Existing federal child welfare regulations require states to describe the quality assurance (QA) system the state has in place to regularly assess the quality of services under the Child and Family Services Plan (CFSP) and assure that there will be measures to address identified problems as part of the CFSP (45 CFR 1357.15(u)). In addition to the CFSP requirement, Title IV-E of the Social Security Act requires agencies to monitor and conduct periodic evaluations of activities conducted under the Title IV-E program and to implement standards to ensure that children in foster care are provided quality services that protect the safety and health of such children (sections 471(a)(7) and 471(a)(22) of the Act), respectively. The Children’s Bureau considers having a method for conducting ongoing case reviews as essential to a state having a functioning CQI system in child welfare. In addition, in response to the April 2011 Federal Register notice [76 FR 18677] requesting public comments on improving the process of reviewing titles IV-B and IV-E through the Child and Family Services Review (CFSR), states and other stakeholders suggested a strengthening of states' overarching QA systems to encompass continuous quality improvement (CQI) methods. Commenters suggested that such systems should play a prominent role in federal monitoring of conformity with Title IV-B and Title IV-E requirements and state-driven assessment, refinement, and improvement.
In addition to collecting and analyzing quantitative data, it is also critical that state CQI systems have an ongoing case review component that includes reading case files of children served by the agency under the Title IV-B and Title IV-E plans and interviewing parties involved in the cases. Key to the efficacy of a state CQI system is an ongoing case review component that includes a comprehensive review of case files of children, adults, and families served by the agency. Case reviews are important to provide an understanding of what is behind the safety, permanency, well-being, and self-sufficiency numbers in terms of day-to-day practice in the field and how that practice is impacting child, adult, and family functioning and outcomes. Case reviews are utilized to assess the quality of services for those being served and, therefore, focus on the assessment and monitoring of how child, adult, and family functioning is progressing in relation to the services provided.
CQI case review processes at each level ensure a sampling universe of persons served statewide and should be sufficiently large enough to make statistical inferences about the population served and stratified to include a proportion of cases that reflect different age groups, goals, and other considerations, such as varying geographic areas of the state, as appropriate. Case reviews are conducted by qualified staff that go through a uniform and consistent training process that helps ensure inter-rater reliability. The process prevents reviewer conflict-of-interest and promotes third-party (unbiased) review of cases.
For a complete overview of DCBS’ CQI process, please refer to the CQI State Plan and Procedures Manual.