THRIVE, Maine`s Trauma-informed System of Care
Transcription
THRIVE, Maine`s Trauma-informed System of Care
THRIVE Maine’s Trauma-informed System of Care FINAL EVALUATION REPORT 2012 Produced for Maine Department of Health and Human Services by Hornby Zeller Associates, Inc. with support from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration THRIVE Maine’s Trauma-informed System of Care FINAL EVALUATION REPORT Prepared by Hornby Zeller Associates, Inc. 373 Broadway South Portland, ME 04106 (207) 773-9529 www.hornbyzeller.com EXPRESSIONS OF GRATITUDE The authors gratefully acknowledge the many individuals and organizations who supported the THRIVE Evaluation. First and foremost, we thank the Center for Mental Health Services (CMHS) and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) for their ongoing support for systems of care and the trauma-informed approach. The State of Maine Department of Health and Human Services, Children’s Behavioral Health Services and particularly, Joan Smyrski, M.S., Director of Children’s Behavioral Health Services and Principal Investigator for THRIVE, was a true trauma champion whose support and dedication were critical to the success of the evaluation and assessment efforts. Douglas Patrick, J.D., L.C.S.W., Manager of Maine’s Children's Behavioral Health System, strongly promoted statewide implementation of the agency assessment and the continuous quality improvement cycle for all child-serving agencies in Maine. Both these state-level trauma champions provided more support that can be articulated here. We thank the THRIVE Initiative both for supporting the evaluation over the years and wanting to learn from it. Chris Copeland, L.C.S.W., Executive Director of the lead agency, Tri-County Mental Health, played an active role both in attending the evaluation committee and in using the information about his agency’s practices to the better of children and families. Arabella Perez, L.C.S.W., Executive Director of THRIVE, provided consistent grounding in trauma-informed theory and cultural and linguistic competence. Brianne Masselli, THRIVE’s Youth Coordinator, ensured that youth voice was always present in creating protocols or presenting findings; she was instrumental in bringing the evaluation to THRIVE’s youth. Alice Preble and Cindy Seekins oversaw THRIVE’s Family Support Partners and faithfully shared intake and enrollment information with the evaluation, while THRIVE’s Family Support Partners Michelle LaPointe, Michelle Hill and Kristi Whiting served as the first point of engagement for families. Melanie Swift, THRIVE’s Technical Assistance Coordinator, Judith Day, THRIVE’s Clinical Coordinator for trauma-informed trainings and evidence based treatment collaboratives, and Lisa Preney, THRIVE’s Social Marketing Coordinator, all contributed time and expertise at various points. Carol Tiernan, Program Director of G.E.A.R. Parent Network, faithfully co-chaired the Evaluation Committee, seeking clarification and providing guidance to give voice to the families she represents. G.E.A.R. eventually took responsibility for the management of THRIVE’s family support program and took an active role in promoting ways to sustain family support partnering in Maine. We would also like to thank the many individuals who convened as members of the Evaluation Committee and the Trauma-informed Agency Assessment workgroup not mentioned elsewhere. These individuals dedicated time and energy to reviewing and interpreting documents, providing feedback and valuable insights over the life of the project. Virginia Jewell, MA and Family Member and Sharon Carter, Family Member patiently and politely endured lengthy discussions about research methodology in order to ensure that the evaluation process was family-driven. THRIVE’s youth committee led by Brianne Masselli provided feedback to the national and local evaluation and ensured that the process was youth guided. Mark Rains, Ph.D. brought a clinical perspective, providing thoughtful considerations regarding the interpretation of results as well as how to meaningfully present information. Both Chris Copeland, referenced above, and Bart Beattie, L.C.S.W., State Executive Director of Providence Service Corps, graciously volunteered their agencies to pilot test the assessment tool. At Hornby Zeller Associates, we would like to thank our Family Evaluators, Kara Thurlow and Claire Nacinovich, who spent hours learning a complex evaluation protocol, speaking with families and recording information. Their ongoing perseverance made all the difference. We also want to thank Lynn Kaier, Ph.D. and Jennifer Battis, M.Res., for their assistance with analyzing claims data as well as on-going data monitoring. Finally, we wish to thank all the children, youth and families who participated in the evaluation. By sharing their stories, they have played a significant role in our efforts to understand the needs of children and youth receiving mental health services. It is our profound hope that their contributions will help to modify the existing services into a seamless system of trauma-informed care that supports youth and family empowerment. James Yoe, Ph.D. Lead Investigator Director of the Office of Quality Improvement Maine Department of Health and Human Services Sarah Krichels Goan, M.P.P. Helaine Hornby, M.A. Hornby Zeller Associates, Inc. The final evaluation report for Maine’s Trauma-informed System of Care is submitted pursuant to Grant No. 6U79 SM57045 under the direction of the Child, Adolescent and Family Branch, Center for Mental Health Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, United States Department of Health and Human Services. TABLE OF CONTENTS Executive Summary............................................................................................................................................... i Chapter 1 – Background and Purpose ........................................................................................................... i Why Trauma Matters ...................................................................................................................................... 1 Maine’s Trauma-informed System of Care and the Trauma-informed Approach .................. 1 Purpose of this Report.................................................................................................................................... 4 Chapter 2 – Prevalence of Trauma Exposure and Effects on Families and Youth ....................... 5 Methodology ...................................................................................................................................................... 5 Local Evaluation Instruments................................................................................................................. 5 Data Collection.............................................................................................................................................. 6 Study Participation ..................................................................................................................................... 7 Analysis ........................................................................................................................................................... 7 Findings................................................................................................................................................................ 9 Participant Demographics ....................................................................................................................... 9 Prevalence of Trauma ............................................................................................................................. 10 Effects of Trauma on Youth and Families ....................................................................................... 12 Effectiveness of the Trauma-informed Approach to Service Delivery ................................ 17 Summary Conclusions ................................................................................................................................. 19 Chapter 3 – Service Utilization and Cost Outcomes.............................................................................. 21 Methodology ................................................................................................................................................... 21 Participants...................................................................................................................................................... 22 Findings............................................................................................................................................................. 23 Service Use Patterns ................................................................................................................................ 23 Cost Effectiveness of Services .............................................................................................................. 26 Observed Differences Among Groups of Interest ........................................................................ 27 Summary Conclusions ................................................................................................................................. 29 Chapter 4 – Effectiveness of Trauma-Specific Treatment .................................................................. 30 Methodology ................................................................................................................................................... 31 Participants...................................................................................................................................................... 32 Agency Participation ............................................................................................................................... 32 TF-CBT Participants at Start of Services.......................................................................................... 32 Client Level Outcomes ................................................................................................................................. 33 Fidelity to the TF-CBT Model .................................................................................................................... 33 Lessons Learned Regarding Data Collection ...................................................................................... 33 Summary Conclusions ................................................................................................................................. 35 Chapter 5 – Assessing the Trauma-informed Approach to Services .............................................. 37 Formative Analysis of TIAA ....................................................................................................................... 37 Planning ....................................................................................................................................................... 37 Pilot Testing ................................................................................................................................................ 37 Refining ........................................................................................................................................................ 38 Implementing ............................................................................................................................................. 38 Essential Elements of the Assessment .................................................................................................. 38 Methodology ................................................................................................................................................... 39 Data Limitations........................................................................................................................................ 40 Initial Validation of the TIAA .................................................................................................................... 40 Results ............................................................................................................................................................... 41 Continuous Quality Improvement Process ......................................................................................... 46 Lessons Learned, Successes and Challenges....................................................................................... 48 Chapter 6 – Conclusion .................................................................................................................................... 49 References ............................................................................................................................................................ 55 Appendix ............................................................................................................................................................... 57 Trauma Instrument Description ............................................................................................................. 59 National Evaluation Instrument Descriptions ................................................................................... 63 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Background Trauma has many causes — physical or sexual abuse, domestic violence, exposure to substance abuse, violent acts, and natural disasters among others. Additionally trauma, as it relates to emotional and behavioral health, is the effect of exposure to an acutely distressing event or a pattern of behavior or environment that is outside the range of usual human experience. It is estimated that three million children and adolescents in the United States are exposed to serious traumatic events each year. Child and adolescent trauma survivors have higher rates of mental health service use and are more likely to use acute mental health treatment services at a higher cost. Research has also linked exposure to trauma during childhood to many risk factors for health and social problems later in life Maine’s THRIVE Initiative began in 2005 and was the first System of Care (SOC) for children, youth and families with a specific focus on trauma-informed practices. The THRIVE Initiative functioned under the auspices of the Maine Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Children’s Behavioral Health in three counties in Maine: Androscoggin, Franklin and Oxford. Tri-County Mental Health served as the lead agency employing THRIVE staff and providing supervision and support. . Based on constructs developed by Roger Fallot and Maxine Harris and outlined in Using Trauma Theory to Design Service Systems (2001), THRIVE developed an approach to service delivery for children’s mental health services that acknowledges and understands the effects of trauma within each of the following components: Safety; Trustworthiness; Choice Collaboration; Empowerment; and Language/Cultural Competency. To supplement and enhance Maine’s service system using this approach, THRIVE advanced the traumainformed approach in five key ways: • • • • • creating a Family Partnering Program which offered trauma-informed peer support to families receiving children’s mental health services; convening the Trauma-focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Learning Collaborative, which trained numerous providers in this evidence based treatment model; providing trauma-informed technical assistance and training for agencies and direct service staff; developing a Trauma-informed Agency Assessment and Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) process by which to inform improvement and gauge progress at the agency level; and encouraging the development of youth and family voice by supporting the creation and development of the Maine Alliance of Family Organizations and Youth MOVE Maine. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page i This report presents the results of the THRIVE evaluation performed by Hornby Zeller Associates, Inc. (HZA) a social science research firm with offices in Maine, among other states, in cooperation with Dr. James Yoe, the Lead Investigator . The study has four major components, each described in more detail in the full report: • • • • Prevalence of trauma exposure and its effects; Service use and cost outcomes; Effectiveness of trauma-specific treatment; and Assessing the trauma-informed approach to services. Major Findings Prevalence of Trauma Exposure and Effects on Children, Youth and Families Overall, 194 children and youth enrolled in THRIVE, 120 of whom participated in the study on incidence and prevalence and 78 of whom were included in the longitudinal study. The average age of participating children and youth was 10 years old at intake into THRIVE; 45 percent were between the ages of seven and 11. Over two-thirds of the children were boys and lived at home with one or both biological parents. The most common diagnosis among participants was attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (54%), followed by mood disorders, oppositional defiant disorders, post-traumatic stress disorder/acute stress disorder, and other anxiety disorders. Prevalence of Trauma Exposure • • • • • Most of the children were found to have experienced at least one traumatic event. The average number of trauma experiences was three, and two out of three reported a substantial trauma history. Nearly one-third of the children and youth had experienced physical abuse and almost one in five had experienced sexual abuse. The parents and caregivers who participated in the study reported experiencing an average of 3.5 trauma events before the age of 18, and nearly two-thirds (65 %) of caregivers reported having experienced three or more traumatic events before the age of 18. Some of the most frequently cited childhood traumatic experiences for parents included emotional abuse, being separated from their caregiver and experiencing sexual abuse. Forty-two percent of the families presented intergenerational trauma, meaning both children and their caregivers had experienced three or more trauma incidents as children. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page ii Effects of Trauma and Outcomes After Six Months • • • • Children and youth with a higher level of trauma experiences were more likely to exhibit challenging behaviors and less likely to exhibit strengths. Caregivers with a higher level of childhood trauma exposure were more likely to report being stressed. Children and youth living in families with “intergenerational” trauma were more likely to present symptoms related to trauma as well as challenging behaviors. Children and youth showed reduced rates of trauma symptoms and challenging behaviors while caregivers showed reduced stress levels after working with a trauma-informed Family Support Partner and receiving other services. Service Utilization and Cost Outcomes This component of the evaluation was intended to explore the patterns of services use among THRIVE participants, the costs associated with those services, and any potential changes after enrolling in THRIVE and even after formal services were concluded. A secondary purpose was to compare the results of children who have had a trauma history to those who had not. For the service and cost study, cost data from 102 participants were analyzed. • • • During THRIVE involvement the percentage of children and youth using targeted case management increased by 14 percent, while the use of Emergency Room, crisis support, outpatient hospital services and home-based services decreased. The proportion of children and youth receiving inpatient mental health services was reduced by nearly half in the period immediately after THRIVE enrollment. There appears to be a cost-savings of just over $450,000 between the period prior to enrolling in THRIVE and the period after program involvement. The greatest reduction in average costs was within families where the child and parent both had experienced trauma histories. Effectiveness of Evidence-based Treatment In 2006, THRIVE’s Clinical and Evidence-Based Practice Committee identified Trauma Focused-Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT) as one of two evidence-based traumaspecific treatment models for children and families to be implemented in the Androscoggin, Oxford, and Franklin County catchment area. Thirty-five clients were served by TF-CBT. At least 10 completed TF-CBT while two dropped out; 16 participants were continuing treatment when the final data were submitted. • • After participating in TF-CBT, youth expressed positive changes in resiliency and reduced frequency of trauma-related symptoms. There appeared to be a relationship between the positive outcomes and the number of TF-CBT sessions. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page iii Assessing the Trauma-informed Approach A major focus of THRIVE was to assist entire mental health agencies to become traumainformed in their approaches and practices. THRIVE’s answer rested in developing a trauma-informed assessment (TIAA) to assess all aspects of the agency’s presentation and treatment to families and children. After two years of development, two agencies piloted the TIAA, as well as answered questions regarding the method of administering the assessment. Youth and family members helped interpret the results and provided feedback about the data collection methods based on their field experiences. Taking into account all findings, the tool was modified and the standards were refined. Once the pilots were completed, all of Maine’s System of Care agencies participated, according to contract language implemented by Maine’s Children’s Behavioral Health Services. The TIAA was administered twice on a statewide basis during the course of the grant although not all contracted agencies participated in both rounds. While the two years generally assess different agencies it is instructive to see the progression of traumainformed practice in many of the areas assessed. The key findings from those assessments are as follows: • • • • The greatest gains from the perspective of agency staff were in the domain of commitment to a trauma-informed approach, followed by trauma competence. The greatest increase from the family perspective was in family empowerment and engagement, a four percentage point increase. Among youth, the greatest change was youth empowerment and engagement, six percentage points, followed by trauma competence, five percentage points. When the perceptions of agency staff, youth and families were compared, the following patterns emerged: o Families reported more positive perceptions of physical and emotional safety than youth and agency staff; o Agency staff perceive that they empower youth more than the youth perceive that themselves; o Agency staff and family members are virtually the same in their perceptions of family empowerment; o Families and youth believe the agencies display more trauma competence than the agencies themselves perceive; o Youth perceptions of trustworthiness are lower than families or agency staff; and o Family members and youth reported more positive perceptions than the staff of cultural competence. Discussion and Conclusions As the first System of Care (SOC) project with a specific focus on trauma-informed practices, the THRIVE Initiative has had a unique opportunity both to define what traumainformed practice means and to assess its impact on children and their families. A strong partnership between the state sponsors at Children’s Behavioral Health Services (CBHS), THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page iv the people developing the THRIVE Initiative in the target counties and the evaluators has permitted and even facilitated a learning process that is now reaping benefits beyond the Initiative itself. The benefits first manifested themselves in the encouragement provided by CBHS to take the learnings from THRIVE to the entire state. This has allowed other communities and agencies to avail themselves of the training and technical assistance provided by THRIVE. The state leaders fostered the ability of all contracted mental health agencies to conduct their own assessments of their agency on the principles of system of care and traumainformed practices using tools and evaluation techniques developed and promoted by THRIVE. Even the federal requirement that grantees provide matching funds helped facilitate the dissemination of learning as the evaluator’s contribution was to go beyond the three counties funded by the project to bring the assessment statewide. Benefits also were derived from the state-level encouragement of the development of both youth and family organizations whose voices could be heard beyond a system of care project. Thus, the THRIVE Initiative, with the strong encouragement of Children’s Behavioral Health, helped to support the development of an alliance of six family organizations, called the Maine Alliance of Family Organizations (M.A.F.O.). Ultimately one of the services provided by THRIVE, the trauma-informed Family Partnering program and cultural brokering, was turned over to two family organizations to administer. It also encouraged the development of a Youth Move chapter, Youth MOVE Maine and supported various youth initiatives that went beyond THRIVE. Going beyond Maine, the THRIVE Initiative and its evaluators have actively developed materials for presentation at national forums, both in the form of workshops, and poster sessions and even extensive institutes. Each year THRIVE’s submissions have been approved by the national children’s mental health research conferences sponsored by the University of South Florida and/or the by the Georgetown Institutes. At the most recent Georgetown Institute (Orlando, 2012), the former youth coordinator for THRIVE and now its Training and CQI Manager was a plenary speaker before 2200 people, providing a first person perspective on growing up with trauma and how even to this day the principles of trauma-informed practice provide comfort and assistance in addressing its impact. THRIVE also has received awards for its innovative social marketing initiatives such as digital stories which allow youth and family to tell their stories in their own voices using the new media. Recognizing the power and potential of disseminating the concepts inherent in traumainformed practice to a national audience, THRIVE was encouraged both by the state sponsors and even its own lead agency, Tri-County Mental Health, to become its own independent organization. Last year THRIVE was granted a federal 501 (C) 3 status as a non-profit organization. This vehicle has allowed THRIVE to develop training and technical assistance contracts in many states throughout the country and has even permitted the dissemination of its Trauma-informed Agency Assessment Tool to states outside Maine through a partnership with the evaluators. The existence of THRIVE as a separate organization promotes the sustainability of the system of care. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page v This partnership has also allowed THRIVE to make new discoveries about the nature and impact of trauma by forging close working relationships with its evaluators. An unusual contractual model was employed. The lead evaluation investigator is a state employee with broad system of care experience; he is currently Director of the Office of Continuous Quality Improvement for the State Department of Health and Human Services. But the dayto-day operations of the evaluation were contracted to Hornby Zeller Associates, Inc., a social science research firm with offices in Maine, among other states. The partnership worked extremely well by combining the expertise and resources of two organizations. For example, the private firm could easily hire family evaluators who may not have had traditional credentials associated with state service. They could be given the materials and resources needed to operate flexibly. The private firm could obtain access to data such as Medicaid claims files and gain expertise in its analysis from the state. The joint efforts led to a powerful service and cost analysis. The partnership allowed investigators to develop materials and make joint presentations to state and national audiences. Through the evaluation, the project hoped to demonstrate both the degree to which trauma is prevalent among the population of children with emotional disturbances and the approaches that could mitigate the negative effects of trauma. While it has done both, the project and its evaluation team has taken the inquiry one step further, with initial results that may prove to be the most important evaluation contribution of the project. That was to assess the impact of trauma from one generation to the next. The evaluation team added three tools to those required by the national cross-site evaluator: the Traumatic Events Screening Instrument (TESI), the Lifetime Incidence of Traumatic Events (LITE; both parent and child versions), and the Trauma Symptom Checklist (TSC; versions for Young Children and for Youth). By having the foresight and ability to capture the caregiver’s own trauma history as a child using the TESI, the evaluation permitted analyses of what we came to call “inter-generational trauma.” The linkages from one generation to the next became apparent by using correlational analysis techniques; these types of analyses could even be extended to the service and cost study which ultimately demonstrated two important things: children whose parents had childhood traumatic experiences used more expensive services for their children before enrolling in THRIVE than those who did not, and these same parents and children realized far greater savings in the cost of treatment six months after THRIVE services concluded, largely due to a shift away from inpatient hospital services. The service shifts led to a cost savings of more than $450,000 for families enrolled in THRIVE, representing more than a 30 percent reduction in cost from six months before service initiation to six months after service termination. The greatest change amounting to more than a 50 percent cost reduction, was among families with an intergenerational trauma history. Their savings were far greater than parents who did not have trauma histories themselves. And the most consistent intervention received by all these families was a Family Support Partner. The THRIVE Initiative learned much about promoting and enhancing a trauma-informed system. Perhaps the most salient lesson is the need for trauma champions, strong leaders at the state and agency level who acknowledge and understand the importance of the THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page vi question, “What happened to you,” as opposed to what is wrong with you. Whether it was the TIAA self-assessment process or TF-CBT learning collaborative, those agencies that were the most successful had leaders who were dedicated to implementing the traumainformed approach. Moreover, the commitment from state agency leadership was instrumental in the statewide TIAA administration and ultimately plans to expand the trauma-informed approach to other agencies and service systems. The TIAA showed that agency staff members often have different perceptions of their practices from the children and families. For physical and emotional safety domains, the families have a higher perception of agency practices than the youth or even the agency staff. On the question of youth empowerment, the agency staff perceive that they empower youth more than the youth perceive that themselves. On the domain of family empowerment, the perceptions of agency staff and family members are virtually the same. Families and youth believe the agencies display more trauma competence than the agencies themselves perceive. Trustworthiness is another issue that the youth have, with their perceptions being lower than families or agency staff. On cultural competency, both the family members followed by the youth, have a higher perception than the staff have of their own cultural competence. These results suggest the need for agencies to work more closely with youth and families to examine these domains, particularly in the one area where the staff rank themselves higher than the people they serve: youth empowerment. In conclusion, the most important independent finding of the evaluation is the connection between a caregiver’s experience of trauma as a child and his or her own child’s experience. These relationships affect how much a child uses expensive services before receiving treatment. It is particularly noteworthy that providing a Family Support Partner was most effective when the caregiver disclosed a childhood affected by trauma. While the post-service costs for the entire sample were reduced by 30 percent, for the subgroup with a trauma history there was a 50 percent reduction. While the sample size is small, the results have face validity and need to be replicated with larger groups of people, preferably using a quasi-experimental design. Future studies should be designed to pinpoint the specific relationships between trauma experiences, trauma-informed services, children’s outcomes and associated costs. Even with its limitations, the overall evaluation results of the THRIVE Initiative suggest that better outcomes and reduced costs can be achieved by providing trauma-informed parent peer supports, offering trauma-specific treatments and taking into account the trauma history of the entire family through a trauma-informed approach to service delivery. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page vii THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page viii CHAPTER 1 BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Why Trauma Matters Trauma has many causes — physical or sexual abuse, domestic violence, exposure to substance abuse, violent acts, and natural disasters among others. It is estimated that three million children and adolescents in the United States are exposed to serious traumatic events each year (Hamblen and Barnett, 2012). Nearly one out of three adolescents has been found to be physically or sexually assaulted by the age of sixteen (Boney-McCoy & Finkelhor, 1995) and violent crime victimization among youth is twice as high as the rate for adults (Hashima & Finkelhor, 1999). High rates (50-70%) of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) have been found among child, adolescent and adult public service users, while PTSD rates among Medicaid enrollees are highest among children ages five to twelve, at 609.5 per 1,000 (Macy, 2002; Kessler, 2000; Switzer, et al., 1999). Child and adolescent trauma survivors have higher rates of mental health service use and are more likely to use acute mental health treatment services, including: inpatient hospitalization, crisis services, and residential treatment services at a higher cost (Frothingham, et al. 2000; Macy, 2002; Newmann, et al., 1998; Blanch, 2003). Finally, the Adverse Childhood Experiences Study (Felitti, et al. 1998) has shown a strong relationship between exposure to trauma during childhood and many risk factors for health and social problems later in life. Other research has suggested a relationship between parental childhood trauma and how parents interact with their children (Appleyard & Osofsky, 2003; Bolen, 2000; Silverman & Lieberman, 1999; Ancharoff et al., 1998). In light of mounting evidence about the impact of trauma, the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) recognized violent trauma as a root cause of pervasive, harmful and costly public health problems in January 2010. SAMHSA has begun a strategic initiative to reduce the behavioral health impacts of violence by integrating trauma-informed services with prevention and treatment programs. Maine’s Trauma-informed System of Care and the Trauma-informed Approach Maine’s THRIVE Initiative began in 2005 and was the first System of Care (SOC) for children, youth and families with a specific focus on trauma-informed practices. In addition to embodying the SOC principles of being family-driven, youth-guided and culturally and linguistically competent, Maine sought to make trauma-informed a key SOC principle. The THRIVE Initiative functioned under the auspices of the Maine Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Children’s Behavioral Health. It operated in three counties in Maine: Androscoggin, Franklin and Oxford. Tri-County Mental Health served as lead agency. Maine’s system of care application and focus was precipitated by data collected and analyzed by James Yoe, Ph.D., the Director of the Office of Continuous Quality Improvement THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 1 with the Maine Department of Health and Human Services, which showed that compared to others, children and youth recipients of mental health services who have experienced and survived trauma in Maine had greater behavioral and emotional challenges, and were at greater risk of significant harm. The study findings also indicated that these children were more likely to experience co-occurring physically, developmental, and substance abuse challenges; they also had significantly greater challenges in the areas of child/youth and parent/caregiver acceptance and engagement with service providers. An analysis of service use and costs showed that children and youth who experience trauma were more likely to use high-end mental health services, including psychiatric inpatient services, residential treatment, and crisis services; they also had 73 percent higher mental health service expenditures and 51 percent higher overall treatment expenditures. Based on constructs developed by Roger Fallot and Maxine Harris and outlined in Using Trauma Theory to Design Service Systems (2001), THRIVE developed an approach to service delivery for children’s mental health services that acknowledges and understands the effects of trauma. The resulting trauma-informed approach defines service delivery and best practices within each of the following components: • • • • • • Safety Trustworthiness Choice Collaboration Empowerment Language/Cultural Competence To supplement and enhance Maine’s service system using this approach, the THRIVE Initiative advanced the trauma-informed approach in five ways: creating a Family Partnering Program which offered trauma-informed Family Support Partners to families receiving children’s mental health services; convening the Trauma-focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT) Learning Collaborative, which trained numerous providers in this evidence based treatment model; providing trauma-informed technical assistance and training for mental health agencies and direct service staff; developing a Traumainformed Agency Assessment and Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) process by which to inform improvement and gauge progress in adopting trauma-informed practices at the agency level; and using organizational structures to encourage youth and family voice. Each of these interventions, which collectively constitute the THRIVE Initiative, is described in more detail below. Trauma-informed Family Partnering Program. Family Support Partners worked with families who were referred to the THRIVE Initiative from Child Welfare, Juvenile Justice and local mental health agencies. The Family Support Partners were a peer support, meaning that they were themselves parenting at least one child with special needs, and they received training in the trauma-informed approach. The overall goal of the Family Support Partners was to build upon a family’s strengths and to increase a parent’s ability to advocate for his or her family. While the role of the Family Support Partners varied based on an individual family’s needs, Family Support Partners offered the following types of THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 2 support, usually for a period of about six months: • • • • • Providing information about local resources; Talking and listening without judgment; Helping articulate needs and wants to service providers; Helping prepare for meetings; and Attending meetings to support family members on request. Trauma-focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT) Learning Collaborative. TF-CBT is an evidence-based trauma-specific treatment model for children and families that typically lasts for a period of 12 to 16 weeks. Research has shown that TF-CBT is successful with children between the ages of three and 18 who have experienced traumatic events that are contributing to emotional challenges. THRIVE used a Learning Collaborative approach to bring TF-CBT to seven local mental health agencies, plus four private practitioners, serving Androscoggin, Oxford, and Franklin Counties. Over the course of one year, participants received three rounds of training in the model plus monthly peer consultation and on-going support. The people who received TF-CBT as a therapeutic intervention were not the same as those enrolled in the THRIVE Family Partnering Program. Trauma-informed Training and Technical Assistance. To educate providers regarding the trauma-informed approach, THRIVE provided trainings to mental health agencies, community providers, and youth and families organizations throughout the service area. In particular, training and assistance were offered to the 23 local entities that signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the THRIVE Initiative. The project also developed and disseminated a Best Practices Guide for implementing the trauma-informed approach at an agency and developed free informational webinars outlining the core concepts. These activities formed the core of the Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) process being used in conjunction with the Trauma-informed Agency Assessment, discussed below. Trauma-informed Agency Assessment. THRIVE developed a trauma-informed agency assessment (TIAA) and Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) process to help agencies determine the extent to which they were delivering trauma-informed services and to pinpoint areas for improvement. Over the course of five years, youth, family, evaluators, service providers and project staff worked together to develop a three-part self assessment tool that measures Physical and Emotional Safety; Youth and Family Empowerment; Trustworthiness; Trauma Competence; Commitment to the Trauma-informed Approach; and Trauma-informed Cultural and Linguistic Competence. The assessment and CQI process was implemented twice with all child-serving mental health agencies in the state of Maine. Youth and Family Voice. THRIVE worked actively to support the development of the Maine Alliance of Family Organizations which helped to coalesce seven family groups with somewhat different foci including families of children with learning disabilities as well as those with emotional problems. THRIVE also helped to develop the Maine chapter of Youth MOVE, which became Youth MOVE Maine. It used leadership development and social THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 3 marketing techniques to help develop and promote the youth voice in a variety of activities. Purpose of this Report This report presents the results of the THRIVE evaluation performed by Hornby Zeller Associates, Inc. (HZA) a social science research firm with offices in Maine, among other states. The remainder of the report consists of five chapters. Chapter 2 presents trauma history findings for children, youth and families who have participated in THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program. Chapter 3 describes the types of services used by children and families in THRIVE’s Family Partnership Program and the costs associated with them. Chapter 4 documents the process and effectiveness of the Trauma-focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Learning Collaborative that was instituted by THRIVE. Finally, Chapter 5 outlines how THRIVE developed a process of assessment and continuous quality improvement for expanding and sustaining the key principles of Trauma-informed Systems of Care while Chapter 6 provides conclusions. The report covers the time period of 2006 to 2011. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 4 CHAPTER 2 PREVALENCE OF TRAUMA EXPOSURE AND EFFECTS ON FAMILIES AND YOUTH Children and youth who experience trauma are less likely to receive a formal PTSD diagnosis than adults. Some of the more common diagnoses found among children who have experienced trauma include separation anxiety disorder, oppositional defiance disorder, phobic disorders, and attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder. Symptoms of trauma include: extreme anxiety, depression, anger, post-traumatic stress, dissociation and sexual concerns. These and other behaviors related to traumatic stress can manifest at any time and everywhere youth and families are found. That is, among children, the trauma survivor population is much larger that the PTSD population (Ford et al., 2000; Husain, Allwood, Bell, 2008; Daud & Rydelius, 2009). In addition, the Adverse Childhood Experiences Study (Felitti et al., 1998) showed that as the number of trauma exposures increases, the risk for a number of lifelong health and well-being problems also increases, such as health-related quality of life, depression, substance abuse and domestic violence. This chapter presents trauma history findings for children, youth and families who have participated in THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program. The primary research questions include: 1. What was the prevalence of trauma experiences in children and youth who enrolled in THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program? 2. What was the prevalence of trauma experiences of the families of those children? 3. What were the effects of trauma exposure on children, youth and caregivers? (Were trauma survivors more likely to experience trauma-related symptoms and behavioral/emotional challenges?) 4. To what extent did children and youth enrolled in the THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program exhibit reductions in trauma-related symptoms and behaviors over time? (Did those youth and families experiencing trauma show greater improvements?) Methodology Local Evaluation Instruments To collect information regarding the prevalence of trauma exposures for children, youth and caregivers the THRIVE Evaluation Team employed three tools: the Traumatic Events Screening Instrument (TESI), the Lifetime Incidence of Traumatic Events (LITE; both parent and child versions), and the Trauma Symptom Checklist (TSC; versions for Young Children and for Youth). In addition, information from the following instruments, which are part of the National System of Care evaluation protocol, was used in the analysis: THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 5 • • • • • Enrollment Demographic Information Form (EDIF) Behavioral and Emotional Rating Scale (BERS) Caregiver Information Questionnaire (CIQ) Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) Caregiver Strain Questionnaire (CGSQ) A full description of each evaluation instrument and the scoring methodology (where applicable) can be found in the Appendix. Data Collection With the exception of the EDIF, which was collected during the intake process by the Family Support Partner, the questionnaires were administered in person. Hornby Zeller Associates, Inc. (HZA) employed and trained Family Evaluators to administer the local and National Evaluation tools. The first round of interviews took place within 30 days of the family’s start with THRIVE. One child per family was eligible for the longitudinal interviews and not all families consented to participate in the longitudinal evaluation. Family Evaluators were family members of a child or young person who had been involved with the mental health system. Interviewers collected the information from families and youth (over the age of 12) and recorded it directly into an electronic system enabled on a tablet laptop. Data were then submitted to the National and Local evaluations once the interviewers had verified the data. Prior to collecting information, each interviewer was provided with three days of training which covered the following topics: • • • • • • Project overview Evaluation protocol and timeframes Informed consent procedures and confidentiality Interview techniques Question-by-question review of the evaluation tools Role-playing Family Evaluators received weekly supervision and support from HZA in the form of weekly follow-up meetings for six months after the initial training. These meetings addressed questions that arose in the field, allowed interviewers to share successes and challenges, and ensured that data were being properly coded and submitted. Monthly meetings occurred after the first six months, with the evaluation supervisor being available at any time for consultation. HZA’s same two family evaluators were retained for the entire project, which led to continuity of effort. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 6 Study Participation Families, children and youth were eligible to participate in the evaluation if the following criteria were met: • • • • • • Child/youth between the ages of 0 and 18; Child/youth diagnosed with Serious Emotional Disturbance (SED) 1; Family lived within tri-county area (Androscoggin, Oxford, Franklin); Family involved with at least two systems (e.g., Child Welfare plus Mental Health); Family agreed to work with a THRIVE Family Support Partner; and Family consented to participate in evaluation. Table 2-1 shows the final sample for each component of the evaluation study. For the incidence and prevalence of trauma, data were collected from 120 families (children/youth and primary caregivers) out of 194 total children/youth who enrolled in THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program; 78 children/youth are represented in the longitudinal study. Family members were paid $50 for each interview in the form of a gift card. The interviews often lasted two or more hours. Table 2-1. THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program Evaluation Study Participation Number Percent Overall Enrollment in THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program 194 100% Incidence and Prevalence of Trauma 120 62% Longitudinal Study of Trauma Outcomes 78 40% When families were enrolled in the program but did not participate in the evaluation interviews, there were two primary reasons: the initial interview was not completed within 30 days of program initiation (22); the children/youth had a sibling already enrolled in the evaluation (15). A handful of families (13) opted not to participate in the evaluation interviews; generally the reason was a family crisis (e.g., recovering from a fire, death in the family). For the follow-up interviews required of the longitudinal study, the primary reason families did not participate was one of retention; that is, they were not able to be contacted or located after the initial six-month follow-up despite multiple methods and attempts to reach them. Analysis To ensure quality, data collected during the in-person interviews were cleaned and errors corrected on an ongoing basis. This process included reconciling identification numbers, missing data or erroneous dates. Additional steps were taken to ensure data quality for the final analysis. For example, continuous variables such as age were re-coded into categories and valid skip patterns were distinguished from missing data. Serious Emotional Disturbance (SED) is defined for children (from birth to age of majority) as those who have a diagnosable mental, behavioral, or emotional disorder of sufficient duration to meet diagnostic criteria specified within the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). 1 THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 7 Data were then analyzed using descriptive and correlational techniques. The results were tested for statistical significance primarily using chi-square tests as well as independent and paired t-tests. To facilitate the analysis, prevalence and outcome data were converted into dichotomous indicators where the presence of an indicator or attribute was represented by “1.” For instruments that use scaled responses, the differences between mean scores were examined. All results were tested at the p=<.05 level (unless otherwise stated); because the data analyses were exploratory, standards for two-tailed significance were used. Data were first examined to identify the extent to which children and youth were exposed to trauma, in order to better understand trauma-related symptoms and outcomes. Trauma exposures were identified from the responses on the LITE 2, where each exposure was counted once and a total exposure score was calculated. To be included in the total score, the event must have bothered the child/youth “a lot.” The exception to this rule was exposure to physical or sexual abuse, which was always counted. Children and youth were then divided into two groups: those experiencing three or more exposures to different types of trauma that bothered them a lot, and those experiencing fewer than three trauma exposures. Again, there was one exception made to this standard. The handful of children who had at least three trauma experiences including physical or sexual abuse among them were counted in the three plus trauma exposure group regardless of whether the other trauma events bothered them “a lot.” One unique feature of the evaluation study was to try to determine whether a parent having experienced trauma him or herself had an impact on the child’s experience with trauma. That is, does trauma exposure have an intergenerational impact? To explore this question, the evaluators examined the exposure of caregivers to trauma independently and then in conjunction with the child’s exposure. The analysis focused on children and youth identified above as having three or more trauma exposures. The group was then split by whether the primary caregiver reported on the TESI being exposed to three or more types of traumatic events during his or her childhood (that is, before the age of 18). Evaluators also examined trauma symptoms at intake and at six months using the Trauma Symptom Checklist (TSC) to determine whether there were changes after THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program enrollment. Clinical symptoms on the scales were calculated separately according to the parameters outlined for the age-appropriate tools. Some interview data were excluded due to under-response, hyper-response and atypical response according to the TSC developers’ guidance. 3,4 The percentages measure whether the child or youth scored within the clinical range on the age-appropriate tool. Throughout 2 Older youth were administered the LITE independently of their caregiver. In those cases, researchers reconciled youth and caregiver reports of trauma. In most cases, there were no discrepancies. For instances when there was a discrepancy, usually the youth reported something occurred but that it did not bother them. If the youth reported an incident occurred and it bothered him/her, but the parent did not report the incident, the youth report was included in the total score. 3 Briere, J. (2005). Trauma Symptom Checklist for Young Children (TSC-YC): Professional Manual. Psychological Assessment Resources, Inc. Odessa, FL. 4 Briere, J. (1996). Trauma Symptom Checklist for Children (TSCC): Professional Manual. Psychological Assessment Resources, Inc. Odessa, FL. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 8 the analyses described above, trauma data were linked to the data collected as part of the National System of Care Evaluation to examine other aspects of family well-being and functioning. The results were analyzed following the parameters and methodologies employed by the national evaluation protocol. Findings Participant Demographics The children and youth participating in the evaluation study had an average age of 10 years at intake into THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program. The ages ranged from two to 18; 45 percent were between the ages of seven and 11. Most of the children were boys (69%) and the overwhelming majority lived at home (92%) with a biological parent (82%). As depicted in Figure 2-1, the most common diagnosis among participants was attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder, reported in over half of all the children and youth (54%). This was followed by mood disorders (36%), oppositional defiant disorders (23%), posttraumatic stress disorder and acute stress disorder (17%) and other anxiety disorders (15%). Figure 2-1. Mental Health Diagnosis at Intake Conduct Disorder 1% Personality Disorders 1% Substance Use Disorders 1% Schizophrenia and Other Psychotic… 2% Learning, Motor Skills,… 4% Mental Retardation 4% Disruptive Behavior Disorder 5% Pervasive Developmental Disorders 5% Impulse Control Disorders 6% Adjustment Disorders 8% Anxiety Disorders* 15% PTSD and Acute Stress Disorder 17% Oppositional Defiant Disorder 23% Mood Disorders 36% Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder 0% 20% 40% 54% 60% 80% 100% *NOT including PTSD or Acute Stress Disorder The primary caregivers who participated in the evaluation tended to be female (92%) and were, on average, 36 years old at intake. Most had at least a high school degree (81%). Seventy percent reported that their family earned less than $50,000 per year. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 9 Sixty-three percent of participants were referred to THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program by Child and Family Services (child welfare) 5, the primary referral source , and close to one-quarter (22%) were referred by a mental health agency. Prevalence of Trauma This section discusses the results of the initial administration of the trauma tools. Child and Youth Trauma Experiences Most of the children were found to have experienced at least one traumatic event; only 11 out of 120 reported no such experiences (9%). To some degree, this is to be expected given that the primary referral source for the program was child welfare, and abuse and neglect, domestic violence, and placement in foster care are all considered traumatic events. However, the prevalence and scope of experiences of the children and youth was less expected. The average number of trauma experiences was three, and this ranged from zero to 10. Two out of three children and youth (62%) reported a substantial trauma history, and this was more likely among girls (62%) than boys (46%). Those who reported three or more trauma experiences were also more likely to be over the age of 12 (37% compared to 24%). The most frequent type of trauma experienced by the children and youth was parental domestic violence (39%). Many also reported witnessing a bad accident (36%), having a seriously hurt or sick family member (34%), having their parents divorce or separate (33%), or having a close family member die (32%). Nearly one-third of the children and youth had experienced physical abuse (32%) and almost one in five had experienced sexual abuse (18%). Although not pictured, nine percent had been separated from their primary caregivers. Figure 2-2 displays the prevalence of various types of traumatic experiences reported at baseline. Compared to the rates from the national evaluation, Maine’s participants had a higher incidence of experiencing or witnessing abuse; for example, national evaluation estimates showed that 30 percent of the children and youth enrolled in THRIVE had been physically abused, compared to 21 percent nationally. 6 This makes sense given that the primary referral source during the first year of the program was Child Welfare. 5 System of Care projects target youth who are involved with more than one service system. The THRIVE Initiative selected child welfare as a key system partner. 6 The national evaluation instruments differ from the tools employed by Maine’s evaluation to assess trauma; these national figures are considered less reliable but are provided here for comparative purposes. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 10 Figure 2-2. Prevalence of Child and Youth Trauma Experiences Car accident 14% Sexual abuse 18% Other accident/sick 21% Threatened 26% Physically abused 32% Family member death 32% Parents divorced/separated 33% Family hurt or sick 34% Witnessed accident 36% Parents domestic violence 39% 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% Caregiver Trauma Experiences Primary caregivers reported experiencing an average of 3.5 trauma events before the age of 18, and 65 percent reported having experienced three or more traumatic events before the age of 18. Only 11 percent reported no childhood trauma history (a figure remarkably close to the 9% among children and youth) and even fewer reported no lifetime experience with traumatic events. Some of the most frequently cited childhood traumatic experiences are shown in Figure 2-3 and included emotional abuse (43%), being separated from their caregiver and experiencing sexual abuse (each 42 %). This was followed by witnessing domestic violence, as reported by 38 percent of all caregiver respondents. Note that witnessing domestic violence was equally frequent among the children and youth’s (39%) and the caregivers’ own experience in childhood (38%). Figure 2-3. Prevalence of Childhood Trauma Experiences Witnessed violence (outside family) 19% Been threatened to kill or hurt badly 20% Been attacked with intent to kill/harm badly 21% Death of close family/friend 22% Witness bad accident 23% Bad accident 27% Witnessed domestic violence 38% Sexual abuse 42% Separated from caregiver(s) 42% Emotionally abused 43% 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. 50% Page 11 Intergenerational Trauma To further understand the prevalence of trauma within the families served by THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program, the evaluation explored intergenerational trauma, that is, the incidence of child and youth trauma in conjunction with the prevalence of caregiver trauma during their own childhood years ago. Evaluators were seeking to determine whether there were statistically valid correlations between a parent having experienced trauma in his or her own childhood and the children’s traumatic experiences as well as mental health symptoms. The first step was to calculate the proportion of families where both the caregiver and the child independently reported significant trauma histories. The family member would have had to report trauma incidents in childhood. Again the standard of three or more traumatic events was used. 7 Figure 2-4 shows that 42 percent of the families presented intergenerational trauma, while 19 percent reported a trauma history for only the child or youth. Interestingly, 22 percent of families had a parent with a childhood trauma history, but the child/youth was not presenting a trauma history. Chi-square analysis suggests that there is a relationship between parental history of trauma and child’s history of trauma although, due to small sample size, it is not statistically significant 8. Figure 2-4. Prevalence of Intergenerational Trauma 50% 42% 40% 30% 22% 20% 19% 16% 10% 0% Parent & Youth Parent Only Youth Only Neither Effects of Trauma on Youth and Families As previously described, children and youth who experience trauma are not likely to receive a formal PTSD diagnosis; instead they often manifest that exposure to trauma in other ways. Among adults, the risk for a number of health and well-being problems over the lifespan increases in direct relation to the number of childhood trauma exposures. The The extent the caregiver was bothered by the childhood trauma could not be included since the TEXI does not measure that. 8 The same proportional difference tested with a larger sample size was statistically significant. 7 THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 12 following sections explore these concepts for participants in THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program. Youth Trauma Symptoms, Behaviors and Strengths Children and youth who reported more trauma experiences in their lives displayed a higher likelihood of experiencing clinical symptoms of trauma when they first enrolled in THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program. For example, as Figure 2-5 shows, children and youth with extensive trauma histories were significantly more likely to exhibit symptoms of anxiety (25% compared to 7%) and post-traumatic stress (40% and 9%), 9 both of which were statistically significant at the .05 level. Other observed differences were not statistically significant. Figure 2-5. Child/Youth Trauma Symptoms, By Number of Trauma Experiences 50% 40% 30% 40% 38% 36% 30% 27% 26% 25% 20% 9% 10% 19% 14% 7% 7% 0% Depression Anxiety Anger < 3 Trauma Experiences PTS Dissociation 3+ Trauma Experiences Sexual Concerns These results are not overly surprising, as children with a trauma background exhibit higher rates of trauma symptoms. However, the effects of youth trauma experiences were observed in other measures as well. For example, those with a higher level of trauma experiences were more likely to exhibit challenging behaviors and less likely to exhibit strengths. This is demonstrated in Figure 2-6, which shows the percentage of children and youth whose reported behaviors placed them within the clinical range on indicators captured by the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL). For example, compared to children and youth reporting fewer trauma experiences, those reporting a higher incidence of trauma were much more likely to present social problems (52% compared to 28%), withdrawn or depressive behaviors (41% compared to 17%), somatic complaints (38% versus 14%) and aggressive behaviors (67% compared to 44%). These were all statistically significant differences. This does not indicate a formal diagnosis of post-trauma stress disorder, merely symptoms associated with such a diagnosis. 9 THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 13 Figure 2-6. Child/Youth Challenging Behaviors, By Number of Trauma Experiences 100% 80% 52% 60% 40% 43% 28% 41% 17% 20% 38% 64% 60% 42% 44% 28% 54% 39% 67% 44% 14% 0% <3 Trauma Experiences 3+ Trauma Experiences These children and youth were also less likely to report strengths than their counterparts who did not have significant trauma in their histories. This is demonstrated in Figure 2-7, which depicts child and youth scores on six measures of strengths captured on the Behavioral and Emotional Rating Scale (BERS). When compared to other children and youth enrolled in THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program, those with extensive trauma histories were less likely to demonstrate interpersonal strengths (ability to control emotions or behaviors in social situations), affective strengths (ability to express emotion and accept affection), family involvement strengths (participation and involvement with family) or intrapersonal strengths (outlook on self competence and accomplishments). Again, these were statistically significant differences, with intrapersonal strengths significant at the p<= 0.1 level (the observed differences in school functioning and career strength were not significant). Figure 2-7. Child/Youth Strengths, By Number of Trauma Events 10.0 8.0 6.0 7.3 8.0 7.5 6.1 6.4 8.9 6.9 7.7 6.1 5.9 7.2 7.9 4.0 2.0 .0 < 3 Trauma Experiences 3+ Trauma Experiences THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 14 Caregiver Stress and Health To determine whether the ACES findings held true within the THRIVE population of caregivers, the effects of caregiver trauma experiences were explored in terms of stress and health problems. The Caregiver Strain Questionnaire asks questions about the stress levels of caregivers and calculates scores for a series of scales. Scores range from 1 to 10 whereby higher scores indicate more stress. As demonstrated by Figure 2-8, caregivers with a higher level of childhood trauma exposure were more likely to report being stressed than caregivers who did not report an extensive history of childhood trauma. For example, they exhibited an average score of 8.4 in terms of overall strain, compared to 6.8 among caregivers who reported a less extensive trauma history. Similarly, the same group of caregivers was also more likely to report that someone in their household had recurring physical health problems, 69 percent compared to 33 percent, although this was not necessarily the primary caregiver. All the findings for stress and health were statistically significant. Intergenerational Trauma Effects Although there is existing research that demonstrates the effects of trauma on children and the effects of childhood trauma on adults, there is little research that explores how the trauma combined experiences of youth and primary caregivers affect families, that is, that tests the compounding effects of intergenerational trauma on trauma survivors within a family. To explore this more fully, the evaluation study created an additional comparative layer that compared the symptoms and behaviors of youth with a trauma histories by whether their primary caregiver also reported a significant history of trauma. 10 Figure 2-8 below shows the proportion of children/youth scoring in the clinical range for trauma symptoms among those who had experienced three or more trauma experiences. It is comparing two groups: those where both the children/youth and the caregiver had experienced three of more trauma events and those where only the youth had experienced three or more trauma events. It shows that children and youth living in families with “intergenerational” trauma were more likely to score in the clinical range for symptoms related to trauma. For example, among youth who experienced trauma and lived with a caregiver who had also experienced trauma, 42 percent showed clinical symptoms of depression, compared to only five percent among youth who had experienced three or more trauma exposures but did not live with a caregiver who had an extensive trauma history. The observed differences were statistically significant among the symptoms of depression, sexual concerns and anger (the last being significant at the p<= 0.1 level). 10 For more detailed definitions, please refer to the methodology section of this chapter. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 15 Figure 2-8. Trauma Symptoms Among Traumatized Children/Youth, by Parent Trauma History 50% 40% 42% 37% 37% 30% 30% 25% 18% 20% 15% 16% 15% 16% 10% 10% 5% 0% Depression Anxiety Anger PTS Parent and Youth Dissociation Sexual Concerns Youth Only The findings were similar for caregiver stress and child behaviors. For example, caregivers of youth with higher levels of trauma exposure who also had their own trauma history were more likely to be stressed (9.2 average score, compared to 6.8). As demonstrated by Figure 2-9, youth with trauma who lived with a primary caregiver who also had a trauma history were more likely to exhibit challenging behaviors; this was statistically significant for all the indicators except the scale for withdrawn/depressed behaviors; somatic complaints are significant at the p<= 0.1 level. 100% Figure 2-9. Behaviors Among Traumatized Children/Youth, by Parent Trauma History 80% 60% 70% 65% 63% 58% 48% 45% 42% 37% 40% 20% 80% 75% 26% 21% 32% 26% 16% 11% 0% Parent & Youth Youth Only THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 16 Effectiveness of the Trauma-informed Approach to Service Delivery In addition to receiving Family Support Partner services, families enrolled in the program also benefited from the changes occurring within the service delivery system as a result of THRIVE’s training, technical assistance and assessment opportunities that were provided to local service agencies over the course of the project. The following section explores the observed changes in trauma-related symptoms and other behaviors among 78 families for whom data collected at intake could be linked to an interview conducted six months after enrollment. Trauma Symptoms After working with a trauma-informed Family Support Partner, as well as receiving other mental health and support services for six months, children and youth for whom data were available showed reduced rates of clinical symptoms for trauma. This is demonstrated in Figure 2-10 below. Figure 2-10. Child/Youth Trauma Symptoms at Baseline and 6 Months 50% 40% 35% 33% 29% 30% 20% 24% 21% 22% 21% 19% 17% 12% 10% 12% 10% 0% Depression Anxiety Anger Baseline PTS Dissociation Sexual Concerns 6-Months The chart shows that the rates of clinical symptoms related to depression, anxiety, anger and dissociation decreased, all of which were statistically significant declines (depression and anger are significant at the p<= 0.1 level). For example, the rate of children and youth showing clinical signs of depression decreased from 33 percent to 21 percent; those exhibiting signs of anger decreased from 35 percent to 21 percent. Interestingly, the proportion of children and youth exhibiting signs of post-traumatic stress changed little, perhaps because youth and families were addressing their trauma history, rather than focusing on behavioral or related symptoms. Although the numbers are too small to draw conclusions, it appears that the majority of improvement was experienced among children and youth who had experienced more traumatic events in their lifetimes. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 17 Strengths, Stress and Challenging Behaviors The findings observed for trauma-related symptoms continue when examining the measures of child/youth strengths as well as other challenging behaviors. For example, the average strength scores of children and youth increased in all areas (from 5.63 to 6.50), although only school-based strengths were statistically significant. Similarly, among caregivers, stress and strain indicators also showed modest improvements. For example, the average score for overall stress decreased from 7.7 at baseline to 7.3 six months later, a statistically significant change. Figure 2-11 illustrates how challenging behaviors among children and youth decreased six months after enrollment. Notably, the proportion of children exhibiting thought problems decreased from 71 percent to 55 percent, while those challenged with social problems declined from 45 percent to 31 percent, both of which were statistically significant findings. Children exhibiting attention problems and somatic complaints also decreased significantly at the p<= 0.1 level. Figure 2-11. Child/Youth Challenging Behaviors at Baseline and 6 Months 100% 80% 71% 60% 45% 45% 40% 20% 58% 55% 35% 29% 24% 25% 42% 35% 31% 60% 35% 24% 15% 0% Baseline 6-Months Intergenerational Trauma and Outcomes Mirroring the previous analysis on the prevalence of intergenerational trauma at program intake, the evaluators wanted to see if there were any reductions in the trauma symptoms THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 18 of youth who experienced trauma and lived with a caregiver who also had a trauma history, compared to youth who have experienced trauma but do not live with a caregiver who had a trauma history. Although the numbers were again quite small (the two groups had 23 and 12 cases, respectively), the data yielded some interesting results that are shown in Figure 2-12. Figure 2-12. Change in Child/Youth Trauma Symptoms, by Intergenerational Trauma 50% 43% 39% 40% 42% 42% 42% 39% 35% 30% 30% 26% 26% 22% 22% 20% 25% 22% 17% 17% 17% 17% 17% 13% 9% 10% 8% 8% 8% Parent & Youth Sexual Concerns Dissociation PTS Anger Anxiety Depression Sexual Concerns Dissociation PTS Anger Anxiety Depression 0% Youth Only Baseline 6-Months In the both groups, there was a statistically significant reduction in symptoms associated with dissociation. This was a decrease from 22 percent to nine percent in the group consisting of parents and children/youth who had experienced trauma histories. In the second group, which consisted of youth who had experienced trauma who lived with a caregiver who had not, symptoms of dissociation declined from 42% to 17%. The differences observed after six months between the two groups in terms of improved depression symptoms were statistically significant at the p<= 0.1 level. Summary Conclusions The majority of children and families enrolled in THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program experienced notable amounts of trauma and trauma significantly influenced child and family outcomes. Children and youth who experienced trauma exhibited trauma-related symptoms and faced other behavioral and functional challenges at higher rates than THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 19 children and youth who did not report significant trauma histories. The study also demonstrated that the trauma experiences of parents and/or primary caregivers, particularly events that occurred during childhood, appeared to affect youth symptoms as well as overall family functioning. Moreover, THRIVE data strongly suggest that participation in the Trauma-informed System of Care resulted in improved outcomes and symptom reduction among youth and family with trauma histories, despite their higher likelihood of exhibiting clinical trauma symptoms at intake when compared to youth and families who do not report trauma backgrounds. Specifically, THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program appeared to have a positive effect on child/youth trauma symptoms such as depression and dissociation, particularly in families experiencing intergenerational trauma. Overall, the findings suggest that service providers who take into account the trauma history of the entire family as a whole, not just the child/youth who is the subject of services, will achieve better outcomes. This does not necessarily mean that direct clinical services must be provided to the whole family, but rather that the trauma-informed approach to service delivery, which in this case included Family Support Partners, may well improve service engagement and ultimately parental functioning. Future systems of care should be closely aligned with the trauma-informed approach. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 20 CHAPTER 3 SERVICE UTILIZATION AND COST OUTCOMES Performing a Services and Cost analysis was another component of THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program’s overall evaluation plan. This chapter outlines the purpose of the study, the research questions, the types of information collected, and the observed findings from the final study sample. The primary purpose was to describe the types of services used by children and families and the costs associated with them. A secondary purpose was to explore the relationships among service use and costs as they related to the period of enrollment in THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program. Lastly, the evaluation aimed at comparing the results of children who have had a trauma history to those who had not. To address the study areas described above, the evaluation team developed the follow research questions: 1. What services are used by children and their families who are enrolled in THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program? a. What are the service use patterns before, during and after participation? b. How much do services cost before, during and after participation? 2. What is the cost effectiveness of services in terms of cost savings? 3. In each of the areas described above, is there an observable difference between those with trauma histories and those without? Methodology Medicaid claims data were provided for this study by the State of Maine’s Department of Health and Human Services Office of Continuous Quality Improvement. Information for all children enrolled in the project’s descriptive study through June 2010 and who consented to participate in this additional study were matched to Medicaid claims data covering FY 2007 (July 2006) through FY 2010 (June 2010). Children were identified based on first name, last name, date of birth and county of residence; a successful match was made for 147 children (76% of all children enrolled). Using diagnostic codes, the file was then split into two groups. The first file constituted physical health (or medical) claims, meaning that the services were unrelated to a mental health diagnosis. The second file contained mental health claims, meaning that at least one diagnosis associated with each claim was related to mental health. Mental health diagnoses included all the DSM and V codes that comprise Serious Emotional Disturbance (SED) which are used to determine system of care eligibility. 11 The distinction between medical 11 The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) provides a common language and standard criteria for the classification of mental disorders; V codes (codes V01–V91) are medical codes used to describe encounters with the healthcare system due to circumstances other than disease or injury (e.g., assessment due to exposure to abuse). The same list of DSM and V codes provided by the National Evaluation Team for completing the Enrollment and Demographic Information Form (EDIF) were used here. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 21 and physical health claims was made based on diagnostic code, as opposed to the procedural codes, to reflect that some physical health procedures may in fact be related primarily to a mental health condition; for example, medication management often involves drawing blood samples (a “medical” procedure) to monitor medications prescribed for a mental health condition. The procedural codes were then grouped into service categories following the guidance employed by the Data Infrastructure Grant (DIG) in Maine. Additional re-coding was completed to categorize procedure codes that were used in Maine prior to 2009 (specifically, Z codes), and codes used by entities that provide mental health services that are not directly overseen by the children’s behavioral health system but are nonetheless billable mental health services (e.g., services provided by schools or juvenile justice). Episodes of care received at hospitals were also recoded, relying upon a combination of items to determine the overall type of episode, including provider type, facility type, procedure and primary diagnosis. Hospital classifications were further examined and coded so that medical procedures related to a mental health episode were rolled up into the primary mental health service, an important step for capturing the costs associated with mental health and psychiatric hospitalizations. Since a comparison group was not available, the study employed a cost effectiveness analysis in which the costs in monetary units were compared over the three following time periods: • • • six months before enrollment (“prior”); six months immediately after enrollment (“immediate”), and six months after the immediate period of enrollment (“post”) during which families were discharged (the majority were discharged around six months). To determine the cost-effectiveness, the study examines observed differences in service utilization and costs associated with the prior, immediate and post periods by family trauma history and functional outcomes. Participants The majority of children and youth in the services and cost study were male (61%) and 60 percent were under the age of 12 when they enrolled; one quarter were between the ages of 15 and 18. Just over half had a diagnosis of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, followed by mood disorders (38%), post-traumatic stress and acute stress disorders (21%), other anxiety disorders (17%) and oppositional defiant disorder (15%). Just under half had more than one diagnosis. The caregivers were female (91%) and three out of four were under the age of 40. To ensure that the timeframes and services were comparable, the original 143 cases were limited to only those cases where the enrollment date allowed for a full six months in each THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 22 period (even if no services were received), yielding 102 children and youth in the final sample. 12 Findings Service Use Patterns The concept of “service use patterns” was operationalized to encompass the following two factors: the kinds of services families received and the number of service types received in each period. For all three time periods, targeted case management was the most common service used by families as demonstrated in Figure 3-1 on the following page. This was followed by outpatient services, medication management and school-based supports (non-rehabilitation). All these services were provided in relation to a mental health diagnosis. The percentage of families using targeted case management increased during the period after enrollment by almost 10 percentage points, representing nearly a 14 percent increase. School-based services also increased slightly. The services in which use decreased immediately after enrollment were Emergency Room (from 25% of families to 20%); crisis support, from 24 percent to 14 percent, a 42 percent decrease; outpatient hospital services, from 17 percent to nine percent, a 47 percent decrease; and home-based services, from 10 percent to five percent (a 50% decrease). All of these decreases were in the desired direction. While these rates rebounded somewhat during the post period when contact with the Family Support Partner ended, they remained lower than in the period prior to enrollment. 12 One case was removed because the family moved out of state shortly after enrollment and had no service records after that point. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 23 Figure 3-1. Percentage of Children/Youth Using Community Services, by Time Period 71% Targeted Case Management 73% Outpatient Services 49% Medication Management 27% 58% 58% 38% 34% 35% 37% 32% School-based Support (non-Rehabilitation) 32% 27% 34% Community Supports (Sec 65M, 65G and M&N) 31% 31% 32% Federally Qualified Health Clinic 25% 20% 24% Emergency Room/Department Crisis Support 14% 11% Outpatient Hospital Services (MH) 9% 11% 24% 17% 11% 14% 13% School-based Rehabilitation Home Based Services 5% 1% Case Management - Other 4% 2% 10% 9% 8% 12% Psychiatric/Psychological Services 5% 6% 2% 1% Transport (any) 6% Day Treatment 13% 9% Day Habilitation 6% 5% 4% Substance Abuse Services 5% 6% 2% Education-related Early Intervention Therapy 2% 2% 1% Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) 1% 1% 0% Community Integration 1% 2% 1% 0% Prior 80% 20% Immediate 40% 60% 80% 100% Post THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 24 Figure 3-2 examines the percent of children and youth who received out-of-home care related to a mental health diagnosis by three service types: residential care at a Private Non-Medical Institution (PNMI), inpatient psychiatric hospitalization; and inpatient hospitalization related to mental health. Figure 3-2. Percent of Children/Youth with Hospitalizations Related to Mental Health, by Time Period 25% 20% 18% 15% 10% 6% 5% 9% 8% 7% 7% 5% 4% 5% 0% Private Non-Medical Institution (Residential) Inpatient Psychiatric Hospital Prior Immediate Inpatient Medical Hospital Post The proportion of children or youth who received residential services at a PNMI fluctuated only slightly across the three time periods. However, the percent who received inpatient mental health services from either a psychiatric hospital or a medical hospital was reduced by nearly half in the period immediately after enrollment. Most notably, inpatient hospitalizations at a medical hospital decreased from 18 percent to nine percent. These trends are sustained in the post period, meaning that one year after THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program enrollment, the incidence of inpatient hospitalizations among children and youth remained lower than in the six months prior to enrollment. The rate differences observed between the prior period and the other two periods are statistically significant for inpatient hospitalization. The service array also changed immediately after enrollment. As demonstrated in Figure 33, the percentage of children and youth who were receiving more than five different types of services decreased from 26 percent to 17 percent; more than half were receiving between three and five different types of services. This pattern appears to be sustained one year after enrollment in THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 25 Figure 3-3. Percentage of Children and Youth, by Number of Service Types and Time Period 100% 80% 59% 60% 52% 44% 40% 25% 26% 25% 21% 20% 5% 17% 16% 7% 4% 0% Prior None Immediate Less than 3 3 to 5 Post More than 5 Cost Effectiveness of Services Overall, there is a Medicaid claims cost savings of just over $450,000 between the period prior to enrolling in THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program and the period after program involvement, or an average savings of $4,436 per participant. This is demonstrated in Table 3-1. In terms of monthly participant costs, the average cost per month was $2,452 in the period prior to enrollment, compared with $1,665 in the post period for an average monthly savings of $787 per person. Whether examining total savings, per participant savings or average monthly costs, the results demonstrate an overall reduction in costs of just over 30 percent (31 and 32 percent, respectively). Table 3-1. Total Costs, Per Participant Costs and Average Monthly Costs, By Time Period Total Costs Costs Per Participant Average Monthly Costs Prior $1,469,063 $14,402 $2,452 Immediate $1,143,353 $11,209 $1,869 Post $1,016,581 $9,966 $1,665 Savings (Post-Prior) THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. ($452,481) ($4,436) ($787) Page 26 The majority of the costs savings appears to be related to the shift away from higher cost services such as inpatient hospitalizations and residential services as shown in Table 3-2, which breaks out the total by service category. This shift (away from hospitalizations) was also observed in the utilization patterns described previously. For example, costs associated with inpatient psychiatric hospitalization decreased by about $122,000, for a savings of 51 percent. Moreover, costs associated with visits to the Emergency Room/Department decreased by 40 percent and it appears that inpatient stays resulting from an Emergency Room visit decreased in the immediate and post periods. Table 3-2. Total Costs, by Service Category and Time Period* for Serving 102 Families Service Category Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) Case Management - Other Community Integration Community Supports (Sec 65M, 65G and M&N) Crisis Support Day Habilitation Day Treatment Education-related Early Intervention Therapy Emergency Room/Department Federally Qualified Health Clinic Services Home Based Services Inpatient Hospitalization Inpatient Psychiatric Hospitalization Medication Management Outpatient Services Outpatient Hospital Services Private Non-Medical Institution (Residential) Psychiatric/Psychological Services School-based Rehabilitation School-based Support (non-Rehabilitation) Substance Abuse Services Targeted Case Management Transport (any) Total Prior Immediate Post $10,850 $5,939 $368 $155,141 $37,130 $45,398 $27,910 $3,534 $42,098 $40,991 $38,478 $208,942 $242,568 $15,512 $64,225 $8,265 $281,656 $5,414 $9,703 $32,097 $27,977 $159,238 $5,629 $1,469,063 $4,055 $1,926 $3,199 $120,319 $11,310 $71,303 $52,947 $2,520 $21,134 $16,255 $33,548 $76,308 $113,047 $15,846 $66,235 $3,331 $295,052 $12,074 $5,258 $25,495 $18,731 $172,613 $846 $1,143,354 $0 $1,281 $4,878 $119,840 $7,849 $58,862 $58,737 $3,180 $25,266 $21,443 $3,871 $87,031 $119,817 $9,262 $60,985 $3,275 $220,524 $4,372 $10,319 $32,071 $8,952 $154,445 $322 $1,016,582 Savings (Prior-Post) ($10,850) ($4,658) $4,510 ($35,301) ($29,281) $13,464 $30,827 ($354) ($16,832) ($19,548) ($34,607) ($121,910) ($122,751) ($6,250) ($3,240) ($4,990) ($61,132) ($1,042) $617 ($26) ($19,025) ($4,793) ($5,307) ($452,481) *A time period represents six months of service costs. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 27 Observed Differences Among Groups of Interest When average monthly costs are examined by the presenting trauma histories of child, youth and families, interesting trends emerge that mirror the findings observed in the outcomes study. This is illustrated in Figure 3-4 which shows that the greatest reductions in average costs were within families where the parent had a trauma history, or where the child and parent both had trauma histories. Figure 3-4. Average Monthly Costs by Interval and Trauma History $5,000 $3,395 $1,694 $1,553 $1,694 $1,650 $1,271 $1,349 $1,775 $1,000 $1,884 $2,000 $2,224 $2,882 $3,000 $3,621 $4,000 $Parent & Youth Parent Only Prior Youth Only Immediate Neither Post These findings are even more notable when considered within the context of THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program. That is, THRIVE provided trauma-informed training to its Family Support Partners in an effort to assist families whose children had severe emotional disturbances, but particularly those with a trauma background. And it appears that those are the people who had the greatest cost savings. These data, for the first time, show that the greatest cost savings were observed with the families where the child and the parent both presented a trauma history. In those instances there was a reduction in average monthly costs of $1,847 between the period prior to THRIVE enrollment and the period after discharge, a 51 percent decrease. Conversely, there were actually marked increases in average monthly costs in cases where only the child had a trauma history, or neither the child nor the parent presented a trauma history. The majority of these changes were attributable to shifts in the utilization of inpatient hospital services, residential care, day habilitation, day treatment and community supports. These findings suggest that even more savings can be realized if Family Support Partners are targeted to families with trauma histories. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 28 Summary Conclusions Families who participated in THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program were most likely to receive targeted case management services both before and after enrollment. The utilization of emergency room services, crisis support and outpatient hospital services all decreased immediately after enrollment, as did the proportion of children and youth using inpatient mental health services. These shifts in service utilization had a desired effect in reducing costs by more than 30 percent one year after enrollment, for a total savings of $450,000 and averaging $787 monthly per participant. The findings also suggest that THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program was most effective at serving families with an intergenerational trauma history. Moreover, the children of adult trauma survivors appear to be more effectively served by other community-based services when their parents have access to peer supports such as trauma-informed family support partners, and at an overall lower cost. Isolating the families where one or both family members had experienced trauma the average cost savings are even greater. For those where both the caregiver and the child experienced trauma the savings was 51 percent six months after services were over whereas when the parent alone had experienced trauma it was 53 percent for the same time period. As demonstrated in the previous chapter, children and youth enrolled in THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program showed improved outcomes in reduced trauma symptoms. This chapter has shown that achieving better outcomes was also associated with a shift away from inpatient hospital services, which resulted in a total cost-savings among children and youth enrolled in THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program. Moreover, the average cost-savings was greatest among families where the parent had experienced trauma as a child, again demonstrating the need for aligning children’s mental health services with the traumainformed approach, and one which addresses and supports all family members. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 29 Page intentionally left blank THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 30 CHAPTER 4 EFFECTIVENESS OF TRAUMA-SPECIFIC TREATMENT In 2006, THRIVE’s Clinical and Evidence-Based Practice Committee identified Trauma Focused-Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT) as one of two evidence-based traumaspecific treatment models for children and families to be implemented in the Androscoggin, Oxford, and Franklin County catchment area. The Learning Collaborative, between THRIVE and its community partners, was open to licensed clinicians and clinical supervisors who actively worked with children and families in the catchment area. Participation required a year-long commitment and offered clinicians and supervisors an opportunity to learn a trauma-focused, evidence-based treatment model. Also included were an organizational readiness assessment; formal clinical training; monthly peer consultation; and on-going support for implementation. A further mission of the Tri-County Learning Collaborative was to document the effectiveness of the TF-CBT treatment through structured data collection adapted from the TF-CBT protocol employed by the National Childhood Traumatic Stress Network. The purpose of this study component was threefold: • • • To describe the population that received TF-CBT as part of the Learning Collaborative in terms of both demographics and trauma experiences; To present findings of client-level outcomes that may be linked to TF-CBT; and To identify areas where the data collection process did not work well and make recommendations for improvements for the future. Methodology The evaluation protocol consisted of the following tools: a Baseline Demographics form that collected participant characteristics; the Lifetime Incidence of Traumatic Events (LITE) to collect trauma history from the parent and the youth; a form (Measurements of Resiliency) to capture participants’ key resiliency factors, collected from the parent and the youth; and the UCLA PTSD Index that captured trauma-related symptoms, collected from youth. At the beginning of treatment clinicians administered the data collection tools to each client who participated in TF-CBT and again upon completing the treatment. It is important to note that TF-CBT clients participating in this study did not participate in any of the evaluation studies previously described, nor did they work with a Family Support Partner. The evaluation identified the following key questions: • • • What does the population receiving TF-CBT look like? What type of traumatic events have clients experienced? What impact has TF-CBT had on clients’ trauma-related symptoms? THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 31 Additionally, the evaluation collected monthly process measures from each clinician which included the number of consultations with the Collaborative; the amount of agency supervision received; and the number of TF-CBT sessions for each client. Lastly, clinicians completed a form after each session measuring fidelity to the TF-CBT model, as well pinpointing where successful adaptations occurred. Data were collected by all participating clinicians between April 2007 and June 2009 and submitted to HZA, THRIVE’s contracted evaluators via an electronic data submission system. Participants Agency Participation Forty staff from seven agencies plus four private practitioners received a total of 176 hours of supervision related to TF-CBT; agencies with more clients participating in TF-CBT generally reported more hours of supervision. TF-CBT Participants at Start of Services Thirty-five clients were served by TF-CBT as reported on any data collection tool although not all tools were used for each client. Data received for 20 participants indicated that those served were predominantly female (70%) ranging in age from seven to age 17 and 55 percent were over the age of 12. All participants were white, U.S. citizens and spoke English as their primary language. Seventeen out of 20 (85%) participants lived at home with a parent while three lived in residential treatment group homes. Ten youth reported frequent occurrences of eight or more indicators of trauma symptoms 13. Specifically, more than 50 percent indicated frequent occurrences of the following trauma symptoms at the beginning of treatment: • • • • • • • • I watch out for danger or things that I am afraid of. When something reminds me of what happened, I get very upset, afraid or sad. I have upsetting thoughts, pictures, or sounds of what happened come into my mind when I do not want them to. I feel grouchy, angry or mad. I try not to talk about, think about, or have feelings about what happened. I have trouble concentrating or paying attention. I try to stay away from people, places, or things that make me remember what happened. I have arguments or physical fights. 13 Note that the list was derived from the UCLA PTSD Index which employs somewhat different factors from the Trauma Symptom Checklist referenced in the prior chapters. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 32 Client Level Outcomes Data indicated that at least 10 clients completed TF-CBT while two dropped out; the remaining participants (16) continued treatment as the final monthly data was submitted. Clients who completed TF-CBT received the treatment for an average of four months, with a range from three to six months. Two primary client level outcomes were identified: 1) youth expressed positive changes on the measures of resilience after participating in TF-CBT; and 2) youth reported decreases in the frequency of trauma-related symptoms. In two instances, youth and the parent reported positive improvements on four or more aspects of the resiliency scale after participating in TF-CBT; however, results for other youth were less definitive. Overall, youth rated themselves higher in resilience than their parents rated them. In three cases, parents reported positive changes by the end of TF-CBT while youth reported negative changes. Eight participants completed the UCLA PTSD Index at the beginning and end of TF-CBT. Five reported significant declines on four or more trauma symptom indicators, but results from the remaining three respondents were mixed. Fidelity to the TF-CBT Model Overall, it appears that clinicians remained faithful to the model according to the fidelity checklists that were submitted. Among the 13 people who completed 10 or more sessions, only three indicated that any aspect of the TF-CBT model had not been utilized during at least one session. Those components were: the development of a desensitization plan, addressing the child’s sense of safety, and teaching problem-solving skills. Interestingly, though the clinicians were different, the same three components were skipped in all three cases. The majority of adaptations dealt with timing and flexibility or sensitivity to client needs (e.g., one clinician lengthened the sessions, one extended the number of sessions, and another slowed down the typical trajectory of dealing with issues as the patient and family felt overwhelmed). Furthermore another adaptation was displayed by a session in which the parent gave the child permission to share his or her trauma history. The trauma had been a secret in the past, but this session helped to assuage the child’s fear that the parent would be angry with the child for talking about the trauma. Lessons Learned Regarding Data Collection With a small number of participants and only fair data quality, it is difficult to draw definitive conclusions from this aspect of the evaluation. However, the evaluators developed suggestions for increasing data quality in for future learning collaboratives. Foremost, the tools should be revisited focusing on their usefulness and feasibility, both in a clinical setting and as an evaluation measure. Table 4-1 summarizes assessments and recommendations regarding data collection tools. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 33 Table 4-1. Assessment of the Data Collection Tools Tool Baseline Demographics Lifetime Incidence of Traumatic Events (LITE) Measures of Resiliency UCLA PTSD Index Monthly Metrics Fidelity Tool Pros Easy to administer Important to understand who is being served Easy to administer Asks both youth and the parent for a trauma history Easy to administer Set a positive tone Easy to administer Captures 22 symptoms Provided basic data on the number of clients served and hours of training Captured useful information about program components and adaptations Cons Detailed demographics (e.g. income level, number of children) were not useful None identified Results were inconclusive Provided mixed results Was not submitted regularly Usefulness Recommendation Useful for evaluation only Tool should be simplified for a future learning collaborative Useful both clinically and for evaluation Unless the Uniform Trauma Screening Tool (currently under development) is adopted the LITE should be used again for a future learning collaborative The utility both to clinicians and to the evaluation is doubtful Questionable clinical use Tool may not accurately capture the areas impacted by TF-CBT A future learning collaborative should examine other symptom tools such as Trauma Symptom Checklist. Useful for evaluation only Tool should be simplified and included as part of a future learning collaborative. Useful clinically and for the evaluation Tool should be revised and used as part of a future learning collaborative. Some found it confusing Difficult to analyze This tool should not be used for a future learning collaborative. Some clinicians indicated that reviewing data protocols after two days of intense training was overwhelming. It may be useful to provide additional training on the data collection protocol, or to introduce it at a different point. Providing training in smaller doses and at different stages may also be helpful. Additional training may address many of the common data errors such as missing or incomplete forms; incorrect identification numbers; and THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 34 transposition of identification numbers. Simplifying the numbers, or using a number already being utilized, may make more sense. Electronic data submission worked well for some clinicians but others experienced complications; many were simply more comfortable with paper. Consequently, various easier methods should be considered. An obvious choice would be using paper-based packets that can be pre-numbered; this method might alleviate some of the data errors outlined above, but would then require data entry. An alternative is a web-based system although that would not be possible to complete during a therapy session itself. Lastly, agencies with strong supervisory buy-in for the data collection process produced better data results. To obtain high quality data from learning collaborative participants, it is imperative to train supervisors in the data collection protocol, about the benefits derived from data collection, and in the importance of their role in monitoring data collection. Summary Conclusions Findings from Maine’s TF-CBT Learning Collaborative support a continued offering of TFCBT as an effective treatment for trauma survivors. Overall, TF-CBT participants were wellmatched with the treatment; each reported having experienced multiple traumas in their lifetimes. More importantly, five out of eight cases resulted in clear and consistent improvements on PTSD indicators, while others showed milder improvements. More data are needed to fully gauge the impact of TF-CBT on Maine’s population of young people who have experienced trauma, and a larger sample of complete pre- and post- data would likely produce more conclusive results. However, TF-CBT should continue to be offered as a key element of the service array for THRIVE and other trauma-informed efforts. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 35 Page intentionally left blank THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 36 CHAPTER 5 ASSESSING THE TRAUMA-INFORMED APPROACH TO SERVICES A major focus of THRIVE was to assist entire mental health agencies to be trauma-informed in their approaches and practices. That is, not only should the treatments take trauma into account but a child and family’s experience interacting with its mental health provider should be nurturing and empowering and generate a sense of safety. At the very least, the interaction should not contribute to the trauma already experienced in other contexts. The question taken on by THRIVE was how to assess the degree to which an entire agency had adopted a trauma-informed approach. THRIVE’s answer rested in developing a traumainformed agency assessment (TIAA) which could be used to assess all aspects of the agency’s presentation and treatment to families and children. This chapter provides a formative analysis of the assessment and the results that were achieved during the life of the project. Formative Analysis of TIAA The development process for the TIAA occurred over a two-year period. Youth and family members were instrumental partners during each phase. Planning A group of key stakeholders, including youth and family members working with THRIVE, created the conceptual framework for the TIAA, as well as brainstormed methods for collecting the information needed to complete it. The initial content was based on TraumaInformed Systems Theory (Fallot & Harris, 2006) and system of care principles. The first major decision was which domains to include from the two conceptual bases. The planning group determined where the domains overlapped and which additional ones were critical to both trauma-informed practice and system of care principles. The result was selection of six domains which are defined in the next section: physical and emotional safety; youth and family empowerment; trustworthiness; trauma competence; cultural competence; and commitment to trauma-informed philosophy. A workgroup reviewed the literature, collected and examined existing tools, and drafted potential questions. Sets of questions were written for each perspective being assessed: managers, clinicians, family members and youth. The idea was that multiple perspectives would give agencies the most complete view of their trauma-informed performance. They then developed uniform standards which provided the basis on which to assign a score. A larger group of stakeholders reviewed and vetted the results of the planning phase. Pilot Testing Two agencies pilot tested the TIAA, as well as answered questions regarding the method of administering the assessment. Initially the stakeholders wanted people outside of the agency to administer and score the tool. During the pilot phase, paired teams (an evaluator THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 37 and a trained youth/family member) conducted interviews with agency administrators and supervisors, staff, family members and youth. Interviewers scored responses according to the standards articulated during the planning phase. The information was analyzed, and the results presented to the stakeholder group. Refining Youth and family members helped interpret the results of the pilot and provided feedback about the data collection methods based on their field experiences. Stakeholders also determined that it was overly labor-intensive to have external evaluators (including family members and youth) conduct the assessment face to face. Moreover, this approach was not sustainable once funding was concluded. Taking into account all findings, the tool was made into a self-assessment or, in the case of the youth and family, an assessment of the agency. In addition, the tool was developed in a web-based version. Youth and families provided invaluable guidance on the most compelling ways to present the results to various audiences. During the next phase, people were given the option of completing the TIAA electronically through the web, or on paper. Implementing Once the pilots were completed, all of Maine’s System of Care agencies in the three project counties participated, according to contract language implemented by Maine’s Children’s Behavioral Health Services. Essential Elements of the Assessment The TIAA measures the following domains derived from both system of care and traumainformed guiding principles. • • • • • • Physical and Emotional Safety assesses whether secure reception/waiting areas, non-judgmental treatment and flexible scheduling, among others, promote a sense of safety. Youth and Family Empowerment is whether policies and practices empower clients through strength-based participation and/or community-based partnerships. Trustworthiness is whether factors such as consistency, accessibility of staff and interpersonal boundaries foster trust between an agency and the consumer. Trauma Competence is the extent to which staff, policies, procedures, services and treatment serve the unique experiences and needs of trauma survivors. Cultural Competence is the extent to which staff, policies, procedures, services and treatment accommodate the cultures, traditions and beliefs of youth and family consumers. Commitment to Trauma-Informed Philosophy is the extent to which all agency staff members with consumer contact integrate a trauma-informed philosophy in everything they do. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 38 Three modules were used to gauge the level of trauma-informed services provided by an agency: • • • Agency Staff Self-Assessment: for all staff with consumer contact, including, but not limited to: receptionists, bus drivers, case managers, clinicians, human resources and administrators. Family Questionnaire: for family members receiving services directly or who are caregivers of a young person receiving services. Youth Questionnaire: for those ages 12 to 20 receiving services from the agency. Methodology– The TIAA used a fairly simple metric to determine final scores. Each question employed a five-point scale, whose anchor is illustrated at right. All questions are equally weighted. The evaluators mapped specific questions to domains for the family and youth versions, as the organization was not made obvious. Agency Assessment 1- Low 2 - Low-moderate 3 - Moderate 4 - Moderate-high 5 - High Family and Youth Assessment 1 - NO!! 2 - No. 3 - Neutral. 4 - Yes. 5 - YES!! Evaluators used the following components for calculating a score within each trauma domain for an individual survey response: individual raw score, individual total potential score and individual final score. First a raw score was calculated, representing the sum of all the responses within each domain. Second, the individual total potential score was calculated by counting the number of questions answered in that domain and multiplying by five. Evaluators did not include blank or skipped questions or responses of “Doesn’t apply.” Third, the individual final score was calculated by dividing the raw score by the total potential score and multiplying by 100. To create the overall score for the agency, the evaluators applied a similar process to all the “valid” survey responses within a domain. The following steps were used to calculate the scores: • • • Raw score: the sum of all the raw scores calculated within each domain from all individual surveys; Total potential score: the sum of all the total potential scores calculated in each domain for all individual surveys; and Final score: divides the raw score by the total potential score and multiplies it by 100. To create a statewide average or overall score for multiple agencies, evaluators applied the same methodology used for a single agency. That is, HZA calculated a raw score, the total THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 39 potential score and final score by summing all the “valid” individual survey responses within a domain. Data Limitations Domains in which three or more questions were blank or answered “Doesn’t apply” were not included with the exception of the multiple questions on the family and youth survey related to a respondent’s safety plan. No matter how many answered “Doesn’t apply” on that item, the safety domain score could be calculated; however, “Doesn’t apply” responses were excluded from the total potential score calculation. At least five responses were considered necessary in each category of respondents to create an overall agency score for a given domain. For example, at least five youth respondents were necessary to calculate a reliable youth score for trustworthiness even though this small N may not be truly representative of the entire agency. Initial Validation of the TIAA The development process itself established the face validity of the tool. A panel of experts, including youth and family members, created the survey and provided multiple perspectives, including cultural and linguistic perspectives. Two additional validation analyses were performed once data was returned: Cronbach’s alpha and Principal Component Factor Analyses. Cronbach’s alpha is a measure of internal consistency, and reliability; it is used to demonstrate how closely related a set of items is as a group and the extent to which the items “hang together” and contribute to the measurement of the same concept. Cronbach alpha coefficients above .70 generally indicate an acceptable level of internal consistency. When tests were performed on the data collected during the first statewide implementation, the results of the TIAA for each of the six domains ranged between 0.80 and 0.93, as illustrated in Table 5-1. This suggests that the TIAA domains have relatively high internal consistency reliability. Table 5-1. Cronbach Alpha Scores by TIAA Module Scale Physical and Emotional Safety Youth Empowerment Family Empowerment Trauma Competence Trustworthiness Commitment to Trauma-Informed Approach Cultural Competence Agency (n = 1,441) .855 .832 .823 .887 .847 .931 .906 Youth (n = 213) .838 .923 — .869 .911 — .912 THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Family (n = 574) .882 — .899 .876 .905 — .912 Page 40 The item analysis also found that most items in each domain contributed to the overall scale score and exhibited moderate inter-correlations; they are all measuring a similar concept (e.g., youth empowerment) but measure slightly different aspects. After reviewing the analyses, the TIAA workgroup determined that in many of the instances where questions were related, they ultimately captured different aspects of the domain and should be monitored separately. A series of exploratory Principal Component Factor Analyses were conducted to assess the underlying structure of the data and the extent to which the individual items corresponded to conceptual trauma-informed domains. All 42 items from the agency module were included in the initial principal component analysis. The results revealed seven independent groups of items. These factor groupings were found to align closely with the TIAA conceptual domains, in some cases, exactly. The domains for youth and family empowerment were the least cohesive; this made sense because empowerment occurs in areas that relate to all the other domains. For example, that informed consent is reviewed with the consumer in easy to understand language makes it part of empowerment; that the consent process fully discloses agency expectations for services and grievance policies is a measure of trustworthiness. The Factor Analysis results were less conclusive for the youth and family modules where Exploratory Principal Component analysis on all 42 items yielded 10 component factors which crossed the TIAA domains. When the analysis was limited to five factors, the same number of domains measured by the youth and family modules, the results continued to suggest that youth and family responses did not distinguish between and among the domains of safety, trustworthiness and empowerment. More validation work is needed on the youth and family surveys to determine the extent that the items in each domain, as currently defined, measure singular traits of trauma-informed practice from the perspective of youth and families. In summary, the preliminary validation analyses suggested that the scale items that make up each trauma domain show high internal consistency and reliability for all three TIAA modules. The factor analyses provided preliminary support for the conceptual trauma domains used in the tool for the agency staff module. Further validation efforts are needed to determine the extent to which the youth and family module adequately captures each trauma domain. Results After the initial testing of the TIAA in the three project counties, the assessment was administered twice on a statewide basis during the course of the grant in the states’ sixteen counties; included were all agencies, numbering around 130, which had service contracts with Children’s Behavioral Health, the state mental health authority. While not all the agencies participated, the use of the tool statewide far exceeded the grant requirements. The second statewide TIAA administration was a “corrective action,” encompassing THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 41 agencies that did not participate adequately in the first statewide round. 14 The second round results, therefore, should not be viewed strictly speaking as gains (or losses) from the first round but more as a continuum of statewide adoption of trauma-informed practices, stimulated by THRIVE training and technical assistance that also broadened to statewide exposure after the initial project years. The table below displays the statewide results for both rounds, employing the statewide methodology for analysis discussed above. The number represents the number of surveys completed for the given module while the percent represents the proportion of the total potential score by constituent group (agency staff, parent/family members and youth). Table 5-2. TIAA Statewide Results 2010 Module Number Agency Staff Module Physical and Emotional Safety Youth Empowerment and Engagement Family Empowerment and Engagement Trauma Competence Trustworthiness Commitment to Trauma-informed Approach Cultural Competence and Trauma Parent/Family Module Physical and Emotional Safety Youth Empowerment and Engagement Family Empowerment and Engagement Trauma Competence Trustworthiness Commitment to Trauma-informed Approach Cultural Competence and Trauma Youth Module Physical and Emotional Safety Youth Empowerment and Engagement Family Empowerment and Engagement Trauma Competence Trustworthiness Commitment to Trauma-informed Approach Cultural Competence and Trauma 2011 Percent Number Percent 1,480 1,474 1,477 1,479 1,482 1,475 1,463 80% 79% 81% 72% 84% 69% 74% 938 938 938 938 938 938 938 82% 78% 81% 75% 85% 73% 75% 541 n/a 542 537 542 n/a 540 83% n/a 79% 84% 87% n/a 86% 825 n/a 825 817 828 n/a 809 84% n/a 83% 86% 88% n/a 86% 213 210 n/a 209 213 n/a 207 77% 70% n/a 74% 77% n/a 80% 945 941 n/a 933 944 n/a 935 79% 76% n/a 79% 80% n/a 82% While the two years generally assess different agencies it is instructive to see the progression of trauma-informed practice in many of the areas assessed. The greatest gain from the perspective of agency staff was in the domain of commitment to a traumainformed approach, with a four percentage point increase, followed by trauma competence. 14 However, agencies that wanted to participate both times were permitted. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 42 From the family perspective the greatest increase was in family empowerment and engagement, a four percentage point increase. Among youth, the greatest change was youth empowerment and engagement, six percentage points, followed by trauma competence, five percentage points. These results are encouraging and are a testament to the growing commitment of agencies to embrace trauma-informed principles and practices. It is interesting to compare the perceptions of agency staff, youth and families on how trauma-informed the agency is. The following graph summarizes the results for 2010 and 2011 combined. In some instances there is no score; that is because questions such as youth empowerment are not completed by family members and family empowerment is not assessed by the youth. In addition, commitment to a trauma-informed philosophy, as a separate domain, is not assessed by youth or families. For physical and emotional safety, the families have a higher agency perception than the youth or even the agency staff. On the question of youth empowerment, the agency staff perceive that they empower youth more than the youth perceive that themselves. On the domain of family empowerment, the perceptions of agency staff and family members are virtually the same. Families and youth believe the agencies display more trauma competence than the agencies themselves perceive. Trustworthiness is another issue that the youth have, with their perceptions being lower than families or agency staff. On cultural competency, both the family members followed by the youth, have a higher perception than the staff themselves have of their own cultural competence. The differences in all categories except family empowerment are statistically significant. Figure 5-1. Comparison of Agency, Youth and Family Scores Cultural Competency 82% 74% Commitment to TI Philosophy 86% 70% Trustworthiness 80% Trauma Competence 73% 78% Family 87% 84% Youth 85% Agency 81% 81% Family Empowerment Youth Empowerment 75% 79% 84% 79% 81% Physcial/Emotional Safety 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 43 Figures 5-2 through 5-4 graph results from the agency, parent/family and youth perspectives, arrayed by the domains assessed by each group. The figures reflect total responses from the two administrations of the TIAA. The five data points are condensed to three, with responses of 1 and 2 grouped as low-moderate and 4 and 5 grouped as moderate-high. The graphs show that agency staff members rank themselves highest on trustworthiness followed by physical and emotional safety and lowest on commitment to a trauma informed philosophy. Since these are statewide results, and THRIVE’s major focus was three counties, it stands to reason that more work needs to be done to increase the commitment around the state. Figure 5-2. Frequency of Agency Staff Ratings, by TIAA Domain Cultural Competency 14% Commitment to TI Philosophy 25% 17% Trustworthiness 4% Trauma Competence 61% 29% 53% 16% 80% 16% 25% 59% Family Empowerment 12% 19% 69% Youth Empowerment 12% 18% 70% Physcial/Emotional Safety 6% 0% Low-Moderate 20% 20% 74% 40% Neutral 60% 80% 100% Moderate-High The youth provide the highest scores to cultural competency and the lowest to youth empowerment. No domain drops below two-thirds approval however. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 44 Figure 5-3. Frequency of Youth Ratings, by TIAA Domain Cultural Competency 6% Trustworthiness 14% 9% Trauma Competence 15% 11% Youth Empowerment 80% 17% 18% Physcial/Emotional Safety 76% 72% 15% 11% 67% 15% 0% 20% Low-Moderate 74% 40% 60% Neutral 80% 100% Moderate-High Family members tend to be higher overall than both agency staff and youth. More people give high marks to the agencies for trustworthiness than any other domain and the lowest for family empowerment. Thus, both youth and family members provide lower scores on empowerment than any other domain. Figure 5-4. Frequency of Family Ratings, by TIAA Domain Cultural Competency 4% 9% Trustworthiness 4% 7% Trauma Competence 6% Family Empowerment Physcial/Emotional Safety 89% 84% 10% 78% 8% 14% 7% 87% 82% 11% 0% Low-Moderate 20% 40% Neutral 60% 80% 100% Moderate-High THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 45 Continuous Quality Improvement Process The results of the TIAA were first disseminated in August of 2010. Agencies reviewed these results, attended THRIVE-sponsored trainings that were co-facilitated by youth and family leaders and began to create technical assistance plans that identified strengths and challenges in the areas of family driven and youth guided care. Youth MOVE Maine and G.E.A.R., Maine’s Federation of Families for Children’s Mental Health, were identified as the partners who would provide education to agencies. THRIVE also worked with DHHS to incorporate the TIAA results into a state-sponsored CQI process whose goal was to make service providers more trauma-informed. Figure 5-5 illustrates this cycle. Figure 5-5. Continuous Quality Improvement Cycle Conduct TIAA Assessment Prioritize Areas of Need Implement CQI Plan Create CQI Plan In many agencies either the administrators and their staff or a designated “Change Team” examined their results which were provided by the evaluators across domains, across respondent groups and in comparison to the statewide averages. Using questions posed by THRIVE as a guide, the Change Team then prioritized the agency’s needs, developed a CQI plan using the Agency Template provided below and in many cases implemented it. Part of this process entailed identifying areas where additional technical assistance or training was needed which was subsequently provided by THRIVE staff. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 46 Continuous Quality Improvement Plan: Agency Template Create steps for each trauma-informed domain that needs improvement. What trauma-informed domain do we want to change? Which target group is most affected? Why did we choose this domain? What steps will we need to take to improve? Who will be responsible? By when do we want to accomplish these changes? 1. 2. 3. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 47 How will we know that we have accomplished our objectives? Lessons Learned, Successes and Challenges From this process of developing and administering the TIAA, THRIVE learned several things. First, it is possible to articulate criteria and standards for assessing traumainformed practices. Using source documents and their own knowledge and experiences, clinical staff, administrators, family members, youth and evaluators were able to hone the domains, questions, and standards that others could be used in assessing agency practice. Second, it is possible to apply these questions and standards to a tool that could be validated for both internal validity and reliability, as well as for data structure. It was easier to do this for the agency version of the tool than for the youth and family versions because youth and family members generally have a more singular vision of the agency from their contact as consumers; therefore there is somewhat more overlap in the domains. The domains for youth and family empowerment were found to be the least cohesive; this made sense because empowerment occurs in areas that relate to all the other domains, particularly safety and trustworthiness (reviewing an informed consent document in easy to understand language is rated under empowerment but the same process, which fully discloses agency expectations for services and grievance policies, is a measure of trustworthiness.) The project did not have an opportunity to test whether other types of questions would make for clearer distinctions. Third, THRIVE learned that a self assessment process by agency staff with comparable input from families and youth was a more realistic way to garner widespread participation than having an outside party conduct interviews. The latter was tried in the pilot period. It was too labor intensive and expensive. The use of anonymous questionnaires produced results that were usable and could be validated. Methods of administration should continue to promote web-based processes, again for sustainability. While youth and family members still tend to gravitate towards written questionnaires, the data entry process makes this approach prohibitive in the long-run. As people become more computer savvy over time and individuals have increased access to computers and internet connections this problem should be resolved. Fourth, THRIVE learned that many agencies want to be trauma-informed and found the results of this type of assessment very useful, especially because it considered the youth and families perspectives. Over time agencies in the second round were able to garner higher scores from youth and family members on engagement and empowerment, critical domains to promoting trauma-informed practice. The challenge for the future is to maintain the momentum established during the system of care initiative for assessing trauma-informed practices and for working with agencies to implement CQI plans to address their areas needing change. State administrators have demonstrated a commitment to these practices by requiring all agencies with children’s mental health contracts to participate in the assessment. In addition, the evaluators are preparing the web-based tools to turn over to the state for later administration. These steps should help assure continuation and growth of trauma-informed approaches. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 48 CHAPTER 6 CONCLUSION Since the start of Maine’s THRIVE Initiative in 2005, the behavioral health impacts of trauma have gained prominence and focus in the national dialogue about children’s mental health services. When people are introduced to the concept of trauma and how it can affect a child’s behavioral or mental health, the logic is obvious and easily understood. Youth, family members and clinicians can all relate. Yet the evidence behind what services are effective has not been well established, with the exception of a handful of clinical treatments such as Trauma-focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy. The problem with the limited response to trauma up to now is two-fold. First, not every agency has clinicians who are trained in specific therapies and second, even if excellent treatment is provided in a clinical setting, other people and events who are close to the child can negate the good that is done in therapy by insensitive actions or simply doing things as usual. The response to trauma needs to be broader. As the first System of Care (SOC) project with a specific focus on trauma-informed practices, the THRIVE Initiative has had a unique opportunity both to define what traumainformed practice means and to assess its impact on children and their families. A strong partnership between the state sponsors at Children’s Behavioral Health, the people developing the THRIVE Initiative in the target counties and the evaluators has permitted and facilitated a learning process that is now reaping benefits beyond the Initiative itself. The benefits first manifested themselves in the encouragement provided by the state to take the learnings from THRIVE to the entire state. This has allowed other communities and agencies to avail themselves of the training and technical assistance provided by THRIVE staff. The state leaders fostered the ability of all contracted mental health agencies to conduct their own assessments of their agency on the principles of system of care and trauma-informed practices using tools and evaluation techniques developed and promoted by THRIVE. Even the federal requirement that grantees provide matching funds helped facilitate the dissemination of learning as the evaluator’s contribution was to go beyond the three counties funded by the project to bring the assessment statewide. Benefits also were derived from the state-level encouragement of the development of both youth and family organizations whose voice could be heard and applied beyond a system of care project. Thus, the THRIVE Initiative, with the strong encouragement of Children’s Behavioral Health, helped to create an alliance of six family organizations, called the Maine Alliance of Family Organizations (M.A.F.O.). Ultimately one of the services provided by THRIVE, the trauma-informed Family Partnering Program, was turned over to one of the family organizations to administer. The partnership also encouraged the development of a youth move chapter, Youth MOVE Maine and supported various youth initiatives that went beyond THRIVE. Going beyond Maine, the THRIVE Initiative and its evaluators have been very active in developing materials for presentation at national forums, both in the form of workshops, THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 49 and poster sessions and even extensive institutes. Every year since the first full year of operation, THRIVE’s submissions have been approved by the national children’s mental health research conferences sponsored by the University of South Florida and/or the by the Georgetown Institutes. At the most recent Georgetown Institute (Orlando, 2012), the former youth coordinator for THRIVE and now its Training and CQI Manager was a plenary speaker before 2200 people, providing a first person perspective on growing up with trauma and how even to this day the principles of trauma-informed practice provide comfort and assistance in addressing its impact. THRIVE has also received awards at these venues for its innovative social marketing initiatives such as digital stories which allow youth to tell their stories in their own voices using the new media. Recognizing the power and potential of disseminating the concepts inherent in traumainformed practice to a national audience, THRIVE was encouraged both by the state sponsors and even its own lead agency, Tri-County Mental Health, to become its own independent organization. Toward the end of the project, THRIVE applied for and was granted a federal 501 (C) 3 status as a non-profit organization. This vehicle has allowed THRIVE to develop training and technical assistance contracts in many states throughout the country and has even permitted the dissemination of its Trauma-informed Agency Assessment Tool to states outside Maine through a partnership with the evaluators. This partnership has also allowed THRIVE to make new discoveries about the nature and impact of trauma by forging close working relationships with its evaluators. An unusual contractual model was employed. The lead evaluation investigator is a state employee with broad system of care experience; he is currently Director of the Office of Quality Improvement for the State Department of Health and Human Services. But the day to day operations of the evaluation were contracted to Hornby Zeller Associates, Inc., a social science research firm with offices in Maine, among other states. The partnership worked extremely well for various reasons. First, the evaluation team as a whole brought more than one perspective and set of experiences to the effort. Second, it provided some flexibility in conducting the evaluation. For example, the private firm could easily hire family evaluators who may not have had traditional credentials associated with state service. They could be given the materials and resources needed to operate flexibly. Third, the private firm could obtain access to data such as Medicaid claims files from the state which is not always easily accessed. The joint efforts led to a powerful service and cost analysis. Fourth, the partnership allowed investigators to develop materials and make joint presentations to state and national audiences. Through the evaluation, the project hoped to demonstrate both the degree to which trauma is prevalent among the population of children with emotional disturbances and the approaches that could mitigate the negative effects of trauma. While it has done both, the project and its evaluation team has taken the inquiry one step further, with initial results that may prove to be the most important evaluation contribution of the project. That was to assess the impact of trauma from one generation to the next. The evaluation team added three tools to those required by the national cross-site evaluator: the Traumatic Events Screening Instrument (TESI), the Lifetime Incidence of THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 50 Traumatic Events (LITE; both parent and child versions), and the Trauma Symptom Checklist (TSC; versions for Young Children and for Youth). By having the foresight and ability to capture the caregiver’s own trauma history as a child using the TESI, the evaluation permitted analyses of what we came to call “inter-generational trauma.” The linkages from one generation to the next became apparent by using correlational analysis techniques and significance tests; these types of analyses could even be extended to the service and cost study which ultimately demonstrated two important things: children whose parents had childhood traumatic experiences used more expensive services before enrolling in THRIVE than those who did not, and these same parents and children realized far greater savings in the cost of treatment six months after THRIVE services were largely ended. Their savings were far greater than parents who did not have trauma histories themselves to start with. And the most consistent intervention received by all these families was a Family Support Partner. Again, the concept of peer support and parent partnering is gaining traction across the country but efforts to demonstrate the effectiveness of this approach have been sparse. THRIVE provides a nice entre to demonstrating the effectiveness of parent support partners where the parents themselves may have unresolved issues from childhood trauma. The THRIVE Initiative came to be defined by its multiple efforts, operating at different levels of systems change: • • • • • Trauma-informed Family Partnering Program provided Family Support Partners to work with families referred to the THRIVE Initiative from Child Welfare, Juvenile Justice and local mental health agencies. The Family Support Partners provided peer support from the perspective of personal experience with a child with special needs. This engagement generally lasted about six months. Trauma-focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT) Learning Collaborative was organized by THRIVE for agencies using this evidence-based trauma-specific treatment model for children and families that typically lasts for a period of 12 to 16 weeks. Trauma-informed Training and Technical Assistance was offered to educate providers regarding the trauma-informed approach, THRIVE provided trainings to mental health agencies, community providers, and youth and families organizations throughout the service area with a focus on the 23 local entities that signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the THRIVE Initiative. Trauma-informed Agency Assessment was developed so that the 23 agencies initially and the rest of CBHS contractors in subsequent years could determine the extent to which they were delivering trauma-informed services and to pinpoint areas for improvement within specific domains. The accompanying CQI process helped agencies develop specific steps for improving their practices. Youth and Family Voice. THRIVE worked actively to support the development of the Maine Alliance of Family Organizations which helped to coalesce seven family THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 51 groups with somewhat different foci including families of children with learning disabilities as well as those with emotional problems. THRIVE also helped to develop the Maine chapter of Youth MOVE, which became Youth MOVE Maine. It used leadership development and social marketing techniques to help develop and promote the youth voice in a variety of activities. The THRIVE Initiative learned much about promoting and enhancing a trauma-informed system. Perhaps the most salient lesson is the need for trauma champions, strong leaders at the state and agency level who acknowledge and understand the importance of the question, “What happened to you,” as opposed to what is wrong with you. Whether it was the TIAA self-assessment process or TF-CBT learning collaborative, those agencies that were the most successful had leaders who were dedicated to implementing the traumainformed approach. Moreover, the commitment from state agency leadership was instrumental in the statewide TIAA administration and ultimately plans to expand the trauma-informed approach to other agencies and service systems. The evaluation studies found that the majority of children and families enrolled in THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program had experienced significant amounts of trauma. Behavioral and functional symptoms, including trauma-related symptoms, were higher among those with a trauma background. Perhaps most importantly, the study also showed that the trauma history of parents and/or primary caregivers had a direct effect on youth outcomes and family functioning. When trauma-informed services were delivered to these families through the THRIVE Initiative, the children and youth showed improved outcomes and symptom reduction. Achieving better outcomes was also associated with a shift away from inpatient hospital services among children and youth enrolled in THRIVE’s Family Partnering Program. These shifts in service utilization had a desired effect in cost savings of more than $450,000 for families enrolled in THRIVE, representing more than a 30 percent reduction in cost from six months before service initiation to six months after service termination. Again, the greatest change was among families with an intergenerational trauma history. The TIAA showed that agency staff members often have different perceptions of their practices from youth and families. For physical and emotional safety domains, the families have a higher perception of agency practices than the youth or even the agency staff. On the question of youth empowerment, the agency staff perceive that they empower youth more than the youth perceive that themselves. On the domain of family empowerment, the perceptions of agency staff and family members are virtually the same. Families and youth believe the agencies display more trauma competence than the agencies themselves perceive. Trustworthiness is another issue that the youth have, with their perceptions being lower than families or agency staff. On cultural competency, both the family members followed by the youth, have a higher perception than the staff have of their own cultural competence. These results suggest the need for agencies to work more closely with youth and families to examine these domains, particularly in the one area where the staff rank themselves higher than the people they serve: youth empowerment. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 52 The most important independent finding of the evaluation is the connection between a caregiver’s experience of trauma as a child and his or her own child’s experience. These relationships affect how much a child uses expensive services before receiving treatment. It is particularly noteworthy that providing a Family Support Partner was most effective when the caregiver disclosed a childhood affected by trauma. While the post-service costs for the entire sample were reduced by 30 percent, for the subgroup with a trauma history there was a 50 percent reduction. While the sample size is small, the results have face validity and need to be replicated with larger groups of people, preferably using a quasiexperimental design. Future studies should be designed to pinpoint the specific relationships between trauma experiences, trauma-informed services, children’s outcomes and associated costs. Even with its limitations, the overall evaluation results of the THRIVE Initiative suggest that better outcomes and reduced costs can be achieved by providing trauma-informed parent peer supports, offering trauma-specific treatments and taking into account the trauma history of the entire family through a trauma-informed approach to service delivery. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 53 Page intentionally left blank THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 54 REFERENCES Appleyard, K. & Osofsky, J. D. (2003). Parenting After Trauma: Supporting Parents and Caregivers in the Treatment of Children Impacted by Violence. Infant Mental Health Journal. 24(2):111-125. Bolen, R. (2000). Validity of Attachment Theory. Trauma, Violence and Abuse. 1(2): 128153. Ancharoff, M. R., Munroe, J.F., & Fisher, L.M. (1998). The legacy of combat trauma: Clinical implications of intergenerational transmission. In Y. Danieli (Ed.), International Handbook of Multigenerational Legacies of Trauma (pp. 257-276). New York: Plenum Press. Blanch, A. (2003). Developing Trauma-Informed Behavioral Health Systems. Alexandria, VA: National Technical Assistance Center for State Mental Health Planning (NTAC). Boney-McCoy, S. & Finkelhor, D. (1995). Psychosocial sequelae of violent victimization in a national youth sample. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 63(5):726-736. Daud, A. & Rydelius, P.A. (2009). Comorbidity/overlapping between ADHD and PTSD in relation to IQ among children of traumatized/non-traumatized parents. Journal of Attention Disorders 13(2):188-96. Felitti, V.J., Anda, R.F., Nordenberg, D. et al. (1998). The relationship of adult health status to childhood abuse & household dysfunction. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 14(4):245-258. Ford, J. D., Racusin, R., Ellis, C. G., Daviss, W. B., Reiser, J., Fleischer, A., et al. (2000). Child maltreatment, other trauma exposure, and posttraumatic symptomatology among children with oppositional defiant and attention deficit hyperactivity disorders. Child Maltreatment, 5:205–217. Frothingham, T., Hobbs, C., Wynne J., Yee, L., Goyal, A., & Wadsworth, D. (2000). Follow up study eight years after diagnosis of sexual abuse, Archives of Disease in Childhood, 83:132134. Harris, M. and Fallot, R.D. (Eds.) (2001). Using Trauma Theory to Design Service Systems. New Directions for Mental Health Services Series. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. Hamblin, Jessica and Barnett, Erin (2009). PTSD in Children and Adolescents. United States Department of Veterans Affairs, accessed at http://www.ptsd.va. Hashima, P. & Finkelhor, D. (1999). Violent Victimization of Youth Versus Adults in the National Crime Victimization Survey. Journal of Interpersonal Violence. 14(8):799-820. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 55 Husain, S.A., Allwood, M.A., & Bell, D.J. (2008). The Relationship Between PTSD Symptoms and Attention Problems in Children Exposed to the Bosnian War. Journal of Emotional and Behavioral Disorders, 16:52-62. Kessler, R.C. (2000). Post-traumatic stress disorder: The burden to the individual and to society. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 61(5):4-12. Macy, R.D., (2002). On the epidemiology of posttraumatic stress disorder: period prevalence rates and acute service utilization rates among Massachusetts Medicaid program enrollees: 1993-1996. Doctoral Dissertation. Union Institute and University (ISBN: 0-493-7354-0). Newmann, J., et al. (1998). Abuse histories, severe mental illness, and the cost of care. In Levin, B., et al. (Eds.) Women’s Mental Health Services. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications. Silverman, R. C., & Lieberman, A. F. (1999). Negative maternal attributions, projective identification, and the intergenerational transmission of violent relational patterns. Psychoanalytic Dialogues: The International Journal of Relational Perspectives, 9(2):161-186. Switzer, G.E., Dew, M.A., Thompson, K., Goycoolea, J.M., Derricott, T., & Mullins, S.D. (1999). Posttraumatic stress disorder and service utilization among urban mental health center clients. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 12:25–39. Yoe, J., Posner, R., McPherson, C., & Burns, J. (2005). Influence of Trauma on Service Use and Expenditures for Children with Emotional & Behavioral Challenges. Poster Presentation to the 18th Annual Research Conference: A System of Care for Children’s Mental Health: Expanding the Research Base, Tampa, FL. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 56 APPENDIX THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 57 Page intentionally left blank THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 58 Trauma Instrument Description Traumatic Events Screening Inventory (TESI) The trauma history of the primary caregiver impacts a child’s reaction to and recovery from trauma (Appleyard and Osofsky, 2003). Therefore, the adult version of the Traumatic Events Screening Instrument (TESI) is used to identify whether the primary caregivers of children enrolled in the longitudinal study have themselves experienced trauma. The TESI screen for trauma history in adults in clinical or research settings and can be administered as a semi-structured interview. It screens respondents for a wide range of potentially traumatic events, including accidents, hospitalizations, physical or sexual abuse, natural disasters, community violence, witnessing domestic violence, and interpersonal losses due to severe illness or injury. While only the child and parent versions of the instrument have been validated (not the adult screener), Ford and Rogers (1997) found that the kappa scores for interrater reliability for the TESI-C ranged from .73 to 1.00. The kappa scores for retest reliability for both the TESI-C and TESI-P ranged from 50 to 70 over a two- to fourmonth period. Please note that, unlike the other instruments listed here, this tool is only administered during the baseline interview. Lifetime Incidence of Traumatic Events (LITE) Child trauma is increasingly recognized as both widespread (Pynoos, 1990) and detrimental to psychosocial development and quality of life (Terr, 1991). Children exposed to extreme distress, such as occurs in natural disaster or violent incidents, will probably be traumatized (Terr, 1991), and they often have difficulty recovering unless special assistance is provided (Sugar, 1989). Such assistance first of all depends upon identification of those in need. However, reliable identification of traumatized children has typically been cumbersome, involving extended clinical interviewing (McNally, 1991). Some currently available measures are useful and psychometrically sound, but also have a variety of limitations. For example, the Impact of Events Scale (IES; Horowitz, Wilner, & Alvarez, 1979) is widely used with adults following a critical incident, and eight of the items have survived norming with children (Dyregrov & Yule, 1995). Children exhibit a much broader spectrum of post-traumatic symptoms than those covered in the IES (Fletcher, 1993; Terr, 1991); the IES is also limited in that an identified trauma is required as a reference point for all questions. However, a precipitating or predisposing event is not always recognized a priori as the source of a child's problems. Children often exhibit symptoms which may be trauma-based, but which mimic other conditions, including somatic disturbances, Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder, learning problems, anxiety, depression, oppositional behaviors, and conduct disorders (Green, 1983; Terr, 1991). The Trauma Symptom Checklist for Children (TSCC; Briere, 1996) does not address some important aspects of child trauma symptomatology, such as somatic complaints and pessimistic future. The Los Angeles Symptom Checklist (LASC; Foy, King, King, & Resnick, 1995) is not quite as long with 43 items, and is fairly comprehensive, but has only been THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 59 normed downwards to adolescents. The adult-oriented content would make further downward extension inappropriate. The Children's Impact of Traumatic Events Scale (CITES; Wolfe, Gentile, Michienzi, Sas, & Wolfe, 1991) is shorter, with only 20 items, but fails to address many types of child trauma symptoms. Furthermore, the brevity of the CITES is deceptive, since it is derived from a much longer, copyrighted instrument (Child Behavior Checklist; Achenbach & Edelbrock, 1984) and cannot be used independently (T. Achenbach, personal communication, 11/93). A correlational analysis between the Child Report of Post-traumatic Symptoms (CROPS), the Parent Report of Post-traumatic Symptoms (PROPS) and LITE revealed that the correlations between the total scores on each measure and the clinician ratings remained strong after controlling for age, gender, ethnicity, parent education level, and location (urban vs. rural). This was determined in a hierarchical multiple regression analysis in which the LITE rating was entered last, after entering the other five variables. Before entering the LITE rating, the multiplier was .325 for the PROPS and .226 for the CROPS. After entering the LITE rating, the multipliers increased to .553 and .602, respectively. The criterion validity variable (i.e., the LITE rating) accounted for 20 percent of the variation in PROPS scores (r2 increased from .11 to .31) and for 31 percent of the variation in CROPS scores (r2 increased from .05 to .36) beyond the contribution of the other five variables. Trauma Symptom Checklists (TSC) The Trauma Symptom Checklist for Young Children (TSC-YC) is a standardized, 90-item caretaker-report instrument that can be used to assess trauma symptoms in children from ages three to 12. It is normed separately for males and females and for three age groups: (a) 3-4 years, (b) 5-9 years, and (c) 10-12 years. Caregivers rate each symptom on a fourpoint scale according to often it has occurred in the previous month. Unlike most other parent/caretaker measures, the TSC-YC contains specific scales to ascertain the validity of caretaker reports and evaluates a wide range of potentially posttraumatic symptoms. The TSC-YC contains eight clinical scales (i.e. Anxiety, Depression; Anger/Aggression; Posttraumatic Stress-Intrusion; Posttraumatic Stress-Avoidance; Posttraumatic StressArousal; Dissociation; Sexual Concerns; and a summary posttraumatic stress scale. Because the TSC-YC is a secondary report, it includes features to assess the caretaker’s rating style and actual familiarity with the child. The TSC-YC contains two validity scales that assess potential caretaker over report and underreport of the child’s symptoms. The Trauma Symptom Checklist for Children (TSC-C) is a self-report measure of posttraumatic distress and related psychological symptomatology in older children and youth. It is intended for use in the evaluation of children who have experienced traumatic events, including childhood physical and sexual abuse, victimization by peers (e.g. physical or sexual assault), major losses, the witnessing of violence done to others, and natural disasters. The various scales of the TSCC assess a wide range of psychological impacts and consists of 54 items that yield two validity scales (Underresponse and Hyperresponse); six clinical scales (Anxiety, Depression, Anger, Posttraumatic Stress Dissociation [with two subscales], and Sexual Concerns [with two subscales]; and eight critical items. While no data that indicate exposure to the TSC-C is especially stressful, the author of the THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 60 instruments recommends that a mental health practitioner should be available to the child for cases when debriefing might be necessary. Accordingly, the family evaluators and the evaluation participants will have access to the Tri-County Mental Health Services 24-hour crisis hotline in case of emergency (see below). Both the TSC-C and the TSC-YC can be administered and scored by individuals who do not have formal training in clinical psychology, counseling psychology, or related fields. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 61 Page intentionally left blank THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 62 National Evaluation Instrument Descriptions Enrollment and Demographic Information Form (EDIF) The EDIF gathers demographic, diagnostic, and system of care enrollment information on all children receiving CMHS-funded system of care services. Information for the EDIF is gathered from record review and caregiver report. It includes such topics as demographic information, diagnostic information and referral information It consists of 16 questions with subparts and is completed at baseline. Caregiver Information Questionnaire (CIQ) The CIQ is administered to caregivers and gathers additional demographic information, as well as information on risk factors, family composition, custody status, service use history, and presenting problem(s) for children enrolled in the Longitudinal Child and Family Outcome Study. It consists of 39 questions that cover risk factors, family composition, physical custody, service use, employment status, presenting problems and parental attitudes regarding services. Caregiver Strain Questionnaire (CGSQ) The CGSQ assesses the extent to which caregivers are affected by the special demands associated with caring for a child with emotional and behavioral problems. The CGSQ is comprised of three subscales which range in severity from zero to five. Objective Strain refers to observable disruptions in family and community life (e.g., interruption of personal time, lost work time, financial strain). Subjective Externalized Strain refers to negative feelings about the child such as anger, resentment, or embarrassment. Subjective Internalized Strain refers to the negative feelings that the caregiver experiences such as worry, guilt, or fatigue. Higher scores on each of these scales indicate greater strain. A Global Strain score is calculated by summing the three subscales (i.e., Objective Strain, Subjective Externalized Strain, and Subjective Internalized Strain) to provide an indication of the total impact of the special demands on the family. Global Strain scores range from zero to 15. As with the individual subscales, higher scores indicate greater strain. Child Behavioral Checklist (CBCL) The CBCL 1.5–5 is administered to caregivers and measures behavioral and emotional problems in children between the ages of 1.5 and 5. The CBCL 1.5–5 produces seven narrow-band syndrome scores; Emotionally Reactive, Anxious/Depressed, Somatic Complaints, Withdrawn, Sleep Problems, Attention Problems, and Aggressive Behavior; two broadband syndrome scores: Internalizing and Externalizing; and a Total Problem score. T-scores between 65 and 69 (93rd and 97th percentile) on the narrow-band syndrome scales are in the borderline clinical range. T-scores greater than 69 are in the clinical range. T-scores between 60 and 63 (83rd and 90th percentile) on Internalizing, Externalizing, and Total Problems are in the borderline clinical range. T-scores above 63 are in the clinical range. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 63 The CBCL 6–18 is administered to caregivers and measures behavioral and emotional problems in children between the ages of 6 and 18. The CBCL 6–18 produces eight narrowband syndrome scores; Anxious/Depressed, Withdrawn/Depressed, Somatic Complaints, Social Problems, Thought Problems, Attention Problems, Rule-Breaking Behavior, and Aggressive Behavior; two broadband syndrome scores: Internalizing and Externalizing; and a Total Problem score. T-scores between 65 and 69 (93rd and 97th percentile) on the narrow-band syndrome scales are in the borderline clinical range. T-scores greater than or equal to 70 are in the clinical range. On the Internalizing, Externalizing, and Total Problems scales, T-scores between 60 and 63 (84th and 90th percentile) are in the borderline clinical range. T-scores above 63 are in the clinical range. The CBCL is also comprised of three competency subscales, as well as a total competency scale. Higher scores on the competency scales indicate greater competence. The three competence subscales have a T-score range from 20 to 65, with scores under 30 in the clinical range (i.e., less competence) (2nd percentile), scores between 31 and 36 in the borderline clinical range, and scores over 36 below the clinical range (i.e., greater competence). The Total Competence scale has a T-score range from 10 to 80, with scores under 37 in the clinical range (i.e., less competence), scores between 37 and 40 in the borderline clinical range, and scores over 40 below the clinical range (i.e., greater competence). Behavioral & Emotional Rating Scale (BERS) The BERS–2C is administered to caregivers. It measures children’s emotional and behavioral strengths in six different areas: Interpersonal Strength, Family Involvement, Intrapersonal Strength, School Functioning, Affective Strength, and Career Strength. Scaled scores on the strength subscales range from 1 to 16, with an average score between eight and 12. Higher scores indicate greater strengths. A strength index can be calculated and is based on the sum of the subscale scores, excluding career strength. The strength index ranges from 38 to 161, with an average index in the 90–110 range. A higher index indicates greater overall strengths. The BERS–2Y is a youth version of the BERS–2C. It is administered to youth 11 years and older. As with the caregiver version, the BERS–2Y measures children’s emotional and behavioral strengths in six different areas: Interpersonal Strength, Family Involvement, Intrapersonal Strength, School Functioning, Affective Strength, and Career Strength. On the youth version, however, scaled scores on the strength subscales range from one to 18, but the average range remains the same at 8–12. The calculation, range, and average score of the strength index remain the same as well (i.e., 38 to 161, with an average index between 90 and 110). Higher subscale scores and strength indexes indicates greater overall strengths. THRIVE Final Evaluation 2012 – HZA, Inc. Page 64