FINAL OAT Supporting Statement 0311

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Office for the Advancement of Telehealth (OAT) Telehealth Outcome Measures

OMB: 0915-0311

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Supporting Statement A


OAT Telehealth Outcome Measures


OMB Control No. 0915-0311


Revision



  1. Justification


  1. Circumstances Making the Collection of Information Necessary


The Health Resources and Services Administration’s (HRSA) Federal Office of Rural Health Policy (FORHP), Office for the Advancement of Telehealth (OAT) is requesting the Office of Management and Budget’s (OMB) continued approval for telehealth outcome measures of the telehealth grantees. Specifically, we are asking for continued approval to use a performance measurement tool to collect data from grantees receiving funds under the Telehealth Network Grant Program.


The Telehealth Network Grant Program is authorized by Section 330I of the Public Health Service Act. The Health Care Safety Net Amendments of 2002 (Public Law 107-251) amended the Public Health Service Act by adding Section 330I. Under this authority, grants may be awarded to eligible entities to develop telehealth network projects in rural areas, in medically underserved areas, in frontier communities, and for medically underserved populations, to (a) expand access to, coordinate, and improve the quality of health care services; (b) improve and expand the training of health care providers; and (c) expand and improve the quality of health information available to health care providers, and patients and their families. The primary objective of the Telehealth Network Grant Program is to help communities build the human, technical, and financial capacity to develop sustainable telehealth programs and networks. The data collected with the performance measurement tool provides HRSA’s OAT with information about outcome measures including the effectiveness of service programs and monitor their progress through the use of performance reporting data. In addition, the data collected from grantees meets the administrative requirement of assessing programs via the Government Performance Review Act of 1993 (GPRA)1.


The Telehealth Network Grant Program (TNGP) awards demonstration grants to networks that show how telehealth technologies can expand access to quality healthcare; improve and expand training of healthcare providers; and expand and improve the quality of health information available to providers and patients. Because the primary focus of the program has been to fund grantees to build and demonstrate the usefulness and financial viability of telehealth systems in providing health care, this tool provides the needed measures to determine the program's impact on clinical outcomes. As required by GPRA, all federal agencies must develop strategic plans describing their overall goal and objectives. HRSA’s OAT has worked with its grantees to develop performance measures to be used to evaluate and monitor the progress of the grantees. Specific categories were designed to be reported through a performance monitoring website.


The HRSA’s OAT was established in 1998 with the mission to lead, coordinate and promote the use of telehealth technologies by fostering partnerships within HRSA and other Federal agencies, states and private sector groups to expand the field of telehealth by: administering telehealth grant programs; providing technical assistance; assessing technology investment strategies; developing distance learning and training programs for health care providers; evaluating the use of telehealth technologies; developing telehealth policy initiatives to improve access to quality health services; and promoting knowledge about “best practices.” HRSA envisions the use of telehealth technology playing an integral role in facilitating linkages between health care institutions over distance to improve access to quality health care services in this nation and provide educational opportunities or those who would otherwise not have or would have difficulty accessing such opportunities. OAT is the operational focal point within HRSA’s Federal Office of Rural Health Policy for advancing the cost-effective use of telehealth technologies throughout the agency. OAT is responsible for allocating and administering funds, evaluating programs and their impact on the population served, and improving the quantity and quality of care. The data collection tool extracts valuable information on services provided that are critical to the mission of HRSA and provides valid and complete information about methods used to measure the impact of the telehealth program on improving access to healthcare services for residents of communities that did not have such services locally before the program. Projects are able to measure the impact of the telehealth program on rural School Based Health Centers2 in high poverty areas3, hospitalization rates and emergency room visit rates per year for patients receiving disease management services for diabetes, congestive heart failure, stroke and other chronic diseases, as well for patients receiving home care/home monitoring services. Projects can measure impact of the telehealth program on controlling blood glucose levels in diabetic patients and can assure the impact of the telehealth program improving efficiency of health care. In addition, projects also measure the impact of the telehealth program on reducing medical errors and collect data to measure other clear outcomes.


Additionally, the performance measurement tool allows OAT to:

    • Fulfill obligations for GPRA requirements and to report to Congress on impact of the OAT Telehealth Network Grant Program;

    • justify budget requests;

    • create a data-reporting tool for grantees to report on their projects’ performance relative to the mission of OAT/HRSA as well as individual goals and objectives of the program;

    • collect uniform, consistent data which enables OAT to monitor programs;

    • provide guidance to grantees on important indicators to track over time for their own internal program management;

    • identify topics of interest for future special studies;

    • identify changes of healthcare needs to rural communities allowing programs to shift focus in order to meet those needs, thereby improving access to needed services;

    • reduce rural practitioner isolation;

    • improve health system productivity and efficiency; and

    • enhance quality of care.


In FY16, the TNGP began a new focus to support established telehealth networks that serve rural School-Based Health Centers (SBHCs). This healthcare setting is a critical component of the nation’s health care safety net, providing essential preventive services in a convenient and familiar location to improve the health of school-aged children and adolescents, particularly those living in medically underserved and rural areas. In the past decade, the number of SBHCs nationally has increased dramatically to more than 2300, with more than a third in rural areas4. Grants were awarded in FY16 to expand telehealth in school-based settings through the FORHP TNGP to help significantly expand the availability and use of these services. Critical to these efforts, however, is the need to collect valuable date on measures for monitoring to assess school-based telehealth’s effectiveness in expanding and enhancing SBHC access, quality and cost, building on and supplementing existing measurement and research. As a result, a common set of measures are being implemented, for this effort, which will inform future policy changes and sustainability efforts.


  1. Purpose and Use of Information Collection


In order to evaluate existing programs, data are obtained from the OAT Performance Improvement Measurement System (PIMS), which can be accessed thru HRSA’s Electronic Handbook (EHB). The data are used to identify quality improvements, disparities in health care, health status and clinical outcome measures. The tool is also used to address GPRA initiatives. This system provides the government, health centers, patients, general academic and constituent communities with critical information on health care issues that directly affect rural, minority and under-served populations.


During the reporting periods, data are reported for the previous six months of activity. Programs have approximately six weeks to enter their data into HRSA’s Electronic Handbook (EHB). 5


The instrument was developed with the following four goals in mind:


  1. improving access to needed services,

  2. reducing rural practitioner isolation,

  3. improving health system productivity and efficiency, and

  4. improving patient outcomes.


For each of these categories, specific indicators were designed and data are reported regularly through a performance monitoring website. In addition to providing the required GPRA data, OAT uses the reported information to demonstrate the "value-added" that telehealth services contribute to improving health care. OAT has incorporated these performance assessment tools into the routine reporting required as part of the mid-year and annual reports required of their grantees.


All grantees are asked to address access to telehealth technologies at their respective institutions. Telehealth activities include the practice of telemedicine, delivery of distance education in allied health fields health informatics, health care staff supervision from remote sites, and the provision of consumer health information using telecommunications technologies. Grantees will be asked to provide network members or satellite site information. In addition, the data collection tool for the FY16 TNGP recipients, serving the rural School Based Health Centers, will collect uniform measures data using an EXCEL spreadsheet tool. Each TNGP recipient will serve as a data coordinating center for their participating rural school sites These TNGP recipients forward their assembled data to FORHP through a secure data transfer arrangement.


User Level Data

    1. A unique user identifier: Each grantee selects a member from the organization to submit data into PIMS. The selected staff member is assigned a unique EHB login and password code to access the system.

    2. Configuration: This feature allows participants to establish sites, specialties and settings. Participants can update information when necessary.

Specialties and Services

This allows participants to report the number of encounters by specialty/service, by patient care setting and by the type of telemedicine encounter.


Specialty Areas: This allows users to indicate the medical specialties and services provided through their telehealth system for the current reporting period.


Settings Include:

  • School Based Health Center

  • Community Health Center (including FQHCs)

  • Health Care Provider in Private Practice

  • Clinic (including RHC)

  • Local Health Department

  • Hospital (including CAH)

  • Long Term Care Provider

  • Home Health Service Provider

  • Outpatient Mental Health Service Provider/Facility

  • Local or Regional Emergency Health Care Provider

  • Higher Education Institution

  • Oral Health Provider

  • Other Publically Funded Health or Social Service Agency

  • Correctional Facility

  • Other


Encounter Types:

  • Interactive/Real-Time Encounters: Encounters done in an interactive (real-time) video-conferencing format.

  • Store-and-Forward: Encounters done in a format where information/images are gathered and sent electronically to be viewed at a later time by a telehealth provider; therefore, encounters are not interactive and not in real-time.


Service Availability in Remote Communities


Participants are asked to report information about the availability of services in the community. Specifically, they are asked to report whether a specialty/service is available in the community, whether a visiting specialist provides the service regularly, whether their OAT telemedicine program offers the services to the site, and whether another telemedicine program offers the service/specialty. Participants indicate how far one would have to drive from the community to see a specialist in-person.


Patient Travel


Users measure patient travel that is ‘saved’ or avoided through the use of telemedicine. Distance is measured between the hub site and the remote site (patients’ physical location). The number of sessions is also obtained in this area.


HRSA is requesting approval for a revised information collection request.


Participants are asked to report information that demonstrates how telehealth can expand access to, and coordinate and improve the quality of, health care services offered through school-based health centers (SBHCs). Grants were targeted to rural, frontier, and underserved communities providing telehealth services for children, with a particular focus on five clinical areas: asthma, behavioral health, diabetes, obesity reduction and prevention, and oral health. As part of this initiative, OAT is requesting data on these set of measures that will be used for a cross-grantee evaluation of the TNGP. These measures supplement and build off of existing measures and research to assess school-based telehealth’s effectiveness in expanding and enhancing SBHC access, quality, and cost effectiveness.


  1. Use of Improved Information Technology and Burden Reduction


The OAT PIMS tool is fully electronic within HRSA’s Electronic Handbook. The system design provides pre-formatted and interactive data entry that helps assure standardized data across the Telehealth Network Grant Programs and greatly simplifies the data entry process. The grantee provides sites and services information and the system only generates forms based on this data. Patient travel, chronic disease, dermatology and homecare information will be in spreadsheet format. The worksheets collect specific information about each service provided. Calculations in the spreadsheets are fully automated. Drop down menus are also used to simplify selections. Instructions are attached to each individual worksheet.



  1. Efforts to Identify Duplication and Use of Similar Information


Data of the type required to evaluate or monitor the telehealth program are not available elsewhere. The information is not intended to reflect all telemedicine activity nationwide; it reflects only the activity of the telemedicine programs funded by HRSA’s OAT. As such, this gives an indication of telemedicine programs and services, but not the total volume of this activity nationwide. The OAT PIMS tool is necessary for the program to monitor the objectives that the funding initiative is designed to meet.



  1. Impact on Small Businesses or Other Small Entities


This project does not significantly impact small business or small entities.



  1. Consequences of Collecting the Information Less Frequently


Without semi-annual reporting on the use of Telehealth Network Grant Program funds, HRSA’s OAT would not be able to carry out its responsibility to oversee compliance with the intent of congressional appropriations in a timely manner. Because Telehealth is a critical component of health care, specifically in rural areas, semi-annual reporting of the characteristics of the Public Health Service Act, Section 330I - Telehealth Network Grants is necessary to determine whether the administration of the funds is responding to the changes in the affected population(s).

If the information is not collected at all, HRSA’s OAT will not be able to provide critical data that are needed to justify the GPRA, as mandated by OMB. The information being reported supports the following:


      • whether program funds are being spent for their intended purposes;

      • what types of and how many individuals are receiving services;

      • whether there is an increase in the number of communities that have access to pediatric and adolescent, and adult mental health services where access did not exist in the community prior to the Telehealth Network Grant Program;

      • helps determine if there is an increase in the number of diabetic patients enrolled in a telehealth diabetes case management program with ideal glycolic control; and

      • whether there is an increase in the number of services and/or sites that provide access to health care as a result of the Telehealth Network Grant Program per federal program dollar expended.

      • helps build telehealth’s evidence base and determine if it is effective in serving rural schools, particularly in regards to access, quality, and cost effectiveness.



  1. Special Circumstances Relating to the Guidelines of 5 CFR 1320.5


The data is being collected in a manner fully consistent with the guidelines in 5 CFR 1320.5.


  1. Consultation Outside the Agency


A 60-day Federal Register Notice was published in the Federal Register on January 10, 2018, vol. 83, No. 7; pp. 1264. There were no public comments.


OAT consulted and shared the reporting instructions, and measures for the monitoring system, with current grantees providing telemedicine services to their communities. Their expertise was crucial in identifying key performance measures/indicators to be used to evaluate and monitor the progress of the program, specifically for rural schools in high poverty areas. The representatives provided advice/input during the summer of 2017. The names of these individuals are listed in the table below.


Name

Location

Address/Phone Number

Sheila Freed, RN

Avera eCare

Sioux Falls, SD

eSchool Health Director

4500 N. Lewis Ave.

Sioux Falls, SD 57108

605-322-5309

[email protected]


Donna Dittman Hale

Bay Rivers Telehealth Alliance

Tappahannock, VA

Executive Director

Bay Rivers Telehealth Alliance

The Area Health Education Center for the Rappahannock Region

Tappahannock, Virginia

Sarah Wovcha, JD, MPH

Children’s Dental Services

Minneapolis, MN

Executive Director

Children’s Dental Services

636 Broadway St NE

Minneapolis, MN 554132164

[email protected]


Ági Erickson


Community Health Center, Inc.

Middletown, CT

Director of Project ECHO

Weitzman Institute

Phone: 860.347.6971 Ext. 3741;

[email protected]

http://weitzmaninstitute.org



Jill Jennings, RDN, LDN

East Carolina University

Greenville, NC

Healthier Lives Project Coordinator

East Carolina University, Brody School of Medicine

Department of Family Medicine, Research Division

101 Heart Drive

Greenville, NC 27834

(252) 744-0089

[email protected]


Mary Leppert, MD

Kennedy Krieger Children’s Hospital

Baltimore, MD

Assistant Professor of Pediatrics

Johns Hopkins School of Medicine Director,

Center for Development and Learning, Kennedy Krieger Institute

Physician, Division of Neurology and Developmental Medicine

Kennedy Krieger Institute

801 N. Broadway

Baltimore, MD 21205

Phone: (443) 923-3252

[email protected]


Kathy Hsu Wibberly, PhD


Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia

Charlottesville, VA

Director, Mid-Atlantic Telehealth Resource Center

Karen S. Rheuban Center for Telehealth, University of Virginia

P.O. Box 800711

Charlottesville, VA 22908-0711

[email protected]


Lisa Hoffmann Grundl

Sunnyside Community Hospital

Seattle, WA

Project Manager

Health Facilities Planning & Development

120 1st Avenue West, Suite 100

Seattle, WA 98119

(206) 441-0971

[email protected]


Tina Pilgreen


University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

Little Rock, AR

Health Educator

UAMS Center for Distance Health

STAR (School Telemedicine in Arkansas)

(501) 526-7419

[email protected]

go.uams.edu/star


Eve-Lynn Nelson, PhD


University of Kansas Medical Center Research Institute

Fairway, KS


Director, Center for Telemedicine & Telehealth

Professor, Pediatrics

University of Kansas Medical Center

[email protected]

(913) 588-2413


Kirsten Bennett PhD, RD, LD


University of New Mexico

Albuquerque, NM

Education and Outreach Manager Quality Improvement and Telehealth

LEND Nutrition Faculty

Registered Dietitian

Envision New Mexico: The Initiative for Child Healthcare Quality

University of New Mexico

Department of Pediatrics

http://www.envisionnm.org

625 Silver SW, Suite 324

Albuquerque, NM 87102

505-925-7604

Fax 505-925-7601

[email protected]


Kari B. Law, MD


West Virginia University

Morgantown, WV

Assistant Professor, Adult, Child & Adolescent, & Forensic Psychiatry

Director, Telepsychiatry

West Virginia University

Department of Behavioral Medicine

930 Chestnut Ridge Road

Morgantown, WV  26505

(304) 293-5181 - office

[email protected]


  1. Explanation of any Payment/Gift to Respondents


Respondents will not be remunerated.


  1. Assurance of Confidentiality Provided to Respondents


The OAT PIMS does not require any information that could identify individual clients. Names and personal identifiers will not be included in an aggregate data report. All reports and tabulated data that will be released to the general public will be summaries of information across grantees.


  1. Justification for Sensitive Questions


There are no questions of a sensitive nature collected through the OAT PIMS. No patient or client-level identifying data will be reported. Identification of the grantees as recipients of telemedicine funds is a matter of public record, as these recipients receive funds directly from HRSA.


12A. Estimated Annualized Burden Hours


The average annual burden hours of 147 are displayed in the table below. The estimate is based on trials regarding the amount of time it would take to review and complete data entry.


Form

Number of Respondents

Responses per Respondent

Total Responses

Hour Burden

Total Burden Hours

Performance Improvement Measurement System (PIMS)

21

1

21

7

147


12B. Estimated Annualized Burden Costs

Estimated Annualized Burden Costs


Type of

Respondent


Total Burden

Hours


Hourly

Wage Rate


Total Respondent Costs


Nursing, Psychiatric and Home Health Aides

100

$24.62


$2,462

Medical Records and Health Information Technicians

47


$37.66


$1,770

Total

147


$4,2326

Total Respondent Costs include fringe benefits and overhead of 100%.

  1. Estimates of other Total Annual Cost Burden to Respondents or Recordkeepers/Capital Costs

There are no capital or start up costs for respondents related to this effort.

  1. Annualized Cost to Federal Government


The cost of the contract to collect the information is $50,000. A Grade 13 Federal employee with a salary of $96,9707will work on this project 15% of the time for 14,545.50. Therefore, the total annual cost to the Federal Government is $64,545.50.


  1. Explanation for Program Changes or Adjustments


There is currently 2,800 hours of burden in the inventory. This package is requesting 147 hours. The estimated number of respondents is decreasing from 400 to 21 due to fewer recipients and reporting from their respective committed partners.


The number of respondents decreased as a result of the TNGP new initiative to focus solely on those 21 recipients that support rural school settings. In previous reporting periods, the TNGP supported all major healthcare settings and clinical services. The support consisted of overlapping cohorts of TNGP recipients, to which the number of respondents, including all of their network partners, reached close to 400.


  1. Plans for Tabulation, Publication, and Project Time Schedule


The OAT data web application that grantees access was migrated into HRSA’s EHB immediately following OMB’s initial approval of this information collection request.


As a result of the application, grantees have been submitting their data, that corresponds to the GPRA measures, on a semi-annual basis. The first data submission occurred in 2002. Since then, grantees have provided data on a variety of service and outcome measures related to access, travel miles saved, diabetes, and other chronic disease conditions. A HRSA contractor published an instruction manual for the PIMS tool, and currently provides grantees with technical assistance support for the application as they complete and submit their OAT data reporting requirements. Data was last published in January 2013, documenting aggregate data captured during years 2004-2010.


17. Reason(s) Display of OMB Expiration Date is Inappropriate


The expiration date will be displayed.


18. Exceptions to Certification for Paperwork Reduction Act Submissions


There are no exceptions to the certification.

1 GPRA is a law that passed in 1993 which requires that federally funded agencies develop and implement an accountability system based on performance measurement including setting goals and objectives and measuring progress toward achieving them.

2 School Based Health Center is defined in the Children’s Health Insurance Program Reauthorization Act of 2009 (Section 2110(c) (42 U.S.C. 1397jj)

3 SBHCs can facilitate expanding access to key health services in schools in rural high poverty areas (https://www.congress.gov/congressional-report/114th-congress/senate-report/74/1)

5 The EHB allows business processes such as grants management to be broken down into discrete role-based handbooks. The EHB contains electronic forms that can be used in real-time.

6 United States Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics: May 2017 National Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates United States https://www.bls.gov/oes/2017/may/oes_nat.htm


7U.S.Office of Personnel Management: 2018 General Schedule (GS) Locality Pay Table for the locality pay area of Washington-Baltimore-Arlington, DC-MD-VA-WV-PA https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/pay-leave/salaries-wages/salary-tables/pdf/2018/DCB.pdf

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File TitleOAT Telehealth Outcome Measures
AuthorHRSA
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