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HANDS Off To MOWINS

HANDS Off To MOWINS. HANDS Retirement/ MOWINS Celebration. Bureau of WIC and Nutrition Services. WIC Program in Missouri. WIC started in Missouri in 1974. By 1976 there were 66 local agencies. By 1977 it was realized that a computerized processing system was necessary.

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HANDS Off To MOWINS

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  1. HANDS Off To MOWINS HANDS Retirement/ MOWINS Celebration Bureau of WIC and Nutrition Services

  2. WIC Program in Missouri • WIC started in Missouri in 1974. • By 1976 there were 66 local agencies. • By 1977 it was realized that a computerized processing system was necessary. • This led to the WIC-EDP system that started in 1979 and lasted until 1990.

  3. WIC-EDP System • Predecessor to HANDS. • Local agencies used paper forms. • Issued food vouchers to participants. • Local agency staff sent the forms to Jefferson City and state staff keyed the data into the system. • Delays occurred in processing due to the tremendous volume of paper.

  4. Health Agency Network Data System (HANDS) • HANDS was piloted in 1990 and was completely rolled out by 1993. • It used the Department of Social Services mainframe. • HANDS was a big adjustment for local agencies. • Local agency staff did not use computers for WIC and likely did not use computers at all. • They had to learn how to use computers and HANDS to do the data entry for certification that was previously done by state staff. • Changed from vouchers to checks in 2000.

  5. HANDS Training

  6. HANDS • HANDS served WIC well from 1993-2009. • Over the years, changes in computer technology caused the State WIC Office to seriously consider getting a new data system. • In 2006 WIC applied to USDA to get a new data system.

  7. State Agency Models (SAM) • “Build once, replicate many times”. • All USDA WIC SAMs have the following features: • Modern web technology- Windows features- drop down menus, etc. • Standard WIC data elements. • Open system architecture to make it able to use on multiple computer platforms. • Modular components to make it easy to add components. • Compliance with federal policy and regulations.

  8. State Agency Models (SAM) • There are three SAMs • Mountain Plains States’ Consortium- Colorado, Wyoming and Utah. • Crossroads in the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast Regions- North Carolina, Alabama, Virginia and West Virginia. • Successful Partners in Reaching Innovative Technology (Spirit)- 13 Indian Tribal Organizations in Oklahoma and New Mexico.

  9. Missouri WIC SAM Grant Application • Planning document was approved by USDA in August 2006. • Missouri WIC learned of SAM grant for SPIRIT in early April 2007.

  10. Missouri WIC SAM Application • CSC Covansys came to Jefferson City on April 13, 2007 to show demonstration of SPIRIT for steering committee and other state WIC and ITSD staff. • Submitted grant application on June 15, 2007. • Grant was approved on September 13, 2007.

  11. Other SPIRIT States • Other states that received the SAM grant were Arkansas and Montana.

  12. MOWINS (SPIRIT) • We named the system Missouri WIC Information Network Data System (MOWINS). • Contest was held with input from state and local staff. • Web-based system with Windows features. • Designed to use less paper-uses signature pads to capture signatures and scanners to scan documents into participant's folder. • Upgraded to MICR printers from the dot matrix printers that had been used to print WIC checks.

  13. MOWINS Steering Committee • Oversaw implementation of new data system • Members • LWPs- Jim Wheaton, Truman Medical Center, Jan Glaze, Jefferson- Franklin Community Action Corp., Connie Agler, Randolph County Health Dept., Rhonda Breitenbecher, Johnson County Community Health Services • DHSS- Lyn Konstant, Mark Davis, Larry Rutledge, Perry Mathes and Les Hancock, Division of Community and Public Health, Linda Cade, Division of Administration, Paula Peters, ITSD • Missouri Grocers Association- Dan Shaul

  14. MOWINS TimeLine • Released Request for Proposal (RFP) for implementation contractor on January 7, 2008. • Awarded contract to CSC Covansys on April 9, 2008. • Kick off of project to implement MOWINS statewide in Missouri was on May 1, 2008.

  15. MOWINS Timeline (cont) • Gap analysis and Joint Application Design (JAD) sessions- May and June 2008. • User Acceptance Testing (UAT)- September-November 2008.

  16. UAT - September 2008

  17. MOWINS Timeline (cont) • Pilot started in December 2008 (six local agencies) and continued into January 2009. • Statewide roll out- February 2-July 14, 2009. • Six agencies a week rolled out on MOWINS.

  18. Data Conversion • Converted HANDS data into MOWINS • Enabled data that was in HANDS to be available when agency rolled out on MOWINS. • ITSD programming staff provided 477 hours of work (beyond normal business hours) from November 2008-July 2009 to do the data conversion for local agencies that were transitioning to MOWINS (usually six local agencies) the following week. • On average, conversion took 4-5 hours to complete.

  19. MOWINS Training for Local Agencies • Contracted with CSC Covansys to provide the MOWINS trainers. • State WIC staff facilitated the training. • 80 trainings at 40 locations • Most weeks there were four trainings going on concurrently so up to about 50 people a week could be trained. • Three days of training for all staff- one more day for administrative staff.

  20. MOWINS Training

  21. MOWINS Roll Out Support • At least one state WIC staff person attended the roll out of all 118 local agencies, including some satellite sites. • ITSD field staff person attended all roll outs including satellite sites (total of 248 sites).

  22. Logistics • Training Equipment- 4 sets of equipment for training- each set had 16 laptops, 6 signature pads, 2 scanners, 1 switch, 1 printer, network cables and extension cords, training materials. • Van- Including pilot trainings- 80 trainings at 40 sites all over the state for 25 weeks, October 2008-July 2009. The equipment was dropped of at two sites every Monday and was picked up at two sites every Friday. Put over 17,000 miles on the van- coast to coast over 5 times!

  23. Ready to Drop Off Equipment

  24. On the Road Again

  25. Logistics (cont) • Car and motel reservations- for WIC and ITSD staff to go to the training, rollouts and set up computer equipment- over 500 trips!

  26. Arranging MOWINS Travel

  27. MOWINS Equipment • MICR Printers- 449 • Signature Pads-665 • Scanners-565 • Computers-105 • Laptops-100 • Equipment had to be tagged and sent to local agencies, using DH-60- over 2000 items. • ITSD staff set up equipment at 118 agencies- 248 sites.

  28. MOWINS Help Desk • Prior to MOWINS, answered about 100 calls a week. • During roll out, answered approximately 700 calls per week from December 2008-July 2009. • Help Desk staff were on front line for user frustrations as they learned a new system and adapted to new policies and procedures.

  29. Help Desk Staff- Answering Calls

  30. Access to MOWINS • Access to MOWINS was given to 926 local and state staff.

  31. Local Agencies • The 118 local agencies had to make many changes to their workflow and adapt to many policy and procedure changes. • They had to adjust to the fact that MOWINS, because it has a more user friendly interface that requires much more data to flow back and forth from the agency to the server in Jefferson City, is not as fast as HANDS. • They also had to contend with “bugs” in the system that caused delays in serving participants.

  32. MOWINS • Whenever you deploy a new data system there are going to be “bugs” that develop. • It happened with HANDS and with MOWINS. • We identified these “bugs” and worked together as a team to correct them.

  33. MOWINS “Bugs” • WIC reports • Speed issues • Check issues • Down Time • Deadlocks • Signature pad problems

  34. Team Effort • Involved state WIC office, local agency, ITSD, DHSS Warehouse and CSC Covansys all working as team to make this happen.

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