Annual mortality report : New Options Waiver (NOW), Comprehensive Supports Waiver (COMP), 2016

2016 Annual Mortality Report
New Options Waiver (NOW) and Comprehensive Supports Waiver (COMP)
Georgia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities August 22, 2017
This is the third annual report on mortality, mortality trends, and related information pertaining to the health and care received by individuals with intellectual and developmental
disabilities served by the Georgia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities. The report focuses on an analysis of mortality data and findings from DBHDD's mortality review process. Reports are scheduled for publication in August of each year and
cover the prior calendar year of January 1 through December 31.

Table of Contents
Executive Summary....................................................................................................................................... 6 Major Findings .......................................................................................................................................... 6 Utilization of Mortality Report Findings ................................................................................................... 8
About DBHDD ............................................................................................................................................... 9 Vision......................................................................................................................................................... 9 Mission ...................................................................................................................................................... 9
About DBHDD Intellectual and Developmental Disability Services ........................................................... 9 Scope of this Report ................................................................................................................................... 10 Causes of Death among the Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waiver Population .................. 10 Analysis of Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waiver Data Related to Mortality ..................... 13
Age .......................................................................................................................................................... 13 Gender .................................................................................................................................................... 15 Region ..................................................................................................................................................... 16 Type of Medicaid Waiver ........................................................................................................................ 17 Residential Setting .................................................................................................................................. 18 Health Risk .............................................................................................................................................. 20 Multiple Variable Analyses ........................................................................................................................ 22 Health Risk and Residential Setting ........................................................................................................ 22 Health Risk and Age ................................................................................................................................ 24 Mortality During 2016 ................................................................................................................................ 25 Age and Mortality ................................................................................................................................... 26 Gender and Mortality ............................................................................................................................. 28 Age, Residential Setting, and Mortality .................................................................................................. 29 Health Risk and Mortality ....................................................................................................................... 30 The Importance of Age and Intensity of Residential Setting .................................................................. 32 Community Mortality Review Committee and Deficient Practice Analysis............................................. 34 Categories of Deaths............................................................................................................................... 34 Purpose of CMRC .................................................................................................................................... 34 Membership............................................................................................................................................ 35 Process .................................................................................................................................................... 35 Corrective Action Plans ........................................................................................................................... 35 Deficiency Tracking ................................................................................................................................. 35
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Statewide Analysis of Number and Type of Deficient Practices ............................................................. 36 Critical Risk: Statewide....................................................................................................................... 36 High Risk: Statewide........................................................................................................................... 37 Moderate Risk: Statewide.................................................................................................................. 38
Regional Analysis of Number and Type of Deficient Practices ............................................................... 40 Key Findings ................................................................................................................................................ 42 Appendix A: Method for Mortality Review and Analysis .......................................................................... 43 Appendix B: Regions of DBHDD................................................................................................................. 45 Appendix C: Logistic Regression for Living at Home.................................................................................. 47
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List of Tables
Table 1: Leading Causes of Death .............................................................................................................. 12 Table 2: Age Distribution of the Adult Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waiver Population, .... 14 Table 3: Gender Distribution of the Adult Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waiver Population, 2014-2016 ................................................................................................................................................... 15 Table 4: Distribution of Adults Receiving Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waiver, 2014-2016 16 Table 5: Distribution of Adult Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waiver Population, 2014-201617 Table 6: Distribution of Adults in Residential Settings in Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waivers, 2014-2016 .................................................................................................................................... 19 Table 7: HRST Health Care Levels............................................................................................................... 20 Table 8: Distribution of HRST Scores for Adults Receiving Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waivers, 2014-2016 .................................................................................................................................... 20 Table 9: Residential Setting by HRST Score, 2016...................................................................................... 22 Table 10: HRST by Age Category, 2016 ...................................................................................................... 24 Table 11: Mortality Rates by Age Category, 2014-2016 ............................................................................ 26 Table 12: Number of Deaths, Average Age at Death and Mortality Rate by Gender 2014-2016.............. 28 Table 13: Average Age at Death and Mortality Rate by Residential Setting, 2016 ................................... 29 Table 14: Mortality Rate by HRST Score, 2016 .......................................................................................... 31 Table 15: Final Logistical Regression Model with Death as Outcome, 2016 ............................................. 32 Table 16: Odds Ratio for 10 Year Age Difference, 2013-2016 .................................................................... 33 Table 17: Odds Ratio for 10 Year Age Difference, 2013-2016 ................................................................... 33
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Table 18: Critical Risk Count: Statewide ................................................................................................... 37 Table 19: High Risk Count: Statewide ........................................................................................................ 38 Table 20: Moderate Risk Count: Statewide .............................................................................................. 39 Table 21: Regional Analysis of Number and Type of Deficient Practices................................................... 41 Table 22: Logistic Regression Model with Death as Outcome, 2016......................................................... 47 Table 23: Statistics on Age Stratified by Living Situations ......................................................................... 47
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List of Figures
Figure 1: Age Distribution of the Adult Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waiver Population, 2014-2016 ................................................................................................................................................... 14 Figure 2: Gender Distribution of the Adult Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waiver Population, 2014-2016 ................................................................................................................................................... 15 Figure 3: Adult Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waiver Population by Region, 2014-2016 ..... 16 Figure 4: Distribution of Adult Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waiver Population, 2014-2016 .................................................................................................................................................................... 17 Figure 5: Distribution of Adults in Residential Settings in Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waivers, 2014-2016 .................................................................................................................................... 19 Figure 6: Distribution of HRST Scores for Adults Receiving Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waivers, 2014-2016 .................................................................................................................................... 21 Figure 7: Residential Setting by HRST Score, 2016 .................................................................................... 23 Figure 8: Mortality Rate by Age Category, 2014-2016............................................................................... 27 Figure 9: Mortality Rate by HRST Score, 2014-2016.................................................................................. 31 Figure 10: DBHDD Regional Map with State Hospital Locations ................................................................ 46
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2016 DBHDD Mortality Review Report
Waiver Services
Executive Summary
An analysis of individual deaths and trends in mortality is a component of health and safety oversight and is part of the Georgia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities' ("DBHDD," or "the department") quality management and improvement system. This is the third annual mortality report released by DBHDD. The purpose of this report is to provide information about what DBHDD has learned about deaths, to identify trends or patterns, and to identify indicators that may assist DBHDD in the prevention and treatment of certain illnesses/conditions that may lead to deaths or other disorders/diseases in the future. This report does not issue recommendations, as these will emanate from later processes when DBHDD has had the opportunity to consider findings and observations reported within this document.
This report includes data and information concerning adults who died during calendar year 2016 while receiving intellectual and developmental disability Medicaid waiver services from DBHDD and its contracted providers.
Major Findings
In calendar year 2016, DBHDD served 12,151 adults (at least 18 years of age) with intellectual and developmental disabilities in waiver services. A total of 170 deaths occurred in 2016; the 2016 mortality rate was 14.0 deaths per 1,000 individuals.1, 2 The respective mortality rates for 2014 and 2015 were 11.1 and 12.5 deaths per 1,000 individuals. The mortality rates do not differ significantly across any years.
Heart disease was the leading cause of death in the general populations of the U.S. (2014), Georgia (2015), and DBHDD 2016 waiver populations. Six of the top 10 leading causes of death in the U.S. and Georgia, and the most prevalent causes of death among people with intellectual and developmental disabilities served by DBHDD in 2016 were similar to past years' findings. Four of the leading causes of death for the 2016 intellectual and developmental disability population that were not common to the top causes of death in the U.S. and Georgia during 2014 and 2015 included disability, aspiration pneumonia, sepsis, and epilepsy/seizures.
1 The mortality rate used in this report is a crude mortality rate, which is an unadjusted mortality rate. The mortality rate is a measure of how many people out of every thousand served by DBHDD died within the calendar year. It is determined by multiplying the number of people who died during the year times one thousand and dividing this by the total number of people served in the NOW and COMP waiver program during the same year. The crude mortality rate can be useful when comparing deaths across populations of varying sizes. For the purposes of the remainder of this report, crude mortality rate will be referred to as "mortality rate." 2 Standard recommended by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Vital Statistics Report, Age Standardization of Death Rates: Implementation of the Year 2000 Standard, Vol. 47, No. 3, 1998.
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Several variables were analyzed to determine their effect on mortality in 2016. These included age, intensity of residential setting, gender, region, and health risk. Major analytical findings from 2013 through 2015 were that increasing health risk and increasing age were most strongly associated with mortality, while gender, intensity of residential setting, region, and other variables were not related to mortality. In 2016, health risk was significantly related to mortality along with increasing age once again. Most providers had no or very few deficient practices that were identified as posing risk to individuals based on Community Mortality Review Committee (CMRC) findings. DBHDD required providers to submit corrective action plans for 138 deficient practices that were identified as either placing individuals or having the potential to place individuals at critical, high, and moderate risk. As of the date this report was written, most of the reviews identifying deficient practices were closed. The most common provider practices that required corrective action follow:
Health and Wellness Medical (40, 28.9% of all critical/high/moderate deficiencies) Deficient response to change in condition Deficient response to an emergency Deficient response to medical care needs
Neglect (15, 10.9% of all critical/high/moderate deficiencies) Documentation of Care (23, 16.7% of all critical/high/moderate deficiencies)
Deficient progress/clinical notes Deficient medication documentation The overlap among the areas above account for 78 of the 138 identified deficient practices that required a corrective action plan. Though corrective action plans are intended to remediate deficient practices and mitigate further risk, the prevalence (57%) of the abovementioned common deficient practices may indicate additional areas for improvement.
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Utilization of Mortality Report Findings
The observations and findings in this report will be presented to leadership of DBHDD, the department's Division of Developmental Disabilities, and the Department of Community Health (the Medicaid Authority of Georgia) for consideration in identifying issues that need additional analysis, investigation, and interpretation to improve quality of care in specific areas vital to maintaining health. The responsibility for the use of the information within this report is that of the director of the Division of Developmental Disabilities. The director will consider these and other mortality data, publicly available national mortality data, and recommendations from the CMRC to develop and implement quality improvement initiatives, including those to reduce mortality rates for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities in the community. DBHDD's organizational alignment provides a platform for clarified roles and responsibilities in addressing mortality in the intellectual and developmental disability population in Georgia, including analysis, implementation of targeted action steps, and determination of the impact of selected initiatives. Both expertise and responsibility exist in other areas within the department to help the Division of Developmental Disabilities accomplish improvement strategies; the Division of Developmental Disabilities has the responsibility to use these resources. The Division of Developmental Disabilities has at its disposal department resources to accomplish improvement initiatives with the assistance of support functions provided by the divisions of Accountability and Compliance and Performance Management and Quality Improvement.
Care should be taken when comparing these findings with other mortality reviews and reports that analyzed data from different populations or used different methods. Differences in population definitions, waiver
programs, and obligations of other state agencies limit the utility of comparing mortality rates or generalizing findings. DBHDD has used caution when comparing mortality rates across unlike methods and populations.
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About DBHDD
The Georgia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities (DBHDD) provides for treatment and support services for people with mental health challenges and substance use disorders and assists individuals who live with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
Vision
Easy access to high-quality care that leads to a life of recovery and independence for the people we serve.
Mission
Leading an accountable and effective continuum of care to support Georgians with behavioral health challenges, and intellectual and developmental disabilities in a dynamic health care environment.
About DBHDD Intellectual and Developmental Disability Services
DBHDD is committed to supporting opportunities for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities to live in the most integrated and independent settings possible. A developmental disability is a chronic condition that develops before a person reaches age 22 and limits his or her ability to function mentally or physically. DBHDD provides services to people with intellectual and other disabilities, such as severe cerebral palsy and autism, who require services similar to those needed by people with an intellectual or developmental disability. State-supported services help families continue to care for a relative at home or independently in the community when possible. DBHDD also contracts with providers to provide home settings and care to individuals who do not live with their families or on their own. For individuals needing the highest level of care, DBHDD operates five state hospitals across Georgia.
Services are designed to encourage and build on existing social networks and natural sources of support, and to promote inclusion in the community and safety in the home environment. Contracted providers are required to have the capacity to support individuals with complex behavioral or medical needs. The services a person receives depend on a professional determination of level of need.
DBHDD serves as the operating agency for two 1915c Medicaid Waiver Programs, initially approved in 2007 when the two programs transitioned and expanded into their current form. The Medicaid waiver programs operate under the names New Options Waiver (NOW) and Comprehensive Supports Waiver (COMP). Both waiver programs provide home- and community-based services to individuals who, without these services, would require a level of care comparable to that provided in intermediate care facilities for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, the costs of which would be reimbursed under the Medicaid State Plan. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services offers the waiver option to states through application, which may be renewed every five years. As in all Medicaid programs, the services and administrative costs are funded through a federal/state match agreement. A complete description of waiver services can be found at www.dbhdd.ga.gov.
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Scope of this Report
The focus of the mortality review for this report includes adults with a primary intellectual or developmental disability diagnosis who received services funded by NOW and COMP waivers during the 2016 calendar year. During 2016, data systems for individuals receiving waiver services were maintained separately from state-funded services, and data between these systems vary. This report used the NOW and COMP waiver data because it demonstrated the highest verifiable accuracy and reliability. A description of the chosen method and the analysis conducted in the report can be found in Appendix A. This report also includes data from the Community Mortality Review Committee (CMRC) process from a subset of the deaths that occurred within this population during 2016.
This report does not include data for children under the age of 18. Five deaths of children were reported to DBHDD in 2016. Deaths for children are analyzed on a case-by-case basis and not included in these statistical analyses due to potential differences between children and adults and the small sample size of children.
Several considerations are provided for reading and interpreting the findings from this report. The reader should take care when comparing this report's findings with those from mortality reviews in other states, especially when said reviews included all eligible individuals or analyzed data from different populations. Although DBHDD looked closely at other states' reports, given the differences in waiver programs, obligations of the various state agencies, and other state-specific issues, it is difficult to compare mortality rates or conclusions between states. DBHDD has also used caution when comparing mortality rates across unlike methods and populations. In writing this report, the department strongly cautions the reader to resist the inclination to draw conclusions that cannot be supported due to the limits of information available and the differences in eligibility and populations served in other studies.
Causes of Death among the Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waiver Population
The State of Georgia is a mixed coroner/medical examiner system, making the gathering of information concerning causes and manners of death more difficult than if there were a single statewide system. The state has no uniform method for death reporting (i.e., categorizing the causes of death), and information provided on death certificates varies. Due to this lack of uniformity, it is difficult to aggregate causes of death, and the reliability is somewhat questionable since many death certificates are not completed by medical professionals. Currently, the causes of death are identified by DBHDD through one of the following means: the autopsy report, if an autopsy was conducted; the death certificate issued by the Georgia Department of Public Health's Division of Vital Statistics (if available); the medical examiner or coroner's report (if available); or as reported by law enforcement, the physician, or the family.
In prior years, DBHDD classified and determined primary cause of death based upon physician review and categorization of causes of death. Beginning this year, DBHDD presents an aggregate of all underlying causes of death listed on the death certificate following the methods outlined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).3

3 (2017). Retrieved from https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/dvs/2a_2017.pdf. Accessed June 8, 2017.

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Using CDC direction to create a comprehensive look into the issues and concerns leading to death in the intellectual and developmental disability population, all underlying causes of death listed on the available death certificates were combined and weighted equally. Modes of death were excluded if present. As stated in the CDC's "Instructions for Classifying the Underlying Cause of Death, 2017" (2017, p. 2):
A death often results from the combined effect of two or more conditions. These conditions may be completely unrelated, arising independently of each other or they may be causally related to each other, that is, one cause may lead to another which in turn leads to a third cause, etc.
This method helps to encompass comorbid conditions that could be missed when assigning a singular cause of death.
A summary of the causes of death as recorded in DBHDD's Reporting of Critical Incidents database follows. The leading causes of death reported on death certificates among the intellectual and developmental disability waiver population for 2016 are heart disease, disability, aspiration pneumonia, sepsis, and hypertension. Aspiration pneumonia appeared as a leading cause of death in 2015 and remains a leading cause of death in 2016.
That disability is listed as a leading cause of death is peculiar, as disability typically is not considered to be a fatal condition or cause of death. Disability, though often included as a cause of death on the death certificates, has not been captured for the purposes of this report prior to this year. It is important to note the prevalence of disability being listed as a cause of death on death certificates. This likely is an artifact of using causes of death from death certificates, complicated by the limitations of Georgia's mixed coroner/medical examiner system.
At the time of writing this report, updated U.S. and Georgia causes of death were not available. Comparing the intellectual and developmental disability population to U.S. mortality data (2014) and Georgia mortality data (aggregate 2010-2014), heart disease was the leading cause of death in the general populations of U.S. and Georgia, and heart disease was also the leading cause of death in 2016 for the intellectual and developmental disability population. Chronic lower respiratory disease was the third leading cause of death in U.S. and in Georgia. Respiratory diseases and pneumonia (including aspiration pneumonia) also were in the top leading causes of death in the intellectual and developmental disability population in 2016. Therefore, as in past years, at least half of the top 10 leading causes of death in the U.S. and Georgia and the most prevalent causes of death in the intellectual and developmental disability population in 2016 were similar.
Four of the leading causes of death in 2016 were not common to the top causes of death in the U.S. and Georgia during 2014 and 2015:
Disability Aspiration pneumonia Sepsis Epilepsy/seizures
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Table 1: Leading Causes of Death

Rank 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

2014 U.S.

2015 Georgia All Ages

Heart Diseases Heart Diseases

23.4% Ma l i gna nt Neopl a s ms
22.5% Chronic Lower
Res pi ra tory Di s ea s es 5.6%
Uni ntenti ona l I nj uri es
5.2%
Cerebrova s cul a r Di s ea s es

28.9% Ma l i gna nt neopl a s ms
20.6% Chronic Lower
Res pi ra tory Di s ea s es 9.8%
Al zhei mer's (Nervous System
Di s ea s es ) 7.4%
Uni ntenti ona l I nj uri es

2013

2014

2015

2016

Intellectual and Developemental Disability Population

Adult Only

Res pi ra tory Di s ea s e

Heart Diseases

Res pi ra tory Di s ea s e

Heart Diseases

18.2% Heart Diseases
16.4%

21.9% Res pi ra tory
Di s ea s e 17.4%

23.1% Heart Diseases
15.8%

21.2% Di s a bi l i ty
12.4%

Seps i s

Epi l eps y/ s ei zures

Seps i s

As pi ra ti on Pneumoni a

12.1%

7.1%

8.5%

11.20%

Pneumoni a

Seps i s

Pneumoni a

Seps i s

7.9% Cancer

8.5% Cancer

8.5%
As pi ra ti on Pneumoni a

11.2% Hypertens i on

5.1%

6.2%

7.3%

6.5%

8.5%

8.2%

Al zhei mer's Di s ea s e 3.6%
Diabetes mellitus
2.9% Influenza and
Pneumoni a 2.1%
Renal
1.8%

Mental and Beha vi ora l Di s orders
4.3% Endocri ne, nutritional & meta bol i c
di s ea s es
4.0% Digestive system
di s ea s e
3.5%
Reproductive & urinary system
di s ea s es 3.1%

Gastrointestinal Gastrointestinal

Di s ea s e

Di s ea s e

6.7%

6.5%

Epi l eps y/ s ei zures
3.6%

Epi l eps y/ s ei zures

Pneumoni a

Compl i ca ti ons of Cerebral Palsy

4.2% Renal 4.2%
As pi ra ti on Pneumoni a
3.6%

5.8% Renal 3.9%

3.6% Al zhei mer's
Di s ea s e
3.6%

Peri phera l Vascular Disease

Cancer

3.9%

2.4%

Cancer
7.6%
Pneumoni a
6.5% Res pi ra tory
Di s ea s e 6.5%
Epi l eps y/ s ei zures
6.5%

Sui ci de

Infectious &

Peri phera l

As pi ra ti on

Peri phera l

Uni ntenti ona l

parasitic diseases Vascular Disease Pneumonia Vascular Disease Injuries

1.6%

3.0%

3.6%

2.6%

2.0%

5.9%

NOTE: Percent is given for the overall cause of death, not subcategories within the cause of death.

The information presented above is provided for descriptive purposes only. Due to the lack of consistency in categorizing the causes of death and expertise of those completing the death certificates, readers are strongly cautioned against drawing conclusions based on this information. In order to use this information to make conclusions or recommendations regarding system or practice changes, it is necessary to conduct further exploration into available information about individual cases or groups of cases. It is important to understand and consider information, such as the underlying causes of death, the circumstances of the death, the medical care provided prior to the death, co-morbid conditions, and potentially important early detection, screening, and preventive care practices.

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The following sections report statistical analyses. Statistical analyses are useful to identify associations and trends among variables that may be associated to mortality. Statistics commonly refers to "statistical significance." Sometimes associations or patterns occur due to random chance. A "statistically significant" difference for a result or relationship has a "likelihood" that it is caused by something other than mere random chance. It is a natural tendency to assume when there is a statistically significant difference or association that it must result from the something other than a random chance and that the difference must have a specific cause. It is important to exercise caution when interpreting statistical significance in this manner, as sufficient facts may not necessarily be present to conclude a specific idea of what that something is. It is important that statistical significance should be studied further by gathering additional information and by completing a more extensive analysis through additional steps. It also should be noted that statistical significance does not equate to importance or meaningful significance. Meaning and importance of findings can only be determined by more careful examination of additional information.
This annual mortality report does not make conclusions about any differences or statistically significant findings. As such, the statistical findings will be presented to DBHDD to be considered along with other information for further exploration to understand the causes and implications of the statistical findings. Where there are specific information, findings, observations, cases, and issues that warrant additional investigation, analysis, and consideration, work is underway to examine possible strategies to address these concerns within DBHDD.
Analysis of Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waiver Data Related to Mortality
This section presents analyses of intellectual and developmental disability waiver data related to mortality. First, the intellectual and developmental disability waiver population is described by presenting analysis of key variables that are associated with mortality. Tables and charts include data from 2014 and 2015 for comparison purposes.
Age
Table 2 and Figure 1 present the distribution of the intellectual and developmental disability population by age groups. Age was calculated as the duration between the individual's birth date and the end of calendar year 2016; when applicable, the age was calculated as the duration between the individual's birth date and their date of death. The average age of the adult intellectual and developmental disability waiver population in 2016 was 42.3 years (SD = 14.3), which was slightly higher than (but not statistically different from) the average age of 42.2 years (SD = 14.1) in 2015 (|t| = .521, df = 23901.09, p= .301). The largest age group in each year was 25-34. More than half (55.91%) of the population is between 35 and 64 years. Approximately one and a half percent of the population is 75 or older.
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Table 2: Age Distribution of the Adult Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waiver Population, 2014-2016

Age
18-24 25-34 35-44 45-54 55-64 65-74 75-84 85+ Totals
Table 2

2014

Individuals Percent

1,116

9.67%

3,327

28.83%

2,456

21.28%

2,273

19.69%

1,651

14.30%

577

5.00%

128

1.11%

14

0.12%

11,542 100.00%

2015

Individuals Percent

971

8.26%

3,368

28.64%

2,576

21.90%

2,280

19.39%

1,716

14.59%

686

5.83%

147

1.25%

16

0.14%

11,760

100.00%

2016

Individuals Percent

1,002

8.25%

3,450

28.39%

2,690

22.14%

2,286

18.81%

1,818

14.96%

709

5.83%

176

1.45%

20

0.16%

12,151

100.00%

Figure 1: Age Distribution of the Adult Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waiver Population, 2014-2016

3500

3000

2500

2000

1500

1000

500

0

18-24

25-34

35-44

45-54

55-64

65-74

75-84

85+

2014 Individuals 2015 Individuals 2016 Individuals

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Gender
Table 3 and Figure 2 show that the distributions of gender were equal across the years 2014 to 2016. This null relationship was reinforced by statistical testing.

Table 3: Gender Distribution of the Adult Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waiver Population, 2014-2016

Gender
Female Male Total

2014 Individuals Percent
4,824 41.80% 6,718 58.20% 11,542 100.00%

2015

Individuals Percent

4,892

41.59%

6,868

58.41%

11,760

100.00%

2016

Individuals

Percent

5,044

41.51%

7,107

58.49%

12,151

100.00%

Figure 2: Gender Distribution of the Adult Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waiver Population, 2014-2016

8000 7000 6000 5000 4000 3000 2000 1000
0

Individuals 2014

Individuals 2015
Female Male

Individuals 2016

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Region
DBHDD serves individuals throughout the state in six geographic regions through a network of contracted providers. See Appendix B for a description of the regions.
Table 4 and Figure 3 show the regional distribution of waiver participants. The percent of individuals being served in each respective region remained uniform between 2014 and 2016. (No statistical differences between proportions were found.) Region 3, the most densely-populated region, had the largest population of individuals served (3,062, 25.20%); regions 4 and 5 are less-populated areas and had the smallest population of individuals served (1,285, 10.58%; 1,431, 11.78%, respectively).

Table 4: Distribution of Adults Receiving Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waiver, 2014-2016

Region
Region 1 Region 2 Region 3 Region 4 Region 5 Region 6 Total

2014

Individuals Percent

2,275

19.71%

2,055

17.80%

2,899

25.12%

1,284

11.12%

1,331

11.53%

1,698

14.71%

11,542 100.00%

2015

Individuals Percent

2,381

20.25%

2,098

17.84%

2,940

25.00%

1,265

10.76%

1,372

11.67%

1,704

14.49%

11,760 100.00%

2016

Individuals Percent

2,501

20.58%

2,148

17.68%

3,062

25.20%

1,285

10.58%

1,431

11.78%

1,724

14.19%

12,151

100.00%

Figure 3: Adult Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waiver Population by Region, 2014-2016

3500 3000 2500 2000 1500 1000
500 0

Region 1

Region 2

Region 3

Region 4

Region 5

2014 Individuals 2015 Individuals 2016 Individuals

Region 6

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Type of Medicaid Waiver
The number (and percent) of individuals receiving COMP waivers increased by 392 (5.3%) in 2016. The number of individuals receiving NOW waivers decreased by one (0.02%). The only statistically significant difference in proportions was between calendar years 2014 and 2016 (|z| = 7.437, p < .0001).

Table 5: Distribution of Adult Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waiver Population, 2014-2016

Waiver
COMP NOW Total

2014

Individuals Percent

6,841

59.27%

4,701

40.73%

11,542 100.00%

2015

Individuals Percent

7,381

62.76%

4,379

37.24%

11,760

100.00%

2016

Individuals

Percent

7,773

63.97%

4,378

36.03%

12,151

100.00%

Figure 4: Distribution of Adult Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waiver Population, 2014-2016

8000 7000 6000 5000 4000 3000 2000 1000
0

COMP 2014 Individuals

2015 Individuals

NOW 2016 Individuals

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Residential Setting
Individuals who receive intellectual and developmental disability services from DBHDD live in a variety of settings. Many live independently or with family members, friends, or caretakers/caregivers. Individuals may also receive services in small group settings in any of the following arrangements:
Host Home (life-sharing): The individual resides and receives services in an owner-occupied home, where the owner includes the individual in household routines and provides training, support, and supervision.
Community Living Arrangement: "Community Living Arrangement" means any residence, whether operated for profit or not, that undertakes through its ownership or management to provide or arrange for the provision of daily personal services, supports, care, or treatment exclusively for two or more adults who are not related to the owner or administrator by blood or marriage and whose residential services are financially supported, in whole or in part, by funds designated through DBHDD. Provider agencies must hold a Community Living Arrangement License from the Georgia Department of Community Health's Healthcare Facilities Regulation Division.
Personal Care Home: "Personal Care Home," "home," or "facility" means any dwelling, whether operated for profit or not, which undertakes through its ownership or management to provide or arrange for the provision of housing, food service, and one or more personal services for two or more adults who are not related to the owner or administrator by blood or marriage. Agencies providing this service must hold a Georgia Personal Care Home Permit/License from the Georgia Department of Community Health's Healthcare Facilities Regulation Division.
Independent: The individual resides and receives services in a residence which he or she owns, leases, or rents.
Live with Family/Relative/Other: The category combines several residential setting categories that do not live independently or in higher-intensity residential settings. Specifically, the individual lives and receives services in a residence owned, leased, or rented by a family member or relative. "Other" refers to individuals who reside with a caretaker/caregiver who is not a relative, friend, or immediate family member. This category also includes 12 individuals whose residence in the Waiver Information System (WIS) is designated as "foster care." Finally, 44 individuals' residential setting was designated in WIS as "other."
Host homes, community living arrangements, and personal care homes are residential settings that can provide more intensive services and supports. Generally, individuals with greater support needs tend to reside in host homes, community living arrangements, and personal care homes, though individuals and families may choose these settings to allow individuals the opportunity for increased independence and socialization. It is important to note that "higher intensity" and "lower intensity" are used in this report to categorize for analytical purposes. It also is important to understand that individuals living in "lower intensity" residential settings may also receive higher-intensity services, such as 24/7 nursing, for example. The level of intensity of the services are based on individual needs, not the residential setting.
The number and percent of individuals living in each type of residential setting was similar across all years besides two categories in 2014 and 2016. The percent of people who were living in personal
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care homes changed from 12.78% in 2014 to 11.00% in 2016; that change was statistically significant (|z| = 4.225, p < .0001). The proportion of people who were living independently changed from 12.60% in 2014 to 11.88% in 2016; that change was also statistically significant (|z| = 3.158, p < .001). Slightly fewer than 65% lived independently or with a family/relative/other in 2016, and approximately 35 percent resided in more intensive service settings (host homes, community living arrangements, and personal care homes).
Table 6: Distribution of Adults in Residential Settings in Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waivers, 2014-2016

Residential
Community Living Arrangement Host Home Independent Live with Family/Relative/Other Personal Care Home Total

2014

2015

Individuals Percent Individuals Percent

1,420 12.30% 1,519

12.92%

1,223 1,454

10.60% 12.60%

1,210 1,425

10.29% 12.12%

5,970 51.72% 6,200

52.72%

1,475 11,542

12.78% 100.00%

1,406 11,760

11.96% 100.00%

2016 Individuals Percent

1,615 1,222 1,443 6,534
1,337 12,151

13.29% 10.06% 11.88% 53.77%
11.00% 100.00%

Figure 5: Distribution of Adults in Residential Settings in Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waivers, 2014-2016

7000

6000

5000

4000

3000

2000

1000

0 CLA

Host Home

Independent

Live with

Personal Care Home

Family/Relative/Other

(PCH)

2014 Individuals 2015 Individuals 2016 Individuals

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Health Risk
The Health Risk Screening Tool (HRST) is a standardized mechanism used to determine an individual's vulnerability to potential health risks and the supports she or he needs to enable early identification of deteriorating health. The HRST measures health risk using a distinct rating scale related to functional status, behavior, physiological condition, and safety. HRST results are incorporated into the ongoing health care surveillance process. The HRST is completed to facilitate an individual's approval for community intellectual and developmental disability services. After its initial completion, the HRST is conducted annually and whenever an individual experiences significant health events or changes in health, functional, or behavioral status. The HRST guides providers in determining the individual's need for further assessment and evaluation, services, or modifications to his or her service plan to address identified health risks.

The HRST assigns points to rated items. The resulting numerical total is assigned a health care level (HCL) associated with degrees of health risk. Table 7 below shows the risk level designations and points associated with each of the six health care levels used as a part of the HRST.

Table 7: HRST Health Care Levels

HRST: Health Care Levels

Level 1: (Low Risk)

0 to 12 points

Level 2: (Low Risk)

13 to 25 points

Level 3: (Moderate Risk)

26 to 38 points

Level 4: (High Moderate Risk) 39 to 53 points

Level 5: (High Risk)

54 to 68 points

Level 6: (Highest Risk)

69 or greater

Table 8: Distribution of HRST Scores for Adults Receiving Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waivers, 2014-2016

HRST
1 2 3 4 5 6 Total

2014

Count

% of population

2015

Count

% of population

2016

Count

% of population

Significance of 2015-2016 Change

5,053 3,332 1,405 719 476 557 11,542

43.8% 28.9% 12.2% 6.2% 4.1% 4.8% 100.0%

4,799 3,500 1,497 802 545 617 11,760

40.8% 29.8% 12.7% 6.8% 4.6% 5.2% 100.0%

4,733 3,627 1,645 833 588 718 12,144

38.97% 29.87% 13.55% 6.86% 4.84% 5.91% 100.00%

|z = 2.895|, p < .01 NS NS NS NS NS

The most current HRST during 2016 was used for this analysis. Seven individuals had missing values for the HRST field; so, the totals for tables involving HRST will be 12,144 instead of 12,151. Those individuals' other data were used in all non-HRST analysis. To manage the health and wellness of

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individuals, DBHDD considers the individual assessment data and reasons for each score in addition to the actual HRST score. For the purposes of this report, HRST scores of 1, 2, and 3 are considered to be low-risk scores; HRST scores of 4, 5, and 6 are considered to be high risk. Low-risk HRST scores accounted for 82.4 percent of the population; high-risk HRST level accounted for 17.6 percent of the population. The distribution of each HRST remained similar across all levels except for HRST = 1, in which the number of individuals decreased significantly, by 1 percent (|z| = 2.895, p < .01).
The average HRST score for 2016 was 2.26 (SD = 1.453); the average HRST score for 2015 was 2.20 (SD = 1.422); and the average HRST score for 2014 was 2.13 (SD = 1.392). The average HRST scores across these three years were statistically different from each other, 2016 to 2015 (|t| = 3.226, df = 23,902, p = .013), 2016 to 2014 (|t| = 7.025, df = 23,684, p < .001). This means that, on the whole, there is a statistically significant increase in the amount of measured health risk in this population over time.

Figure 6: Distribution of HRST Scores for Adults Receiving Intellectual and Developmental Disability Waivers, 2014-2016

4000 3500 3000 2500 2000 1500 1000
500 0

18-24

25-34 2014 Individuals

35-44 2015 Individuals

45-54 2016 Individuals

55-64

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Multiple Variable Analyses
The previous analysis section described the intellectual and developmental disability waiver population by looking at one variable at a time. This section looks at relationships between two or more variables and their association to mortality.
Health Risk and Residential Setting
It is useful to consider the distribution of health risk scores across residential settings. Because host homes, personal care homes, and community living arrangements were categorized as the "highintensity" residential settings, it is logical that higher HRST scores are distributed differently within those residential settings. For example, approximately 18 percent of people living in community living arrangements had a HRST score of six; in contrast, approximately three percent of people living with family, relatives, or other had a health care level of six. The percentages for other health care level groups within different living situations are presented in Figure 7. The percentages show that both lowand high-health risk individuals as categorized by health care level are present in all settings.
Categorized by type of residential setting, community living arrangements had the highest average HRST score 3.28 (SD = 1.720); personal care homes had the second highest average HRST score 2.63 (SD = 1.464), and live with family/relative/other had the lowest 1.94 (SD = 1.265). To compare the means across more than two groups, a statistical analysis using a one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) indicated that the average HRST scores were different for the different residential settings. This result is concurrent with the information in Figure 7 which shows that a larger proportion of the high-intensity HCLs are in community living arrangements and personal care homes.

Table 9: Residential Setting by HRST Score, 2016

Residential Setting

HRST

Total

Community Living Arrangement
Live with Family/ Relative/ Other
Host Home Independent Apartment/ Home Personal Care
Home

1 2 3 4 5 6 Total Percentage

251 433 281 199 158 293 1,615 13.29%

3,233 1,826 709 345 212 202 6,527 53.72%

349 422 230 94 64 63 1,222 10.06%

595 470 180 73 59 66 1,443 11.88%

305 476 245 122 95 94 1,337 11.00%

4,733 3,627 1,645 833 588 718 12,151 100%

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Figure 7: Residential Setting by HRST Score, 2016

Percent

60.00%

50.00%

40.00%

30.00%

20.00%

10.00%

0.00%
Community Living Arrangement Live with Family/Relative/Other Host Home Independent Personal Care Home

1 15.54% 49.53% 28.56% 41.23% 22.81%

2 26.81% 27.98% 34.53% 32.57% 35.60%

3

4

17.40% 12.32%

10.86%

5.29%

18.82%

7.69%

12.47%

5.06%

18.32%

9.12%

HRST

5 9.78% 3.25% 5.24% 4.09% 7.11%

6 18.14% 3.09% 5.16% 4.57% 7.03%

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Health Risk and Age
Health risk and age are important factors that need to be considered when investigating mortality. Within this population, high-level risk is present across all age categories, as well as varying degrees of lower-health risks across all age categories. The relationship between health risk and age is not uniform. HRST scores are distributed similarly within each age group. Correlations between age (both as continuous and ordinal variables) indicate the association between HRST and age is weak (Pearson's r = .08, p < .001). Though this is statistically significant, the total variance explained in the association between age and health risk is less than one percent, which indicates that for this population, health risk and age are not necessarily meaningfully associated. Therefore, one would also expect that if health risk and age were related to mortality, these variables would have independent (not interactive) effects.
Table 10: HRST by Age Category, 2016

Age 1

Count by HRST

Total

2

3

4 5 6

1

Percent by HRST

2

3

4

5

Total 6

18-24 275 329 154 87 57 94 996 5.8% 9.1% 9.4% 10.4% 9.7% 13.1% 8.2%

25-34 1,552 999 383 209 139 167 3,449 32.8% 27.5% 23.3% 25.1% 23.6% 23.3% 28.4%

35-44 1,215 773 319 151 103 129 2,690 25.7% 21.3% 19.4% 18.1% 17.5% 18.0% 22.2%

45-54 896 667 342 148 111 122 2,286 18.9% 18.4% 20.8% 17.8% 18.9% 17.0% 18.8%

55-64 570 582 298 145 99 124 1,818 12.0% 16.0% 18.1% 17.4% 16.8% 17.3% 15.0%

65-74 189 219 110 73 60 58 709 4.0% 6.0% 6.7% 8.8% 10.2% 8.1% 5.8%

75-84 34

49

35 19 18 21 176 0.7% 1.4% 2.1% 2.3% 3.1% 2.9% 1.4%

85+

2

9

4

1 1 3

20

0.0% 0.2% 0.2% 0.1% 0.2% 0.4% 0.2%

Total 4,733 3,627 1,645 833 588 718 12,144 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0%

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Mortality During 2016
This section contains information on deaths reported to DBHDD among the intellectual and developmental disability waiver population during calendar year 2016. Calendar years 2014 and 2015 are included for comparison purposes. Appendix A describes the method used to collect and analyze information and data contained in this section.
The respective mortality rates for 2014 and 2015 were 11.1 and 12.5 deaths per 1,000 individuals. The 2016 mortality rate was 14.0 deaths per 1,000 individuals; the mortality rates do not differ significantly across any years.
As stated earlier: caution should be used in comparing mortality rates across populations that may differ in terms of inclusion criteria for study. States vary in the eligibility and enrollment criteria, yielding unlike populations, which may complicate meaningful comparisons of mortality rates. For example, Massachusetts4 included all individuals who were eligible for services in the study population, regardless of whether or not they were receiving services. Ohio, Connecticut, and Louisiana include individuals with an IQ above 70 who have functional support needs; however, some of these individuals were receiving only case coordination.5 DBHDD's report includes only those individuals who have an IQ below 70 and have the higher functional support needs required to receive more intensive services within the NOW or COMP waivers. Reports that include only individuals with a demonstrated, verified higher level of functional impairment (as does this report) may yield higher mortality rates than reports with a more expanded population that includes individuals with less severe functional or support needs. Because eligibility and enrollment criteria are not consistent across states, generalizations and comparisons may lead to insupportable conclusions.
A search for peer-reviewed research for comparison data yielded data from four states. Compared to research that used data from Connecticut, Louisiana, Ohio, and New York, the combined crude mortality rate for these states was 14.96 deaths per 1,000 individuals in 2009, which is not significantly different from the 2016 intellectual and developmental disability mortality rate for DBHDD, 14.0 deaths per 1,000. The mortality rate for these states combined in 2011 was 9.37,5 which is significantly lower than the DBHDD 2016 mortality rate (|z| = 4.999, p < .001).
This report also compared mortality findings from other states' mortality reports that were available. Tennessee reported mortality rates of 27.4 (fiscal year 2013) and 21.1 (fiscal year 2014),6 which were significantly higher than the 2016 DBHDD mortality rates (|z| = 6.736, p < .001; |z| = 3.898, p < .001, respectively). Massachusetts reported mortality rates of 19.2 and 17.4 deaths per 1,000 in 2012 and 2013, respectively.4 DBHDD's 2016 mortality rates were significantly lower compared to Massachusetts' mortality rates in 2012 (|z| = 3.465, p < .001) and in 2013 (|z| = 2.382, p = .009). This difference is particularly striking in that Massachusetts included in the denominator all individuals receiving services, as well as those eligible for services, but included mortality information for only those individuals who
4 Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Executive Office of Health & Human Services, Department of Developmental Services. 2012 & 2013 Mortality Report. 5 Lauer, E & McCallion, P. (2015). Mortality of People with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities from Select US State Disability Service Systems and Medical Claims Data. Journal of Applied Research in Developmental Disabilities, 28, 394-405. 6 Tennessee Department of Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, Annual Mortality Report, 2013-2014 Fiscal Year.
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actually received services in the numerator. DBHDD also searched for additional states' mortality reports as well as peer-reviewed mortality statistical reports, to no avail.
Age and Mortality
The average age of death in 2015 was 53.69 (SD = 15.40). The average age of death in 2016 was 53.54 years (SD = 15.40). The average age of death decreased by .15 years from 2015 to 2016; however, that change was not statistically significant. This means that as a whole, individuals who died in 2016 lived about the same length of time as those who died in 2015. The average age of death reported here falls within the 2009-to-2011 range for Connecticut, Louisiana, Ohio, and New York (combined), which was 50.4 to 58.7 years.

Table 11: Mortality Rates by Age Category, 2014-2016

2014 2015 2016

Adult Waiver Population
No. of Deaths
Percent of Deaths
Crude Mortality Rate
Adult Waiver Population
No. of Deaths
Percent of Deaths
Crude Mortality Rate
Adult Waiver Population
No. of Deaths
Percent of Deaths
Crude Mortality Rate

Age Category 18-24 25-34 35-44 45-54 55-64 65-74 75-84 85+

Total

1,116 3,327 2,456 2,273 1,651 577 128 14 11,542

12

14

11

26

43

12

7

3

128

9.4% 10.9% 8.6% 20.3% 33.6% 9.4% 5.5% 2.3% 100.0%

10.8 4.2 4.5 11.4 26 20.8 54.7 214.3 11.1

971 3,368 2,576 2,280 1,716 686 147 16 11,760

6

14

19

34

39

23

10

2

147

4.1% 9.5% 12.9% 23.1% 26.5% 15.6% 6.8% 1.4% 100.0%

6.2 4.2 7.4 14.9 22.7 33.5 68 125 12.5

1,002 3,450 2,690 2,286 1,818 709 176 20 12,151

6

22

21

27

49

37

6

2

170

3.5% 12.9% 12.4% 15.9% 28.8% 21.8% 3.5% 1.2% 100.0%

6.0 6.4 7.8 11.8 27.0 52.2 34.1 100.0 14.0

As in 2014 and 2015, mortality rates increase with increasing age (Table 11, Figure 8). In particular, between 2014 and 2015, the mortality rate for individuals between ages 45 and 54 exceeded the overall mortality rate for the entire population. In 2016, however, the mortality rate increase above this population level occurred in the 55-64 population.

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Statistical comparisons of mortality rates between corresponding age categories from 2016 to 2015 were not significantly different, with the exception of the 65-74 group. The trends in Figure 8 are visually striking due to the absolute difference among 2014, 2015, and 2016 mortality rates for the 85+ age category, which were 214.3, 125.0, and 100.0 deaths per 1,000, respectively. The differences among proportions, however, were not statistically significant due to the small numbers of individuals in the 85+ age category. It is difficult to generalize mortality rate differences for the 85+ age group due to the low number of individuals in this category, as well as the small number of deaths. Also remarkable is the increase in the mortality rate in the 65-74 group. The difference between mortality rates in these groups is statistically significant between 2014 and 2016, indicating that this group's mortality rate has increased in recent years.

Figure 8: Mortality Rate by Age Category, 2014-2016

NUMBER OF DEATHS PER 1000

250.0 225.0 200.0 175.0 150.0 125.0 100.0
75.0 50.0 25.0
0.0
2014 Crude Mortality Rate 2015 Crude Mortality Rate 2016 Crude Mortality Rate

18-24 10.8 6.2 6.0

25-34 4.2 4.2 6.4

35-44 4.5 7.4 7.8

45-54 11.4 14.9 11.8

55-64 26 22.7 27.0

65-74 20.8 33.5 52.2

75-84 54.7 68 34.1

85+ 214.3 125 100.0

As noted above, the mortality rate for the age group 55-64 increases above the overall mortality rate for the population. From there, the mortality rate increases with age. (This pattern did not occur for the 75-84 group in 2016, but such a fluctuation is not abnormal for such a small subgroup.)
Other research7 found that mortality rates increase with increasing age, such that younger groups had lower mortality rates, and significant increases in mortality rates were found to begin at 45-54 and increased dramatically with increasing age. For the U.S. population, mortality rates also increase more rapidly with increasing years after about 55 years of age.7 The 2015 Georgia mortality rate for the 5564-year-old category is 11.6 deaths per 1,000, and it increases with increasing age after 55.8

7 National Vital Statistics Report, Vol. 64 No. 2, February 16, 2016, p. 7. http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr64/nvsr64_02.pdf, accessed June 8, 2017. 8 https://oasis.state.ga.us/oasis/webquery/qryMortality.aspx, accessed June 8, 2017.

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These data combined indicate that age-specific mortality rates are similar for intellectual and developmental disability populations across states. The pattern of significantly increasing mortality rates with increasing ages after 55 is similar for the U.S., Georgia, and the DBHDD intellectual and developmental disability population, though the intellectual and developmental disability mortality rate is higher than those of the U.S. and Georgia.

Gender and Mortality
Gender was not an explanatory variable in mortality in 2014-2016. The 2016 mortality rate for females was 15.3 and 13.1 for males; the difference between the two was not statistically different. The average age of death for females was 56.4 and 51.2 for males.

Table 12: Number of Deaths, Average Age at Death and Mortality Rate by Gender 2014-2016

2014 2015 2016

Adult Waiver Population No. of Deaths
Percent of Deaths Average Age at Death Crude Mortality Rate Adult Waiver Population
No. of Deaths Percent of Deaths Average Age at Death Crude Mortality Rate Adult Waiver Population
No. of Deaths Percent of Deaths Average Age at Death Crude Mortality Rate

Female 4,824
59 46.1% 51.9 12.2 4,892
63 42.9% 55.4 12.9 5,044
77 45.3% 56.4 15.27

Male 6,718
69 53.9% 51.4 10.3 6,868
84 57.1% 52.4 12.2 7,107
93 54.7% 51.2 13.09

Total 11,542
128 100.0%
11.1 11,760
147 100.0%
12.5 12,151
170 100.0%
14.0

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Age, Residential Setting, and Mortality
The average age of death was 53.5 (SD = 15.40) in 2016. The average age of death for residential settings ranged between 44.0 and 59.0 years. The average age of death for individuals who lived in lessintensive residential settings was 46.4 (SD = 15.56). The average age of death for individuals who lived in more-intensive settings was 57.83 (SD = 16.67). The difference between the average age of death for these two groups is statistically different (|t| = 4.863, df = 119.79, p < .001). This means that individuals who died in 2016 who resided in more-intensive residential service settings lived longer than those who received services in less-intensive service settings.
It should be noted, however, that individuals living with family, friends, or others had the second lowest mortality rate (8.3 deaths per 1,000); combined, the lower-intensity residential setting group had a mortality rate of 8.02, which is significantly lower than the rate for the total population 14.0 deaths per 1,000 (|z| = 3.863, p < .001). The lowered average age at death in the living with family friends or others group makes it seem like those living at home may have a higher risk of death than others. That is not the case: the population of people living at home is much younger on average than those in other settings; so, the average age of death is naturally lower regardless of the mortality rate. This result and further analysis are presented in Appendix C.
Residential-setting-specific mortality rates range from 6.9 to 36.5. The mortality rate for the three higher-intensity residential settings combined is 25.4. In 2015, the mortality rate for these three highintensity residential setting combined was 20.6. The mortality rate for the two lower-intensity residential settings combined was 8.0 in 2016 and 8.1 in 2015. The mortality rates for 2015 and 2016 do not differ significantly between similar categories of residential settings. The mortality rate for the highintensity service setting, however, is significantly higher than the lower-intensity service setting mortality rate in 2016 (|z| = 7.743, p < .0001).

Table 13: Average Age at Death and Mortality Rate by Residential Setting, 2016

Residential Setting

Adult Population

Personal Care Home (PCH)
Community Living Arrangement (CLA)

1,337 1,615

Host Home

1,222

Independent Apartment/ Home
Live with Family/ Relative/Other
Total

1,443 6,534 12,151

Percent
11.0% 13.3% 10.1% 11.9% 53.8% 100.0%

% of Population No. Deaths
65+

14.73%

31

Average Age at Death
58.2

11.64%

59

57.6

10.88%

16

58.2

12.54%

10

59.0

3.15%

54

44.0

7.45%

170

53.5

Crude Mortality
Rate 23.2
36.5
13.1
6.9
8.3 14.0

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Health Risk and Mortality
Similar to previous years, there is statistical association between health risk score and mortality rate in 2016. Lower HRST scores (1-3) have a group mortality rate (7.6 deaths per 1,000) that is below the population mortality rate in 2016 (14.0 deaths per 1,000). The mortality rates associated with an HRST score of (4-6) exceed the overall population mortality rate by a large margin (29.9 deaths per 1,000).
The mortality rate for lower HRST scores (1-3) is 7.6; the mortality rate for the higher HRST scores (4-6) is 43.95, which is significantly higher (|z| = 12.958, p < 0.001). The disparity between consecutive levels four and five was the largest (20.4 and 54.42 deaths per 1,000 individuals, respectively) (|z| = 3.461, p < 0.001). It should be noted that despite the visual separation of mortality rates between health care levels five and six (Figure 9), these two mortality rates are not statistically different. These analyses clearly indicate that increasing health risk was significantly associated with mortality, which is especially true for health care levels five and six. In other words, particular attention should be given to health care levels five and six due to their significant association with mortality.
Results from previous years have consistently indicated that a two-point increase in health care level scores is associated with a significant association with mortality. Analysis of 2016 data indicate that this pattern holds still, though there is a significant increase in the mortality rate between health care levels one and two. Therefore, consistent with previous years, it is important to consider a one-point change in health risk scores to address the increased association between increasing health risk and mortality that occurs with a two-point health risk score increase. Furthermore, particular attention should be given to health care level four (in addition to health care levels five and six). First, health care level four is the health risk level that moves above the overall population mortality rate. Secondly, an increase of one health care level score above four would move individuals into a level of risk more significantly associated with mortality (i.e., health care level five/six).
DBHDD has begun further analyses to identify additional information that may provide further understanding of the relationship among health status, health risk, and mortality. For example, mortality analyses of 2013-2016 data have used the health care level of the HRST to understand the relationship between health risk and mortality; the health care level is a summary score. The HRST also provides subscale- and item-level information that may indicate particular health conditions or risks that may be related to mortality, even when the overall summary score provided by the health care level does not. DBHDD is undertaking careful analyses of these subscales and items in the context of mortality outcomes, along with analysis of additional information, to attempt to identify additional findings that may be useful to reduce the risk of unnecessary deaths. These analyses, observations, and findings will be presented to the Division of Developmental Disabilities and DBHDD when they become available.
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Figure 9: Mortality Rate by HRST Score, 2014-2016

Deaths per 1000

70

60

50

40

30

20

10

0 1

2014

3.4

2015

3.1

2016

4.0

2

3

4

5

6

9.0

12.1

29.2

35.7

46.7

9.1

10.7

36.2

40.4

53.5

8.5

15.8

20.4

54.4

62.7

Table 14: Mortality Rate by HRST Score, 2016

HRST Score
1 2 3 4 5 6 Grand Total

2016

Adult Waiver Population

No. Deaths

Percent of deaths

Crude Mortality
Rate

Statistical significance between HRST Scores

4,733 3,627 1,645 833 588 718 12,144

19

11.2%

31

18.2%

26

15.3%

17

10.0%

32

18.8%

45

26.5%

170

100.00%

4.0

(|z| = 2.664, p = 0.003)

8.5

(|z| = 2.361, p = 0.009)

15.8

NS

20.4

(|z| = 3.461, p < 0.001)

54.4

NS

62.7

14.0

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The Importance of Age and Intensity of Residential Setting
Data analyses to this point have examined the relationship of age, gender, region, residential setting, and health risk as they individually, or in pairs, relate to mortality. Examining the contribution of one variable or a small set of variables at a time to mortality rates is useful. However, it also is important to consider all variables of interest at once to determine the individual effect of each variable on the occurrence of death, while controlling for the influence of other variables. Subsequent discussion in this report considers how age, gender, region, residential setting, and health risk together are associated with mortality to determine which variables may be of key importance in understanding it.
Several advantages of using logistic regression exist. First, logistic regression allows one to determine the association of a variable without the influence of other variables. That means, logistic regression analysis about, for example, age, pertains only to the effects of age and mortality without the effect of other variables. In this way, each variable is risk-adjusted so that the effects of other variables do not affect it.
Another advantage is that logistic regression can be used to determine the importance of each variable in that the information from the model can be used to calculate the odds ratio that an event occurred given the effect of one or more variables. An odds ratio is a measure of association between a variable and an outcome occurring, such as death in these analyses. The odds ratio represents the odds of death occurring given a particular event or condition compared to the odds of death occurring in the absence of that variable. An odds ratio of 1 indicates that the variable of interest does not affect the odds of death occurring; odds ratios greater than 1 indicate that the variable is associated with higher odds of death occurring; odds ratios less than 1 indicate that the variable is associated with lower odds of death occurring.
Age, gender, region, intensity of residential intensity setting, and HRST score were used together to analyze which variables were associated with death in 2016. Only age and health risk scores were significantly associated with occurrence of death. This means that when controlling for age and health risk level, region, gender, and residential setting were not significantly associated with the occurrence of death. It should be noted that the logistic regression analysis for 2013-2016 are very similar.

Table 15: Final Logistical Regression Model with Death as Outcome, 2016

Variable Age
HCL

B

S.E.

.044 .005

.527 .044

Wald 8.560 11.970

df Sig. 1 .000 1 .000

Exp(B) 1.045 1.695

The odds of dying increase significantly with increasing age. According to the logistic regression model estimates of association, at 20 years old, the odds of dying are small (i.e., .0008797). However, with each 10-year increase in age, the odds of dying increase multiplicatively, such that the odds of dying at 40 almost triples compared to age 20; the odds of dying at 50 are more than four times greater than at 20. Finally, by age 70, the odds of dying are almost 10 times higher than they are at 20. The main point
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made here is that increasing age has a very strong, exponential relationship to the likelihood that death may occur. (The referent age for Table 17 is 18. Each odds ratio represents the increase in odds from that age.)

The odds of dying increase significantly with increasing health care level scores. Those with an HRST score of 3 had an estimated five times higher increase in odds of having died in 2016. Those with HRST scores of six had 23.62 times increased odds of having died in 2016. This relationship indicates that the odds of death increases exponentially with increasing HRST scores in 2016.

It is worth noting that death is a relatively rare outcome; so, even a large increase in odds (such as with the upper values of HRST and age), does not mean that someone with these attributes is in great danger of death; it only means that people in those groups were more likely than others to experience the death. It is also worth noting that statistical association does not indicate causation. (Refer back to the discussion about statistical analysis on page 11.)

Table 16: Odds Ratio for 10 Year Age Difference, 2013-2016

HCL

OR 2013

OR 2014

OR 2015

OR 2016

1

1.65

1.61

1.66

1.69

2

2.72

2.60

2.77

2.87

3

4.48

4.20

4.60

4.86

4

7.39

6.77

7.66

8.23

5

12.18

10.91

12.74

13.94

6

20.09

17.60

21.20

23.62

Table 17: Odds Ratio for 10 Year Age Difference, 2013-2016

Age

OR 2013

OR 2014

OR 2015

OR 2016

20

1.07

1.08

1.08

1.09

30

1.52

1.61

1.71

1.69

40

2.16

2.41

2.41

2.63

50

3.06

3.60

4.22

4.08

60

4.35

5.37

6.62

6.34

70

6.17

8.00

10.38

9.86

The sections above presented findings and observations based on a statistical analysis of all adults with a primary intellectual or developmental disability diagnosis who received services funded by NOW and COMP waivers during the 2016 calendar year. Statistical analyses are useful for identifying factors or variables and trends that are associated with mortality, which provides information for improvement of service quality. It is also helpful to consider other, more detailed mortality data from mortality reviews that were conducted in 2016, which is presented next.

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Community Mortality Review Committee and Deficient Practice Analysis
DBHDD's Community Mortality Review Committee (CMRC) uses a standard process to conduct reviews of deaths of individuals receiving services by or through DBHDD community providers. The purpose of the mortality review is to identify opportunities to reduce morbidity or mortality and evaluate and provide information that may improve the quality of services. The overall goals of the mortality review are to provide insight into the way the DBHDD system works; share lessons and learn from an individual's death; discover if the same or similar situations may affect others served; assist in prevention or mitigation of future harm; and improve overall quality of care. The CMRC policy was effective November 1, 2015.
Categories of Deaths
The department's incident management policy, Reporting and Investigating Deaths and Critical Incidents in Community Services, 04-106, is an integral part of the CMRC process. This policy requires providers to self-report deaths (and other critical incidents). It identifies categories of deaths and incidents based on risk and establishes reporting timeframes and investigation requirements accordingly. Not all deaths require an investigation or a review by the CMRC.
The CMRC reviews deaths of individuals served by the DBHDD who meet the following criteria:
Receive residential services or 24/7 community living support; Die on the site of a community provider or in the company of staff of a community provider; or Are absent without leave from residential services.
Further, the deaths identified above may be unexpected--not attributed to the natural course of a diagnosis or a diagnosed disease where the reasonably expected outcome is death (Category 1)--or expected--attributed to a terminal diagnosis or a diagnosed disease where the reasonably expected outcome is death (Category 2). The CMRC reviews all Category 1 deaths and Category 2 deaths identified for review by the DBHDD medical director or director of Office of Incident Management and Investigations.
Purpose of CMRC
The CMRC reviews factual information to determine ways to improve the quality of services. The goals of the CMRC include the following:
To conduct mortality reviews using a clinical and systematic interdisciplinary review of deaths; To evaluate the quality and efficiency of services and supports to the individual; To evaluate compliance of the provider with applicable laws, rules, regulations, and standards; To identify possible gaps in services; To make referrals to other governmental entities of identified individual and system issues; To monitor support systems and programmatic operations to ensure reasonable medical;
educational, legal, social, or psychological interventions were being provided prior to deaths; To ensure that risk factors for mortality are identified and prevention strategies implemented; and To recommend statewide action based on mortality information to improve care systematically.
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Membership
The CMRC represents a multidisciplinary, inter-professional team consisting of physicians, including the DBHDD medical director, nurses and other health care professionals, quality improvement staff, legal staff, program staff, investigative staff, representatives from advocacy organizations, and representatives from the provider community. The variety of professionals with differing experiences and responsibilities brings different knowledge and perspectives to the mortality review process and serves to improve the quality of the mortality review findings.
Process
The CMRC is a significant source of information and a major component of DBHDD's quality improvement system, and reflects the department's ongoing commitment to reviewing and learning from critical information gathered during investigations of deaths of individuals served by the department. DBHDD is committed to a systematic, thoughtful, and detailed review of deaths and the opportunity such a review presents for organizational learning and corrections at the provider, department, and system levels.
The CMRC meets at least monthly to review all internal and external investigative reports and mortality reviews. The CMRC seeks to determine whether necessary and reasonable measures were taken to provide for the health, safety, and welfare of the individual receiving services; what statewide actions may reduce risks, including provider training, communication with providers relative to risks, alerts, and opportunities for learning and training; identify and mitigate any findings that could affect the health, safety, and welfare of other individuals; and make recommendations to providers and DBHDD. These recommendations are evaluated to identify deficient practices. When deficient practices are identified, they are managed by DBHDD through a corrective action plan tracking system.
Corrective Action Plans
A corrective action plan is a plan developed by the reviewed entity as a response to deficient practices/problems identified in a written report. The following elements are present in an acceptable corrective action plan:
Identified Cause: The cited entity's determined cause of the deficient practice and the method that the entity used to determine the cause;
Corrective Action: A plan that contains the steps or actions that have been or will be taken to correct the deficient practice and address the identified cause;
Target Date: An anticipated date for the accomplishment of the corrective action; and
Measures of Effectiveness/Monitoring: A description of how the entity will monitor the corrections to ensure that the corrective actions have successfully resolved the issues.
Deficiency Tracking
Deficiencies are tracked in DBHDD's Corrective Action Tracking System (CATS). This database maintains information about deficient practices, entities cited, categorization of the deficiencies (e.g., critical, high, moderate, or low risk), and any corrective actions implemented for those deficiencies. CMRC reviews may reveal no deficient practices, and CMRC reviews may reveal multiple deficient practices for each
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death, resulting in tracking multiple deficiencies and corrective actions. More information about the deficiency determinations and tracking processes can be found in DBHDD policy Internal and External Reviews and Corrective Action Plans, 13-101.
The analysis of deficient practices and deficiency tracking presented below is based on data from CATS. These 2016 CMRC and CATS data and analysis are presented as baseline performance. Not all deaths are reviewed by the CMRC, and DBHDD has requested an external agency review 11 cases that were not completed at the time of this report were written and, therefore, not included in these analyses.
The CMRC purposively selects deaths for review based on policy. Deaths reviewed are not selected to be a representative sample of deaths for the DBHDD intellectual and developmental disability population each year.
Due to small sample sizes, not having all data from some external reviews, not having a representative sample of all intellectual and developmental disability deaths reviewed by CMRC, and having only one year of data, statistical analysis is not advisable at this time. Finally, the reader is cautioned from generalizing findings and observations from the CMRC analysis below to the DBHDD intellectual and developmental disability population.
Statewide Analysis of Number and Type of Deficient Practices
DBHDD distinguishes between "deficient practices" and "recommendations." At a minimum, DBHDD requires providers to correct deficient practices that have the potential for causing minimal harm, which include critical-, high-, and moderate-risk practices. A corrective action plan is required for critical-, high-, and moderate-risk practices. DBHDD required providers to submit corrective action plans for 138 deficient practices that were identified as either placing the individual or having the potential to place individuals at critical-, high-, and moderate-risk levels.
Seventy-nine practices were deemed to have low risk. (Providers were requested to correct these.) Recommendations made as the result of a CMRC review are sent to the provider. DBHDD requests providers respond or comment to recommendations identified as the result of CMRC reviews.
Critical Risk: Statewide Provider practices identified in 2016 with the potential for causing or having caused serious injury, harm, impairment or death to individuals were related to health and safety. The most common critical-risk provider practices centered on health and wellness/medical, including failure to respond to an apparent change in individuals' health condition and failure to respond to an emergency in a manner that would protect the welfare of the individual. In 10 instances, provider practices were classified as neglectful, which also was a commonly-identified critical-risk practice. (DBHDD refers instances of abuse, neglect, and exploitation to external investigative agencies, as appropriate.) As mentioned earlier, DBHDD requires providers to submit a corrective action plan to address critical-risk provider practices. At the time this report was written, most issues were resolved/closed.
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Table 18: Critical-Risk Count: Statewide

CRITICAL RISK

29

Health & Safety

29

Abuse/Neglect/Exploitation

10

Neglect

10

Coordination of Care

1

Communication/Collaboration

1

Health and Wellness/Medical

13

Response to change in condition

6

Response to emergency

7

Medication Management

3

Medication errors

2

Storage, dispensing, administration

1

Physical Environment and Life Safety/Emergency Planning

1

Emergency and disaster planning

1

Staff Issues

1

Scheduling/availability of staff

1

High Risk: Statewide Deficiencies at the high-risk level have resulted in a negative outcome to an individual. A closer examination of the high-risk provider practices that may cause harm to individuals shows similarities with the critical-risk practices: health and safety is the most common high-risk practice area. Again, health and wellness/medical had the most areas of concern, specifically, providers failing to respond to changes in individuals' condition, attending to medical care needs, and failure to respond appropriately to emergencies. Four instances of neglectful provider practices were identified as high risk. (DBHDD refers instances of abuse, neglect, and exploitation to external investigative agencies, as appropriate.)

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Table 19: High-Risk Count: Statewide

HIGH RISK
Compliance Abuse/Neglect/Exploitation Neglect Health and Wellness/Medical Physical care, wellness, preventative Leadership/Governing Body Supervision and Oversight Planning and Program Integrity Scope of Practice
Health & Safety Abuse/Neglect/Exploitation Neglect Coordination of Care Communication/collaboration Health and Wellness/Medical Medical care needs Response to change in condition Response to emergency Leadership/Governing Body Oversight of Service Provision Medication Management Monitoring Provision of Care and Treatment Assessment/treatment planning Special Needs Issues Adherence to treatment plan Training Training for Individualized Care

25
4 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
21 3 3 2 2 9 3 4 2 1 1 1 1 4 1 2 1 1 1

Moderate Risk: Statewide Deficiencies at the moderate-risk level have the potential to result in no more than minimal physical, mental, or psychosocial discomfort. The most common moderate-risk provider practice area was related to provider practices concerning the health and safety of individuals. Health and safetydeficient practices including failure to attend appropriately to medical care needs, failure to respond to changes in condition, and failure to respond to emergencies. Overall, however, the single most common deficient practice was failure to document care adequately.

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Table 20: Moderate-Risk Count: Statewide

MODERATE RISK

84

Compliance

19

Documentation of Care

1

Progress/Clinical note

1

Financial

1

Billing integrity, justification

1

Leadership/Governing Body

3

Oversight of Service Provision

1

Policy, procedure, protocol development

2

Planning and Program Integrity

4

Adherence to service guidelines/requirements

2

Information Management

1

Screening, referral, eligibility processes

1

Provision of Care and Treatment

1

Individual Engagement

1

Risk Management/Quality Improvement

7

Failure to report incidents

5

Failure to conduct investigation

1

Quality Improvement Process and Systems Issues

1

Staff Issues

2

Staff Credentialing, qualifications, competence

2

Health & Safety

62

Abuse/Neglect/Exploitation

1

Neglect

1

Coordination of Care

3

Communication/collaboration

3

Documentation of Care

21

Medication documentation

6

Miscellaneous

1

Progress/Clinical notes

12

Tracking sheets

2

Health and Wellness/Medical

17

Medical care needs

7

Response to change in condition

6

Response to emergency

4

Infection Control

1

Universal Precautions

1

Leadership/Governing Body

2

Oversight of Service Provision

1

Policy, procedure, protocol development

1

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Medication Management

3

Medication Errors

2

Storage, dispensing, administration

1

Provision of Care and Treatment

10

Adherence to treatment plan

3

Assessment/treatment planning

3

Individual Engagement

1

Miscellaneous

1

Special Needs Issues

1

Unauthorized Service Provision

1

Risk Management/Quality Improvement

1

Failure to report incidents

1

Training

3

Policy & Procedure training

1

Required Training/Licensure/Certification

1

Training for Individualized Care

1

Operational

3

Documentation of Care

1

Progress/Clinical notes

1

Provision of Care and Treatment

2

Billing Integrity, justification

2

Regional Analysis of Number and Type of Deficient Practices
Region 2 had the largest number of identified critical deficient practices and accounted for 24.1 percent of critical-risk provider practices identified. Region 5 had 20.7 percent of the critical deficient provider practices identified. Regions 2 and 3 had the highest number of deficient practices that were identified as having high risk to individuals (8, 32.0%; 7, 28%, respectively). Regions 4 and 2 had the most deficient practices that were identified as posing moderate risk to individuals (30, 35.7%; 21, 25%, respectively).
When one considers the 138 total number of critical-, high-, and moderate-risk practices that were identified during the CMRC (recalling that these levels of deficient practices require corrective actions to be submitted to DBHDD), Regions 2 and 4 have the highest number of these levels of deficient practices (each having 36, 26.1%), which account for 52.2 percent of all critical-, high-, and moderate-level risk practices identified. Region 3 had 30 critical-, high-, and moderate-level deficiencies combined, which accounted for 21.7 percent of all deficiencies of these levels. It should be noted, however, that Region 3 has the highest number of individuals being served, as well as the highest number of CMRC reviews where no deficiencies were identified. In comparison, then, Regions 2 and 4 are consistently identified as standing out from other regions in terms of having deficient practices that place individuals at critical-, high-, and moderate-risk levels of potential harm. It should be noted that Region 2 served 863 more individuals than Region 4, indicating that Region 4 stands out most as having deficient provider practices identified as part of mortality reviews.

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Table 21: Regional Analysis of Number and Type of Deficient Practices

Region
1 2 3 4 5 6 Total

Population
2,501 2,148 3,062 1,285 1,431 1,724 12,151

Critical Deficiencies
3 7 4 4 6 5 29

High Deficiencies
3 8 7 2 4 1 25

Count
Moderate Deficiencies
8 21 19 30 2 4 84

Low Deficiencies
13 16 18 24 1 7 79

No Deficiencies Found
9 10 9 8 3 3 42

Region
1 2 3 4 5 6

Critical Deficiencies
10.3% 24.1% 13.8% 13.8% 20.7% 17.2%

High Deficiencies
12.0% 32.0% 28.0% 8.0% 16.0% 4.0%

Percent
Moderate Deficiencies
9.5% 25.0% 22.6% 35.7% 2.4% 4.8%

Low Deficiencies
16.5% 20.3% 22.8% 30.4% 1.3% 8.9%

No Deficiencies Found
21.4% 23.8% 21.4% 19.0% 7.1% 7.1%

The main points concerning deficient practices identified in the course of CMRC reviews, when considering the 138 combined critical-, high-, and moderate-risk practices conjointly (that require a corrective action plan), one notices substantial overlap in three areas:
Health and Wellness Medical (40, 28.9% of all critical/high/moderate deficiencies)
Deficient response to change in condition Deficient response to an emergency Deficient response to medical care needs Neglect (15, 10.9% of all critical/high/moderate deficiencies)
Documentation of Care (23, 16.7% of all critical/high/moderate deficiencies)
Deficient progress/clinical notes Deficient medication documentation The overlap among the areas above account for 78 of the 138 identified deficient practices that require a corrective action plan. Though corrective action plans are intended to remediate deficient provider practices and mitigate further risk, the prevalence (57%) of the abovementioned common deficient practices may indicate additional areas for improvement.
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Key Findings
The 2016 DBHDD NOW and COMP waiver mortality rate was 14.0 deaths per 1,000 individuals. The 2016 mortality rate did not differ significantly from the DBHDD NOW and COMP waiver mortality rates in 2014 and 2015.
The 2016 DBHDD NOW and COMP waiver mortality rate of 14.0 in all except one comparison with other states' mortality rates was significantly lower; however, caution should be used in interpreting or generalizing these differences.
Increasing age (as in previous years) is significantly associated with the occurrence of mortality. Increasing health risk was associated with mortality in 2013-2016. In 2013-2015, mortality increased markedly after the age group of 45-54. This year, mortality increases
markedly after ages 55-64--a pattern also found in the general U.S. and Georgia populations. Life expectancy for the 2016 NOW and COMP waiver population (53.5 years) is comparable to the
average age of death for intellectual and developmental disability populations as reported in other state mortality reports and in published, peer-reviewed research (50.4 to 58.7 years). Heart disease was the leading cause of death in the general populations of U.S. (2014), Georgia (2015), DBHDD 2016 NOW and COMP waiver population. As in past years, at least half of the top 10 leading causes of causes of death in the U.S. and Georgia and the most prevalent causes of death in the NOW and COMP waiver population in 2016 were similar. Four of the leading causes of death for the 2016 NOW and COMP waiver population were not common to the top causes of death in the U.S. and Georgia during 2014 and 2015 included disability, aspiration pneumonia, sepsis, and epilepsy/seizures. DBHDD required providers to submit corrective action plans for 138 deficient practices that were identified as either placing the individual or having the potential to place individuals at risk. As of the date this report was written, most of the reviews identifying deficient practices were closed. The most common deficient provider practices that required corrective action centered on health and wellness/medical, including failure to respond to an apparent change in individuals' health condition, such as failures in responding to a person's medical needs, failure to respond to an emergency in a manner that would protect the welfare of the individual. Fifteen provider actions were identified as neglectful, and deficient practices regarding documentation of progress/clinical notes/medication were also among most common. Most providers had none or very few deficient practices (from CMRC reviews) that were identified to pose risk to individuals.
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Appendix A: Method for Mortality Review and Analysis
This mortality report analyzes information on individuals and deaths reported to DBHDD that meet the following criteria:
At least 18 years of age during the calendar year of review Primary diagnosis of an intellectual or developmental disability Medicaid waiver recipient (NOW or COMP)
Other reports (e.g., 2010 & 2011 Mortality Report, Massachusetts) included all individuals that were eligible for services to calculate mortality rates. This report included only those receiving NOW and COMP waivers, who may have a higher level of disability and need for services and supports. Including data from only those individuals receiving services may have produced upwardly biased mortality rates relative to those studies that included all of the population eligible for services. Due to data limitations mentioned earlier, it was not possible to investigate this possible bias.
Individuals who moved between the NOW and COMP waiver during 2016 were categorized into the waiver where they were last enrolled.
The data used to calculate mortality rates per 1,000 people by age group and type of residence was supplied by the Waiver Information System (WIS) Medicaid information system and Reporting of Critical Incidents (ROCI). WIS Medicaid information was the primary source for identifying, demographic, and payer information, as well as residential setting. Health risk information was extracted from the Columbus Information System (CIS). Death and incident information was extracted from ROCI. ROCI and CIS do not track individuals by a common unique identifier stored in WIS. All efforts were made to match individuals using related identifying information, including name, age, address, and region.
For these analyses, the following information was included:
Region (WIS) Medicaid number (WIS) Date of birth (WIS) Date of death (ROCI) Residential setting (WIS) Cause of death (if known) (ROCI) Whether death was referred for investigation (ROCI) Whether a mortality review was completed (CMRC) Health Status Risk Screening Tool (HRST) score (CIS) Tracking of deficient practices and corrective action plans related to CMRC (CATS)
Due to the large number of statistical comparisons, the statistical significance level was set at = .01. Setting = .01 as the significance level is to compensate for finding significance due to increased chances afforded by multiple comparisons.
The specific methodology employed by this report to calculate mortality rates per 1,000 people throughout this report appears on the following page.
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Crude Mortality Rate =

(Number of people who died in calendar year x 1,000) (Number of adults who received waiver service during the calendar year)

Caution should be used when comparing mortality rates across unlike methods and populations.

Deaths were included, regardless of death category, for all population-eligible adults who died in 2016.

Analyses were conducted using R,9 including tests of significance and logistic regression. In order to facilitate the interpretation of coefficients, variables were not transformed. The variables used for the logistic regression follow:

Death (outcome):

0 = No death

1 = Death

Age: Continuous

Gender:

Female = 0

Male = 1

HRST: Continuous (1-6)

Intensity of Residential Setting

Lower Intensity = 0

Independent apartment/home

Live with family/relative/caretaker/friend

Higher Intensity = 1

Personal care home

Community living arrangement

Host home

All variables were entered into a single step, and the variables were examined for significant association with death. Variables that were indicated as not being significantly associated with death were removed, and the model was recomputed. Those variables that were indicated as significantly associated with death were retained in the model. This process continued until only significantlyassociated variables with death remained. Finally, the model was examined for meaningful relationships and interpretation.

9 R Core Team. (2016). R: A Language and Environment for Statistical Computing. R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria. https://www.R-project.org.
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Appendix B: Regions of DBHDD
The DBHDD system of services is administered through six regional field offices. Each field office is responsible for the following:
Communicating and implementing department policy at the local level; Developing annual regional plans in conjunction with the regional advisory councils; Managing allocated funds and contracting with providers for mental health, substance use
disorder, and intellectual and developmental disability services for individuals eligible to receive these services through the public sector; Facilitating and determining eligibility for intellectual and developmental disability services, managing the planning lists, and authorizing services; Managing the provider network by routinely meeting with providers to improve existing services, plan for the implementation of new services, ensure consumer access to services, and improve quality of services; Developing and promoting effective working relationships with all stakeholders in the region, through regular meetings with providers, consumers, individuals, family members, advocates, elected officials, regional advisory council members, and other social service agencies; and Investigating and resolving complaints and conducting special investigations as needed.
Region Descriptions (map on following page):
Region 1 covers 31 predominantly rural counties of Northwest and Northeast Georgia (total population: more than 2.5 million). Region 2 covers 33 counties of East and Central Georgia (total population: 1.27 million). Region 3 covers 6 counties, which includes the capital city of Atlanta (total population: 2.9 million). Region 4 covers 24 predominantly rural counties in Southwest Georgia (total population: 611,590). Region 5 covers 34 counties in Southeast Georgia (total population: 1.1 million). Region 6 covers 31 counties in West-Central Georgia (total population: 1.37 million). Two-thirds of the region is rural.
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Figure 10: DBHDD Regional Map with State Hospital Locations 46 | P a g e

Appendix C: Logistic Regression for Living at Home
The population of individuals living at home with their family, a friend, or someone else had lower mortality rates in 2016 than many of the other more-intensive living situations; yet, the population's average age of death was lower than others. A logistic regression model was generated using only the individuals in the family, friend, or other residential setting category. The results are the same as those for the overall population. The association between age and mortality remained much like the overall model. The association between HRST and mortality was also largely the same; so, there are no differences between variables and their respective associations to mortality for those in the aforementioned population and others in the waiver population examined in the primary analysis.
It was found, however, that the distribution of individuals living at home with family/relative/other had a lower average age than any of the other living situations. The average ages of death are presented in Table 22. Their low average age of death is an effect of the low age of the population. This way, the population can have a low mortality rate yet a low average age of death.

Table 22: Logistic Regression Model with Death as Outcome, 2016

Variable HCL
Age

B S.E. .492 .079 .039 .009

Wald df Sig. 6.218 1 .000 4.170 1 .000

Exp(B) 1.636 1.039

Table 23: Statistics on Age Stratified by Living Situations

Living Situation Independent Live with Family/Relative/Other PCH CLA Host Home

Mean 48.106 37.871 49.881 47.235 44.269

SD 13.557 12.647 13.738 14.487 15.361

Median 47.675 35.071 51.180 47.949 42.852

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