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PLEASE NOTE: This policy issuance has been withdrawn in its entirety and should be used only for historical or reference purposes.
| ACF Administration for Children and Families |
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN
SERVICES |
|
| 1. Log No.: ACYF-CB-IM-00-11 | 2. Issuance Date: December 28, 2000 | |
| 3. Originating Office: Children's Bureau | ||
| 4. Key Word: National Standards, Child and Family Service (CFS) Reviews | ||
INFORMATION MEMORANDUM
TO: State and Territorial Agencies Administering or Supervising the Administration of Titles IV-B and IV-E of the Social Security Act
SUBJECT: National Standards for the Child and Family Service (CFS) Reviews
LEGAL AND RELATED REFERENCES: The Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997 (Public Law 105-89), Titles IV-B and IV-E of the Social Security Act, the Social Security Act Amendments of 1994 (Public Law 103-432), 45 CFR 1355
PURPOSE: The purpose of this information memorandum (IM) is to transmit the national standards on the six statewide data indicators that will be used in the child and family service reviews to determine, in part, whether or not States are operating in substantial conformity.
INFORMATION:
Background
The final rule, published in the Federal Register (65 FR
4019 - 4093) on January 25, 2000, sets forth the requirements for
the child and family service reviews, including the establishment
of national standards for certain statewide data indicators that
will be used, in part, to determine a State's substantial
conformity under titles IV-B and IV-E of the Social Security
Act.1
The determination of a State's substantial conformity is based on a
review of certain outcomes and systemic factors using quantitative
and qualitative data. A State that is found not to be operating in
substantial conformity based on a CFS review has an opportunity for
program improvement prior to the withholding of any Federal
funds.
The national standards are based on information that is reported
by States to the Detailed Case Data Component of the National Child
Abuse and Neglect Data System (NCANDS) and the Adoption and Foster
Care Analysis and Reporting System (AFCARS).
Statewide Data Indicators
In the preamble to the final rule, we listed seven statewide data
indicators under the outcomes of safety and permanency that we
intended to use in the child and family service reviews.2 We are using
only six of those indicators in determinations of substantial
conformity at this point. Those six statewide data indicators are
as follows:
We determined that it was impossible, at this time, to use "length of stay in foster care" as a statewide data indicator for determining substantial conformity. In the preamble to the regulation, we defined this measure as the median length of time it takes for the first time entry group cohort (children entering foster care for the first time) for the year under review to be discharged from foster care, i.e., that point when 50 percent of the group is discharged from the first episode of foster care. Many States will not have achieved the median discharge point for the cohort group by the time of their first CFS review. Therefore, we plan to provide data on length of stay in foster care, where it is available, for States' use in addressing items in the statewide assessment, but not for our use in determining substantial conformity during the first round of reviews.
The statewide data indicator "recurrence of maltreatment" has been modified since the publication of the regulation. In the preamble, we defined this measure as the percentage of children who were victims of substantiated or indicated child abuse and/or neglect during the period under review who had another substantiated or indicated report within a 12-month period. We are now following children who were victims of maltreatment during the first six months of the calendar year to see if they received another indicated or substantiated report within six months of the first report. We made this change so that we could use a single year of data which would alleviate the difficulties in following children from one report year to another and using very early data to compute the standard.
Establishing the National Standards
We are not using the AFCARS reporting periods as described in the
preamble and the regulation, which we had anticipated would be the
April - September 1998 reporting period, the complete fiscal year
of 1999 and the October - March 2000 period of AFCARS data.4 Rather, we
selected the time periods described in the following chart to
establish the national standards in order to avoid using the same
data to establish the standards and to determine substantial
conformity on the first reviews. We have learned since the
publication of the final rule, that it would be an inappropriate
methodology to use the same data to develop the standards that
would be used later to measure a State's performance; thus, we are
now rectifying the matter. In light of this change, the data
sources below are the most recent and complete data sets available
to establish the standards as required by the regulation. We are
now using the following time periods for the statewide data
indicators:
| Statewide Data Indicators | Time Period and Data Source |
|---|---|
| Recurrence of maltreatment | NCANDS data for calendar years 1997 and 1998 |
| Incidence of child abuse and/or neglect in foster care | NCANDS data for January - September of 1997 and 1998; and AFCARS data for January - September of 1997 and 1998 |
| Foster care re-enteries Length of time to achieve reunification Length of time to achieve adoption Stability of foster care placement |
AFCARS data for reporting periods 1998a and 1998b5 |
For each of the six indicators, we computed the States' percentages from their NCANDS and/or AFCARS data for each of the reporting periods indicated in the chart provided above. Those percentages served as the input data for determining the national standard for each of the six indicators. For statistical purposes, the input data for each indicator were used to fit a normal probability distribution to that data set. From each of the six normal probability distributions, the 75th percentile was calculated and served as the national standard for that indicator. The 75th percentile divides the data set so that 75 percent of the data set falls below it and 25 percent of the data set exceeds it.6
The National Standards
The following chart describes the national standards, the data
sources used for each and the method for calculating the
standard:
| Statewide Data Indicator | National Standard7 | Description | Key Data Elements | Method of Calculating Standard |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recurrence of maltreatment | 5% | A State meets the national standard for this indicator if, of all children who were victims of substantiated or indicated child abuse and/or neglect during the first six months of the period under review, 5% or fewer children had another substantiated or indicated report within six months. | NCANDS elements: (CHID)Child ID; (RPTDT) report date; (RPTDISP), report disposition | The indicator is based on children who were victims of maltreatment during the first six months of the calendar year (January 1 - June 30) for the NCANDS reporting period used in the review. We followed each child victim for six months from the first report date during the January-June period to determine if another substantiated or indicated report was received. We divided the count of children who met the recurrence criterion by the total number of children who were victims of maltreatment during the first six months of the calendar year. The respective percentages were calculated, fitted to the normal probability distribution, and the 75th percentile was computed. |
| Incidence of child abuse and/or neglect in foster care | 0.4% | A State meets the national standard for this indicator if, of all children in foster care in the State during the period under review, the percentage of children who were the subject of substantiated or indicated maltreatment by a foster parent or facility staff is 0.4% or less. | NCANDS elements: (CHID)Child ID; (RPTDT) report date; (PER1REL PER2REL, PER3REL), perpetrator's relationship to child; (RPTDISP), report disposition AFCARS elements: element 21, date of latest removal and element 56, date of discharge from foster care | We determined the number of children who were reported in NCANDS as maltreated by a perpetrator who was a foster parent or a residential facility staff person for the nine-month period of January 1 through September 30 for 1997 and 1998. We divided that number by the population of children served in foster care, as reported in AFCARS, for the same time period. The respective percentages were calculated, fitted to the normal probability distribution, and the 75th percentile was computed. |
| Foster care re-entries | 6% | A State meets the national standard for this indicator if, of all children who entered foster care during the year under review, 6% or fewer of those children re-entered foster care within 12 months of a prior foster care episode. | AFCARS element 19, total number of removals from home to date; element 20, date child was discharged from last foster care episode; and element 21, date of latest removal from home. | We reviewed a child's placement history to see if there was a prior entry date within 12 months of the most recent entry date. The respective percentages were calculated, fitted to the normal probability distribution, and the 75th percentile was computed. |
| Stability of foster care placements | 89% | A State meets the national standard for this indicator if, of all children who have been in foster care less than twelve months from the time of the latest removal, 89% or more children had no more than two placement settings. | AFCARS element 21, date of latest removal from home; element 24, number of previous placement settings during this removal episode; and element 56, date of discharge from foster care (needed only if child exited during the year). | We reviewed the children who were in foster care at the end of the year and the children who exited during the year to determine how many months they were in foster care. Then, for those who were in foster care less than twelve months, we determined their number of placements. The respective percentages were calculated, fitted to the normal probability distribution, and the 75th percentile was computed. |
| Length of time to achieve reunification | 78% | A State meets the national standard for this indicator if, of all children who were reunified with their parents or caretakers at the time of discharge from foster care, 78% or more children were reunified in less than twelve months from the time of the latest removal from home. | AFCARS data element 21, date of latest removal from home; element 56, date of discharge from foster care; and element 58, reason for discharge. | We reviewed the discharge reasons for those children who exited foster care to reunification and then determined the time between the date of discharge and the date of the latest removal from the home. The respective percentages were calculated, fitted to the normal probability distribution, and the 75th percentile was computed. |
| Length of time to achieve adoption | 36% | A State meets the national standard for this indicator if, of all children who exited foster care during the year under review to a finalized adoption, 36% or more children exited care in less than 24 months from the time of the latest removal from home. | AFCARS data element 21, date of latest removal from home; element 56, date of discharge from foster care; and element 58, reason for discharge. | We determined the number of children who exited foster care to a finalized adoption. Then we determined how many months elapsed between the time of discharge and the date of latest removal from the home. The respective percentages were calculated, fitted to the normal probability distribution, and the 75th percentile was computed. |
The National Standards in Context
States should be aware that meeting the national standard for the period under review is one of a number of factors that determine substantial conformity. In designing the CFS reviews we have endeavored to balance our use of statewide quantitative indicators with case-specific qualitative observations in our decision-making. For the outcomes with data indicators where national standards are assigned, a State must meet both the national standard for the statewide data indicator and substantially achieve the outcome in 90 percent (95 percent in reviews subsequent to the first round of reviews) of the cases on-site to be considered in substantial conformity. We will resolve any discrepancies between the Statewide data and on-site review findings so that substantial conformity does not rely totally on one or the other information source.8
A State whose data do not meet the national standard in a review will be required to implement a program improvement plan (PIP) designed to improve the States' performance on the data indicators. The program improvement plan allows the State the opportunity to identify the issues that may contribute to nonconformity and plan action steps and technical assistance to improve State performance. In accordance with 45 CFR 1355.35(a), the State and the Regional Office may negotiate a percentage of improvement to be made in the statewide data indicators over the course of a PIP that takes into account the unique circumstances of the State.
While our intention is that all States eventually will be able to attain and surpass the national standards, the negotiated improvement may in fact be less than the national standard. In those circumstances, if the State achieves the level of improvement agreed upon in the PIP, the State will not be penalized for nonconformity on the basis of the statewide data. With a goal of continued quality improvement, States whose data remain below the national standard in subsequent reviews will be required to establish new benchmarks of improvement to be made toward the eventual attainment of the national standard.9
INQUIRIES TO: ACF Regional Offices
/s/
James A. Harrell
Acting Commissioner
Administration on Children, Youth and Families
Footnotes
1 Note: For a
complete overview of the child and family services reviews, please
consult the final rule and the Child and Family Services Reviews
Procedures Manual, which are both available on the Children's
Bureau website at http://www.acf.dhhs.gov/programs/cb.
Back to Text
2 See the
discussion on the seven statewide data indicators at 65 FR 4024 -
4025. In the final rule (45 CFR 1355.34(b)(4) and (5)), ACF
preserved the ability to add, change or suspend data indicators as
appropriate as well as periodically review and revise the standards
as necessary.
Back to Text
3 The first two
statewide data indicators fall under Safety Outcome 1: Children
are, first and foremost, protected from abuse and neglect. The last
four statewide data indicators fall under Permanency Outcome 1:
Children will have permanency and stability in their living
situations. The names of some of the statewide data indicators have
been modified somewhat from how they appeared in the preamble to
the final rule to be consistent with those used in the annual Child
Welfare Outcomes Report.
Back to Text
4 See 65 FR
4025 and 45 CFR 1355.34(b)(5).
Back to Text
5 "1998a"
refers to the AFCARS reporting period from October 1, 1997 - March
31, 1998, and "1998b" refers to the AFCARS reporting period from
April 1 - September 30, 1998.
Back to Text
6 We used
generally acceptable statistical processes related to fitting data
to a normal probability distribution to arrive at the standards
which, for some indicators, meant transforming the input data. For
more detailed information on the computation of the national
standards, please contact John Hargrove at (202) 205-8634.
Back to Text
7 After
calculation, the national standards were rounded to whole numbers
using typical rounding procedures. The incidence of child abuse
and/or neglect in foster care is very small and was rounded to one
decimal place, rather than a whole number, so that it would be a
meaningful standard.
Back to Text
8 See 65 FR pp.
4028 and 4039, CFR 1355.33(d), and pp. 53-54 of the CFS review
procedures manual for a discussion of the process for resolving
discrepancies.
Back to Text
9 More
information on developing program improvement plans can be found in
chapter 7 of the CFS review procedures manual.
Back to Text