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DMR Facts and Figures that all CABs Should Have

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Title: DMR Facts and Figures that all CABs Should Have


1
DMR Facts and Figures that all CABs Should Have
  • SAC reTREAT
  • January 12, 2008

2
Governor and Lt. Governor
  • Deval Patrick
  • Timothy P. Murray

3
EOHHS OrganizationThe Secretariat
4
Undersecretary EOHHS Vacant
EOHHS
Assistant Secretary CYF Marilyn Chase
Assistant secretary Disabilities Jean McGuire
Assistant secretary Health Services Vacant
Deputy Assistant Secretary, Health Vacant
Deputy Assistant Secretary, CYF Kathleen Betts
Deputy Assistant Secretary, DCS Laurie Burgess
Commissioner DMR Elin Howe
5
The Department of Mental RetardationStructure,
Services, Programs
6
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7
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8
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9
DMR Organizational Chart More Detail
10
Demographics
  • Who receive services?

11
Demographics Continued
12
DMR Class Members
  • Ricci Class 3,834 class members
  • 2995 reside in the Community
  • 779 reside in ICF/MR Facilities (22 in Marquardt
    SNF)
  • 60 reside outside of Massachusetts
  • Brewster Class 36 class members
  • Rolland Class Members 2,951
  • 836 reside in Nursing Facilities
  • There are approximately 400 nursing facilities in
    Massachusetts, 250 of these facilities have
    Rolland Class Members
  • Boulet Class Members original class 2,439

13
How are individuals supported?
  • Families and Informal Caregivers
  • State supported services
  • DMR statewide employs 7523
  • Contracted Services
  • 220 providers
  • 18,182 employees

14
What are the DMR funded services?
  • Service Coordination
  • Family Supports
  • Individual Supports
  • Residential Supports
  • Facility Supports
  • Day Supports
  • Employment Supports
  • Transportation

15
Service Coordination
  • What is it? Service Coordinators arrange,
    coordinate, and monitor the supports that DMR
    provides, purchases or arranges for an
    individual.
  • Who provides it? DMR staff
  • How many receive it? 32,445 individuals
  • (23,459 Adults 8,986 children)
  • Caseload Ratio Adults 1 to 53
  • Children 1 to
    279

16
Family Supports
  • What it is? Family Supports is a flexible array
    of services that enable children and adults to
    live with their immediate family and be welcomed,
    contributing members of their communities.
  • Who provides? A network of 72 Family Support
    Provider Agencies under contract with DMR.
  • How many receive? Approximately 4600 adults and
    8,650 children and families in 2007.

17
Individual Supports
  • What it is? Individual Supports consist of
    assistance with a variety of community
    activities, such as, help with money management,
    food preparation, food shopping, cooking,
    banking, and housekeeping.
  • Who provides? Provider Agencies under contract
    with DMR
  • How many receive? Approximately 3,000 individuals

18
Employment Supports
  • What it is? Employment Supports provide
    supervision, training, and/or transportation that
    enable individuals to get paid jobs. It includes
    help with career planning and job development as
    well.
  • Who provides? Providers Agencies under contract
    with DMR.
  • How many receive? Approximately 4,400 individuals

19
Community Day Supports
  • What it is? Day supports help
  • individuals to build and maintain their
    ability to participate in community activities by
    focusing on important skill areas that include
    communication, self-care, relationship building
    and community involvement.
  • Who provides? State and Provider Agencies under
    contract with DMR
  • How many receive? Approximately 1,700
    individuals

20
Residential Supports
  • What it is? Residential Supports
  • provide care, supervision and basic
  • life skills and community living skills
  • training in various residential setting
  • for up to 24 hours a day, 7 days
  • a week.
  • Who provides? State and Provider Agencies under
    contract with DMR
  • How many receive? Approximately 9,200 adults

21
Facility Supports
  • What it is? Facility Supports is provided in 6
    large state owned and operated facilities that
    are certified by the federal government as
    intermediate care facilities for the mentally
    retarded (ICFs/MR). They are
  • Monson Developmental Center,
  • Glavin Regional Center,
  • Templeton Developmental Center,
  • Hogan Regional Center,
  • Wrentham Developmental Center
  • Fernald Developmental Center
  • Who provides? The Department of
  • Mental Retardation
  • How many receive? 946 individuals

22
DMR Consumer Service Types
  • Supports include family supports, individual
    supports, transportation, respite, clinical
    services, etc.
  • Day includes DMR Community Based Day Services and
    MassHealth Day Habilitation
  • Community Residential Services includes DMR
    Community Based Residential Services and
    MassHealth Adult Foster Care
  • Facilities include ICF/MRs (Monson, Glavin,
    Templeton, Hogan, Fernald, Wrentham) and and
    Marquardt Skilled Nursing Facility.

23
MassHealth Funded Services
  • Day Habilitation provides individualized
    assistance to 6338 DMR consumers to acquire and
    maintain life skills, such mobility training,
    social behaviors, communications, basic safety
    skills, health skills and personal care skills.
  • Adult Day Health community based program
    providing a variety of health, social and related
    services that is serving 851 DMR consumers.
  • Adult Foster Care provides residential
    placement, health and social supports for 791 DMR
    consumers with various needs, such as, help with
    medication, ADLs, and ambulation.

24
DMR Programs
25
Waiver Programs
  • DMR program that provides home and
    community-based services through the federal
    Medicaid Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS)
    waiver program.
  • The Waiver Program helps fund community services
    with federal dollars.
  • DMR operates 2 Waiver Programs
  • Comprehensive Waiver serving 12,500 adults
  • Autism Waiver serving 80 children (ages 0 through
    8)

26
Waiver Services
  • Adult Waiver Services Family Supports,
    Individual Supports, Residential Supports,
    Supported Employment, Community Based Day
    Supports, Respite, Transportation, Personal
    Agents, Transitional Services, Assistive
    Technology
  • Autism Waiver Services Habilitation-Community
    Integration, Habilitation ADL/ Independent
  • Living Skills, Expanded Habilitation
    Service-Education, Respite, Family Training,
    Adaptive
  • Aids, Vehicle Adaptations, Homemaker

27
ISO (Intermediary Service Organization)
  • Consumer driven program that allows individuals
    and families to actively participate in the
    design and manage their services
  • ISO helps support self determination goals by
    enabling participants to have individualized
    budgets and control their services.
  • The ISO helps individuals and families directly
    select and arrange for supports and services with
    community providers.
  • In FY 2008, there are 281 ISO participants

28
DOE/DMR Program
  • Provides specialized intensive home, community
    and education supports.
  • Serves children
  • Ages 6 through 21
  • Enrolled in Department of Education (DOE)
    approved special education residential school OR
    school district determines child is at risk of
    needing a more restrictive out of home placement
  • eligible for DMR services
  • In FY 2007, 366 special education students were
    served in the DOE/DMR Program

29
Turning 22 Program
  • The Ch. 688 law establishes a transitional
    planning process for students with severe
    disabilities during the final two years of
    special education (before high school graduation
    or turning 22 years of age, whichever happens
    first)
  • The goal for the student is to
  • 1) Plan for appropriate adult service
    delivery
  • 2) To gain a level of independence
  • The Ch. 688 law does not require the continuation
    of the special educational entitlement nor does
    it automatically secure funding for adult
    services
  • The FY 2008 Turning 22 class for DMR is 608
    individuals.

30
Quality Assurance
31
How does DMR assure Quality?
  • A strong quality management and improvement
    system (QMIS) that looks at quality at 3 levels
  • the individual,
  • the provider
  • the system
  • QMIS measures quality outcomes important to
    stakeholders
  • QMIS consists of 22 different processes involving
    DMR staff, consumers and families on all levels
    of service delivery

32
What are the Quality Outcome Measures?
  • Health
  • Protection from Harm
  • Safe Environments
  • Human Civil Rights
  • Decision-making Choice
  • Community Integration Membership
  • Relationships
  • Achievement of Goals
  • Work
  • Qualified Providers

33
Licensure and Certification Processes
  • Public and private providers are evaluated on the
    level of quality of supports provided
  • Certification process assures that the quality
    outcomes and health and safety are present in
    peoples lives.
  • Licensure process assures that essential
    safeguards regarding health, safety, and rights
    are in place.
  • The evaluation uses observation, interviews and
    review of documentation for a sample of
    individuals served by a provider.
  • Residential, day, employment respite providers
    are subject to licensure and certification. 
    Individual supports are subject to certification.

34
Investigations Fiscal Year 2007
35
Complaint Resolution Team (CRT)
  • Each Area Office and Facility has a CRT
  • Brings citizen perspective regarding prevention
    of abuse and mistreatment
  • Reviews all investigated cases and cases subject
    to administrative review and develops Action Plan
    for all those cases

36
Investigations and CRT Action PlansFiscal Year
2007
37
Family Citizen Monitoring
  • A CAB managed quality assurance activity
  • 20 of 23 CABs conduct monitoring
  • 2 to 6 residences are visited monthly per CAB
  • Focus varies by CAB safety, nutrition,
    relationships, etc.
  • Area Director follows up on problems and concerns
    identified.

38
Human Rights Committees
  • Every Provider and DMR program have a Human
    Rights Committee (HRC).
  • HRC educates consumers and staff regarding human
    rights (e.g. privacy, self-determination and
    freedom of choice, free from exploitation,
    enjoyment of basic goods services)
  • HRC monitors compliance through visits, reviews
    of mistreatment and abuse complaints, restraints
    and other reports.
  • Oversight provided by DMR Human Rights Advisory
    Committee

39
Quality Councils
  • 4 regional and 1 statewide Quality Council that
    meet quarterly
  • Comprised of self-advocates, family members,
    providers and DMR staff
  • Charged with reviewing data from all sources
    regarding the quality of DMR services and
    supports
  • Identifies service improvement targets and
    monitors progress towards achieving targets

40

The Budget Process
DMR to EOHHS September Governors House 1
Budget January House Ways Means April Senat
e Ways Means April May Conference
Budget June - July Governor Signs
Budget June - July
41
DMR Budget FY 2008
  • 5911-1003 DMR Administration Operations
    77,144,454
  • 5911-2000 Transportation 14,137,324
  • 5920-2000 Community Residential
    547,716,905
  • 5920-2006 Residential Rate 2,000,000
  • 5920-2010 State Ops
    135,018,927
  • 5920-2020 Boulet/Waiting List
    87,870,762
  • 5920-2025 Day/Employment
    122,669,711
  • 5920-3000 Family Supports 55,044,228
  • 5920-3010 Autism 3,277,672
  • 5920-5000 Turning 22 7,700,000
  • 5930-1000 State Schools 184,933,044
  • 5982-1000 Templeton Retained Revenue
    150,000
  • 1599-6901 EOHHS Salary Reserve 10,826,454
  • 5948-0012 DOE/DMR
    8,000,000
  • TOTAL
    1,256,489,481

42
SAC CAB on DMR Web Site www.mass.gov/dmr
Role of Individuals, Families Volunteers
43
SAC CAB Section on DMR Web Site
44
SAC CABs can post and publicize on the DMR Web
Site!
45
SAC CABs can Collaborate Using PACEs Team
Room
  • The PACE Team Room is an internet based tool
    that the SAC CABs can use to
  • Share information
  • E-mail each other
  • Have on-line
  • discussions

46
Getting into Team Rooms
  •  I'm happy to report that PACE is now accessible
    via a link on the home page on the Internet see
    lower left hand side under the heading of Key
    Resources" which looks like this
  •  
  • KEY RESOURCES
  •                                Find a DMR Office
  •                                DMR Offices and
    Facilities
  •                                After Hours
    Emergency Phone Number (781) 894-3600
  •                                PACE Training
    Login
  •        
  •  Once you click the link above "PACE Training
    Login" you will automatically link to this page
    (see below) next scroll down to the Department of
    Mental Retardation and click on that link
  • PACE Login
  • Please find your agency and login properly.
    Thanks.
  • Human Resources Division  - Municipality/Non-Stat
    e Government
  • Department of Conservation and Recreation   -
    Municipality/Non-State Government
  • Department of Revenue  - Municipality/Non-State
    Government
  • Office of Health and Human Services  - Center
    Staff Development  - Virtual Gateway
  • Department of Mental Health  -
    Municipality/Non-State Government
  • Department of Mental Retardation  -
    Municipality/Non-State Government

47
PACE questions?
  • For further questions about PACE please contact
  • Valarie Oresto
  • Staff Development and Training Director
  • 500 Harrison Avenue
  • Boston, MA 02118
  • 617- 624-7755
  • valarie.oresto_at_massmail.state.ma.us

48
DMR Resource for SAC and CABs
  • Ralph Edwards, Director
  • Office of Citizens Leadership
  • 500 Harrison Avenue
  • Boston, MA 02118
  • 617- 624-7755
  • Email Ralph.Edwards_at_massmail.state.ma.us
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