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Arizona Family Builders Program (November 2001, Report No. 01-30)

 

 

SUMMARY

The Office of the Auditor General has completed an evaluation of the Family Builders Program. This evaluation was conducted pursuant to the provisions of Laws 2000, Ch. 23, §2, and provides information regarding the program’s effectiveness in achieving its goals.

Family Builders is a family-centered, community-based program that provides early intervention to families with potential- and low-risk child abuse or neglect reports made to Child Protective Services (CPS). The program’s goal is to enhance parents’ ability to create safe, stable, and nurturing home environments that promote the safety of all family members and healthy child development. CPS refers potential- and low-risk reports of child abuse and neglect to community-based Family Builders contractors. These contractors provide services, such as parenting skills training, counseling, and utilities assistance, aimed at reducing the problems contributing to the potential for abuse or neglect. Participation in the program is voluntary, and families typically participate for about 6 months.

The Arizona Department of Economic Security (Department) is responsible for administering Family Builders. To do this, the Department contracts with eight community-based organizations to provide services to families in ten Arizona counties. Contractors are paid a capitated rate for each of the three program phases completed by a family: referral, assessment, and service plan.

Family Builders received 14,249 referrals between August 1, 1999 and April 30, 2001. In 9,586 of these cases, families completed only the referral phase. In 4,663 cases, families received an assessment. In all but 266 of the assessed cases, families signed a service plan to receive services.

Services Differ but
Program Outcomes
Comparable to CPS
(See pages 13 through 18) 

Although the services provided to families differ, Family Builders and CPS had similar outcomes related to subsequent CPS reports. Family Builders offers more services to low-risk families than CPS does, yet evaluators found that the proportion of families served by Family Builders who received subsequent CPS reports was comparable to the proportion of families investigated by CPS who received subsequent reports. Evaluators also analyzed the number of CPS reports per 10,000 persons for areas served by Family Builders and areas served only by CPS and found them to be similar.  

Despite these similar outcomes, positive differences exist among program participants. Families who completed the program had fewer subsequent CPS reports than families who did not complete the program. Further, families receiving program services experienced a slight reduction in their risk for child abuse and neglect, as measured by the caseworker-completed Family Risk Scale.

Department Has Made
Limited Progress in
Monitoring and Oversight
(See pages 19 through 24) 

Although the Department has taken steps to address monitoring and oversight problems identified in the Auditor General’s March 2000 evaluation (see Report No. 00-4), its progress has been limited. The Department still needs to improve its cost data for it to make statements about the type and cost of services delivered and ensure that capitation rates are appropriate. In a random sample of 100 cases, evaluators found many problems, such as missing and miscategorized costs. Although the Department has recently revised its cost category definitions, which had been a primary cause of problems, the database still contains data entered according to old definitions. The Department also still needs to improve other program data, such as demographic and risk assessment information, and to eliminate problems including missing and duplicative records. Although the Department has taken some steps to address the Family Builders database flaws and other factors contributing to the persistence of data problems, additional effort is needed. Specifically, the Department should develop a data quality assurance plan and conduct a system-wide review of the Family Builders database to eliminate current problems. It should also monitor contractor’s use of the recently modified cost categories and program definitions, create a database users’ manual, and provide regular training. Finally, the Department should assign the technical resources required to effectively address current problems and maintain the data collection system.

Statutory Evaluation
Components
(See pages 25 through 35)

As required by Laws 2000, Ch. 23, §2, the Office of the Auditor General has included in this report information on the number of referrals to the program, the number of families served, participants’ demographic characteristics, the services delivered, client satisfaction, the cost of services, the contractors who provided services, recommended improvements in program administration, the extent to which program goals and objectives are being met, and the outcomes for families served by the program, including its impact on reducing the risk of child maltreatment.


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