accreditation and CFSR standards require customer input.

  25. Outcome: Customer Satisfaction If CFC uses CFS beliefs and practices Then Customer Satisfaction should Be higher.

  26. Population for Sampling • 491,913 Total Population • Foster Adoptive: 2290 • Personnel: 5521 • Community Partners: 13496 • P&P Clients: 22412 • Child Support: 91056 • Family Support: 357952

  27. Process Overview

  28. Response Rates 52% overall

  29. CFS Summative Evaluation Methodology

  30. Method Customer Satisfaction Database CFS Indicators Added • Months CFS in place by county • Average: 5.59 months • CFS Yes or No by county • 63.8% had CFS in place

  31. Client Groups and CFS

  32. Average Total Client Satisfaction F (2, 4105) = 105.34; p = .000, power = .99

  33. Significant Differences for All Clients • Call returned • Easier to make appointments • Staff treat me with respect • Family is more able to care for themselves • Family is safer and more secure with help and referrals made by the agency

  34. P & P ClientsSatisfied Most - Not Significant

  35. Family Support Significant Difference

  36. Child Support

  37. Comments from Clients: Percent X2 (1, 1142) = 13.15; p = .001

  38. Community Partner Average Total Satisfaction F (1, 3185) = 23.0, p = .000; power = .98

  39. Community Partner Most Satisfied • Calls returned • Communication • Treated with respect • Helps Community Families to be more independent, safe, and secure

  40. Foster Parent Total Satisfaction F (1, 1387) = 17.93, p = .000; power = .98

  41. CFS: Foster Pre-Adoptive Parents • NO differences in: • Recommending fostering to others • Pride in helping families • Biggest differences: • Quality visits to child • Receives information

  42. % Satisfaction with Quality Visits to Foster Child F (1, 1387) = 46.73; p=.000

  43. Other Significant Differences

  44. Time and CFS • The longer CFS was in place, the higher • Client Satisfaction • Community Partner Satisfaction • Foster Parent Satisfaction • All statistically significant at the .000 level.

  45. CFS a way to do business Customer Satisfaction an Outcome

  46. Limitations • Regional differences in the way CFS is implemented (e.g., access to services, rates of poverty, rural regions) • Confounding variables (interpersonal relationship skills of certain workers) • Survey has not been empirically validated

  47. What does this mean for practice? • CFS shows promise • Not cause and effect with this data • Different effects for different programs • Probably other effects at work • CFS is consistent with best practices in the literature

  48. Questions and Discussion

More Related