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San Diego County’s Health and Human Services Agency
It Cannot Demonstrate That It Employs the Appropriate Number of Public Health Nurses to Efficiently Serve Its Residents

Report Number: 2017-124

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The Health Agency Cannot Sufficiently Demonstrate That It Has the Appropriate Number of PHNs

Key Points:

Because the Health Agency Does Not Use Efficiency Measures, It Cannot Fully Demonstrate That Its PHN Staffing Is Appropriate

The Health Agency does not use relevant information available to it to better assess whether it has an adequate number of PHNs overall and has assigned the right number of them to its regions and programs. San Diego County’s Code of Administrative Ordinances requires the Health Agency’s director to administer programs through departments, divisions, and geographic service regions in a manner that integrates the administration and delivery of services to ensure their effectiveness, efficiency, accessibility, and quality. Similarly, a guiding principle of the Health Agency’s Public Health Services’ strategic plan for 2013 to 2018 is to provide optimal, community‑focused services by aligning its efforts and resources to achieve effectiveness and efficiency. Given these mandates, we would expect the Health Agency to monitor both effectiveness and efficiency to help ensure that it employs the appropriate number of PHNs overall and allocates them to each of its public health programs and service regions to best meet public health needs.

Contrary to the expectations created by the county ordinance and Public Health Services’ strategic plan, the Health Agency evaluates the effectiveness but not the efficiency of its PHNs’ performance. Specifically, it uses metrics such as the percentage of clients who receive timely preventive health exams to assess how well its public health programs provide services. However, it does not consistently use available information such as case assignment data to measure PHN efficiency and help assess its PHN staffing assignments. Consequently, the Health Agency cannot sufficiently demonstrate whether it employs the appropriate number of PHNs or allocates them to the right locations.

We surveyed the Health Agency’s PHNs to obtain their perspective on issues affecting PHN staffing and, based on the responses, reviewed selected effectiveness measures for two programs for which a large percentage of PHNs reported that their caseloads were too high for them to do their jobs effectively. As Table 2 shows, five of the 10 (50 percent) PHNs in Foster Care who responded to our survey said their caseloads were too high for them to effectively accomplish their jobs. Similarly, 17 of the 21 (81 percent) PHNs in Children’s Services who responded to our survey said their caseloads were too high. These Foster Care and Children’s Services PHN respondents account for 22 of the 40 total Health Agency PHN respondents who told us their caseloads were too high for them to effectively accomplish their jobs. According to the Health Agency’s chief nursing officer, who is responsible for planning, organizing, evaluating, and directing its PHN programs, our survey results correspond with caseload concerns she has heard from Foster Care and Children’s Services PHNs.


Table 2
PHNs Raised Workload Concerns in Response to Our Survey Questions
PROGRAM NUMBER OF PHNs SURVEYED* NUMBER OF RESPONSES RESPONSE RATE   RESPONSE: CASELOAD IS TOO HIGH FOR YOU TO EFFECTIVELY ACCOMPLISH YOUR JOB
NUMBER PERCENTAGE
Foster Care 16 10 63%   5 50%
Children’s Services 23 21 91 17 81
Other programs 132 80 61 18 23
Total surveyed 171 111 65% 40 36%

Source: Analysis of survey responses from Health Agency PHNs.

* Total number of Health Agency PHNs surveyed as of January 3, 2018.


The Health Agency assigns about a quarter of its total PHN staff to Foster Care and Children’s Services to provide for the public health needs of clients in those programs. State law requires the county to use Foster Care PHNs to coordinate health care services with child welfare services workers for dependents in foster care. The Health Agency budgeted 19 PHN positions (almost 10 percent of its total PHN positions) to Foster Care. State law also establishes Children’s Services, a state and county program that provides medically necessary benefits to persons under 21 years of age who have physically handicapping conditions and meet medical, financial, and residential eligibility requirements. The Health Agency assigned 25 PHN positions (13 percent of its total PHN positions) to Children’s Services.

Notwithstanding the concerns that Foster Care PHNs raised regarding their caseloads, the Health Agency reported generally positive results on the program’s effectiveness measures during our audit period. Specifically, California’s Department of Health Care Services (Health Care Services) requires the Health Agency to report on three Foster Care effectiveness measures: timely preventive health exams, timely preventive dental exams, and timely coordination of follow‑up care when health assessments reveal conditions requiring it. For the preventive exam measures, the Health Agency’s goal is that 100 percent of foster care children will receive timely physical and dental exams.1 Although the Health Agency did not meet this goal, it reported that more than 90 percent of Foster Care clients received timely health exams in fiscal years 2014–15 through 2016–17. The Health Agency reported its highest score, 97 percent, on this measure in fiscal year 2016–17. On the dental exam measure, the Health Agency reported scoring 91 percent in fiscal year 2016–17. However, it reported scoring only 75 percent and 77 percent on this measure in fiscal years 2014–15 and 2015–16, respectively. Although two PHNs told us that clients might miss or be overdue for certain exams if PHNs are understaffed and do not mail out reminders for preventive services, the Health Agency identified other problems unrelated to PHN staffing, including problems with clients’ Medi‑Cal enrollment, as among the most common impediments to timely preventive services that Foster Care clients’ caregivers reported.

The Health Agency reported generally lower scores on a third effectiveness measure for Foster Care—timely follow‑up care. This measure considers the percentage of clients for whom PHNs coordinate timely follow‑up care when their health conditions require it (timely follow‑up is considered to be within 120 days of when the program receives appropriate paperwork from a client’s provider). The Health Agency’s reported scores on this measure fluctuated from 51 percent in fiscal year 2014–15 to 89 percent in fiscal year 2015–16 to 78 percent in fiscal year 2016–17. The branch chief who oversees Foster Care indicated that performance on this measure was low in part because PHNs had difficulty determining from the paperwork submitted by providers that a child had received appropriate follow‑up care.

Similarly, despite the concerns Children’s Services PHNs raised regarding their caseloads, during our audit period the Health Agency reported generally positive scores on eight performance measures that Health Care Services requires Children’s Services to track. These include whether program staff determine clients’ medical, financial, and residential eligibility in a timely manner, and the extent to which clients’ families participate in the program. The measures also assess the proportions of clients who have primary care providers; who have certain medical conditions and received referrals and authorizations for special care; and who are 14 years or older, are expected to have chronic health conditions that extend past their 21st birthday, and have documentation of a biannual review for long‑term transition planning to adulthood. The Health Agency’s reported scores on the eight Children’s Services performance measures for the three fiscal years of our audit period were 91 percent or better in 17 of the 24 instances (71 percent) we reviewed. The lowest score among the Children’s Services measures was 78 percent in both fiscal years 2015–16 and 2016–17 on the measure regarding long‑term transition planning. In fiscal year 2015–16, Children’s Services implemented a quality improvement project to enhance the transition to adult health care. The project called for expanding PHN interactions with certain clients to include phone calls and face‑to‑face encounters. Although this project may have increased the amount of time PHNs spent on some of their cases, the Health Agency’s fiscal year 2016–17 reported score of 78 percent for transition planning did not change from the prior year.

The Health Agency also points to its 2016 accreditation by the Public Health Accreditation Board (Accreditation Board) as evidence of its commitment to excellence across a wide range of public health services. The goal of this voluntary national accreditation program is to improve and protect public health by advancing the quality and performance of public health departments. The Accreditation Board’s standards and measures for accreditation address 10 essential public health services, as well as the Health Agency’s management, administration, and governance. San Diego County’s Health Agency received accreditation in May 2016. Within the State, only the California Department of Public Health and 10 of California’s 61 local health departments have received such accreditation. Although the Health Agency reported that the Accreditation Board awarded San Diego County the highest possible ranking on 94 of 100 assessment measures, it also acknowledged that the Accreditation Board identified challenges or opportunities for improvement, including the Health Agency’s assessments of staff competencies and performance management.

Although the Health Agency may be successfully providing services to clients, it does not consistently measure PHN efficiency. For example, the Health Agency does not require its managers to monitor each PHN’s caseload. We used a combination of information, including PHN case assignment records and PHN vacancies, to calculate average caseloads for Foster Care and Children’s Services PHNs. In the absence of generally accepted caseload measures, we used benchmark indicators from state funding documents as a proxy to assess caseload variations over time and among regions.2 For Foster Care, documents from both the California Department of Social Services (Social Services) and Health Care Services state a ratio of 1 PHN to 200 clients. For Children’s Services, guidelines issued by Health Care Services state a ratio of 1 nurse to 400 clients.3

As Figure 4 shows, average caseloads for the Health Agency’s PHNs exceeded these state benchmarks for both programs for all three years we reviewed. Although total caseloads have declined for both programs since 2015, the discrepancy between the benchmarks and the Health Agency’s average caseloads is an indicator that the Health Agency’s overall Foster Care and Children’s Services PHN staffing may be inadequate.

Figure 4
Average Caseloads for Foster Care and Children’s Services Exceeded State Benchmarks

Figure 4 is a bar chart that shows average caseloads for Foster Care and Children’s Services exceeded state benchmarks.

Source: Analysis of the Health Agency’s Foster Care and Children’s Services PHN case assignments data, Social Services’ All County Letter No. 99‑108, and Health Care Services’ Child and Health Disability Prevention Program Letter No. 01‑2017 and Children’s Medical Services Plan and Fiscal Guidelines.

* Average caseloads are calculated using filled PHN positions, not budgeted positions.


We also observed notable differences in Foster Care PHN caseloads among the Health Agency’s six regions. As Figure 5 shows, in 2017 the Foster Care PHN covering cases in the East region averaged 295 cases. This was higher than the State’s benchmark of 200 cases per Foster Care PHN. The East region PHN also carried almost 100 cases more than the 197 average caseload in the South region, which was just under the State’s goal. These differences indicate that the Health Agency may not be optimally allocating PHNs to provide Foster Care services throughout the county.

Figure 5
The Health Agency’s Foster Care PHN Caseloads Varied Among Regions

Figure 5 is a bar chart that shows the Health Agency’s Foster Care PHN caseloads varied among regions.

Source: Analysis of Health Agency personnel and caseload data and correspondence with Foster Care PHNs.

* Average caseloads are calculated using filled PHN positions, not budgeted positions.

North Coastal and North Inland regions each have one PHN position and share another PHN position.

There is only one East region Foster Care PHN.


Unlike Foster Care PHNs, each Children’s Services PHN who coordinates services for clients carries a roughly equal caseload. According to the program’s medical director, program managers assign cases by generating a complete list of clients, alphabetizing the list by client surname, and dividing the list evenly among PHNs. Public Health Services cited in its fiscal year 2015–16 annual report the nearly 13,500 chronically ill, severely and physically disabled persons it served as a Children’s Services accomplishment. However, as we showed in Table 2, 81 percent of Children’s Services PHNs who responded to our survey said their caseloads were too high to allow them to effectively accomplish their jobs. Caseloads for Children’s Services PHNs were highest in 2015, as shown in Figure 4. In that year, each PHN carried an average of 859 cases, more than twice the 400 cases cited in Health Care Services’ ratio. In 2016 and 2017, each PHN carried more than 100 fewer cases than in 2015 (734 and 735, respectively) but still well above 400. Because program managers do not use efficiency measures to track factors such as the amount of time, including any overtime, that PHNs spend on their caseload duties, the Health Agency cannot sufficiently demonstrate that it employs an appropriate number of PHNs to coordinate care for Children’s Services clients. The human services program manager for Children’s Services told us that the statewide Children’s Services program is currently defining changes in standards for caseload and performance management data, and that it could develop and implement a model to define PHN efficiency as part of changes already in progress.

Although no state laws govern the ratio of clients to PHN for public health facilities, the State’s benchmark of 200 cases per Foster Care PHN and 400 cases per Children’s Services PHN could help the Health Agency evaluate whether its PHN staffing in those programs is adequate. However, managers of both Foster Care and Children’s Services expressed concern that caseload numbers provide incomplete information about PHN efficiency. The branch chief over Foster Care said that caseload is a simplistic measure of PHN workload because of variables including case complexity. Similarly, the medical director of Children’s Services indicated that caseload as a raw number is not necessarily meaningful on its own. Nonetheless, measuring actual PHN caseloads against appropriate benchmarks would allow Foster Care and Children’s Services managers to monitor trends, as shown in Figure 4. The Health Agency could then identify caseload variances that could serve as indicators of potential inefficiencies or the need for staffing changes.

Rather than rely only on caseload numbers that Foster Care and Children’s Services managers deem insufficient, the Health Agency could also measure case complexity as part of its caseload monitoring to help assess PHN efficiency and the appropriateness of PHN staffing. Case complexity refers to how much work a particular case is likely to involve—for instance, depending on whether a client’s needs are standard or complex. For example, as we indicated earlier, Children’s Services PHNs are responsible for providing transition care planning for clients who will age out of the program at 21 years old and will need to become responsible for managing their own medical care. For some clients, this may require a PHN only to mail an informational packet. For other clients, however, it might involve multiple interactions beginning at age 14 and may include phone calls and face‑to‑face contact. A case complexity measure would allow managers to assess levels of client need and anticipate the amount of work that cases of differing complexity might involve.

As we described earlier, San Diego County’s Children’s Services currently assigns each PHN a roughly equal number of cases, using an alphabetical list of clients. Unlike San Diego, Los Angeles County’s Children’s Services program uses a case complexity measure to sort cases according to levels of client need. The program’s associate medical director told us that Los Angeles County piloted its case complexity measure with a target group of clients and nurses starting in 2014. In a journal article about the pilot project that the associate medical director coauthored, she explained that the measure categorizes cases as standard or complex based on the anticipated amount of work required to meet a client’s needs. For instance, a standard case involves responding to patient inquiries and performing an annual case review, whereas a complex case involves developing a nursing care plan for a client and performing quarterly and annual case reviews. According to the article, Los Angeles County’s Children’s Services nurses participating in the pilot reported overall satisfaction with their work and felt their caseloads were manageable. The associate medical director told us that Los Angeles County now uses the measure for all Children’s Services patients. Although she told us average caseloads were as high as 1,000 in 2017 and between 700 and 800 in March 2018—which are comparable to San Diego County’s average caseloads—the case complexity measure gives Los Angeles County an additional tool for monitoring and adjusting caseloads. According to the medical director of San Diego County’s Children’s Services, a case complexity measure would promote a more equitable division of labor than the program’s current caseload distribution system.

Similarly, although the Health Agency does not currently use a case complexity measure to assess or distribute work in Foster Care, the branch chief who oversees Foster Care said that participants in a multiyear quality improvement project, including PHNs, have held preliminary discussions about developing a case complexity measure. Such a measure could help Foster Care assess whether variations like those we saw in regional PHN caseloads are reasonable based on the varying amounts of work that particular cases require.

Overtime may also be an indicator of PHN efficiency. According to its group human resources director, the Health Agency as a whole does not track PHNs’ overtime hours and leaves the decision to monitor overtime to its programs or regions. However, the Health Agency could use overtime data to help identify whether it has enough PHNs to complete their work within a normal work period and thus whether PHN staffing is adequate. For example, our analysis of the Health Agency’s overtime data revealed that PHNs’ overall overtime hours over the last three fiscal years were generally reasonable, but that a few PHNs worked high amounts of overtime. For example, in 2017, four PHNs worked from 489.5 to 616 hours of overtime, while the average PHN overtime that year was 43.7 hours. Two of these four PHNs worked in the Epidemiology and Immunization Services Branch. The other two worked in the Public Health Preparedness and Response Branch and the Tuberculosis Control and Refugee Health Branch. We discuss overtime in relation to the hepatitis A outbreak here. If the Health Agency were similarly examining overtime, it could identify averages and outliers, which could aid it in assessing whether it has a sufficient number of PHNs and in detecting workload issues that may cause outliers to exist.

The Health Agency has a resource it can use to develop efficiency measures using factors such as PHN caseload, case complexity, and overtime that can better help it ensure and demonstrate the efficiency and adequacy of its PHN staffing. Specifically, in 2014 San Diego County established the position of chief nursing officer to direct the Health Agency’s nursing programs and to plan, coordinate, implement, and evaluate countywide nursing standards and practices. These standards could include efficiency standards. The chief nursing officer told us she is working on a project that addresses a collection of quality assurance measures to make more informed staffing decisions, although she confirmed that the Health Agency does not yet collect or analyze PHN workload information from its programs and regions. And while she acknowledged that there are no current required standards for measuring PHN workloads, she agreed that the lack of PHN efficiency measures means the Health Agency cannot demonstrate that its PHN staffing is appropriate. By using the Health Agency’s existing information, such as the PHN case assignment and overtime data we used to perform our analysis, and developing a case complexity measure to promote a more equitable division of labor, the chief nursing officer could develop and implement efficiency measures and monitor them against appropriate benchmarks to help assess the Health Agency’s PHN staffing. The chief nursing officer agreed that the Health Agency would benefit from using PHN efficiency measures that would allow it to understand how its PHN resources are allocated and assess whether the Health Agency is best meeting its clients’ needs.

Recommendation

To better ensure and demonstrate that it efficiently meets public health needs of at‑risk county residents, and that it employs the appropriate number of PHNs in the right locations to address those needs, the Health Agency should measure and assess PHN efficiency. Specifically, the Health Agency should direct the chief nursing officer to begin developing and implementing PHN efficiency measures by January 1, 2019. These measures could address such factors as caseload, case complexity, and overtime.


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The Health Agency Implemented Its Draft Surge Plan to Respond to the Recent Hepatitis A Outbreak

Key Points:

The Health Agency’s Surge Plan Provided the Framework for Assigning PHN Resources to Address the Hepatitis A Outbreak

As we mentioned in the Introduction, San Diego County experienced an outbreak of hepatitis A in 2017. While our audit was ongoing, two San Diego County entities published reports assessing the county’s response to the hepatitis A outbreak. San Diego County released its after action report on May 10, 2018, and the grand jury’s report is dated May 17, 2018. Both reports identified concerns and made recommendations to improve the county’s response efforts for future public health emergencies; however, neither report criticized the Health Agency’s use of its PHNs in responding to the hepatitis A outbreak. We reviewed these reports and analyzed PHNs’ involvement in responding to the hepatitis A outbreak.

According to its after action report on the hepatitis A outbreak, the county implemented Public Health Services’ surge plan to respond to the hepatitis A outbreak. Specifically, the after action report stated that the Health Agency used the surge plan’s protocols to engage and train nurses beyond county staff. The surge plan, which was in draft form throughout the outbreak, states that it is to be used to meet work demands specific to disease outbreaks and public health situations in which the need for screening and investigational activities exceeds the Health Agency’s current capacity and that personnel eligible to meet surge needs may include any nurse the county employs who demonstrates compliance with the surge plan’s training and other standards.

The surge plan describes three levels of response to public health threats and hazards. In an episodic, or short‑term, surge, a surge team from Public Health Services can meet demand in 80 percent of events lasting two to four weeks. In a sustained, or long‑term, surge, which can last for more than four weeks, a surge team will not be able to meet the event’s demand for services and will need temporary staffing solutions, which can include additional nursing support. In a disaster or public health emergency, categories used to describe large‑scale events that exceed department staffing levels, Public Health Services can require staff in its branches and regions to assist and may require mutual aid from jurisdictions outside the county, including federal or state resources.

On September 1, 2017, San Diego County’s public health officer declared the hepatitis A outbreak to be a local public health emergency, which the county board of supervisors ratified later that month. The county then activated its medical operations center and used a centralized staff of schedulers and staffing coordinators for the response effort. According to a PHN supervisor in the Public Health Preparedness and Response Branch, the Epidemiology and Immunization Services and Public Health Preparedness and Response branches primarily managed the scheduling and staffing of immunization events for the outbreak. These events included providing vaccines at medical and social service provider sites and staffing foot teams in which, according to the county’s after action report, PHNs worked with public safety officers and social workers to locate and vaccinate homeless individuals in the field.

The Public Health Preparedness and Response Branch PHN supervisor also stated that the Health Agency appointed a PHN surge team coordinator in each region to coordinate local hepatitis A response events and schedules, in accordance with the surge plan. The after action report stated that the total number of county PHNs assigned to the outbreak ranged from 100 to 132. According to the grand jury report on the hepatitis A outbreak, new instances of hepatitis A decreased after the local emergency was declared, dropping from 80 new cases in the county in September 2017 to 34 new cases in October 2017. The PHN supervisor told us that the Health Agency discontinued its use of the medical operations center shortly after the public health emergency was repealed in January 2018; however, the county continued to provide vaccinations at public health centers, jails, and locations where high‑risk individuals congregate.

To understand the extent to which responding to the hepatitis A outbreak affected the Health Agency’s PHNs, we interviewed Foster Care and Children’s Services PHNs about their involvement in the hepatitis A response, examined the overtime hours that PHNs from all Health Agency branches worked from July through December 2017 as part of the hepatitis A response efforts, and assessed PHN responses to our survey regarding the impact of the outbreak on their regular workloads. We determined that PHNs from Foster Care and Children’s Services were not heavily involved in the outbreak response efforts. According to PHN supervisors in their respective programs, Foster Care PHNs were not used for response efforts, and at least five of the 25 Children’s Services PHNs were temporarily reassigned for short periods of time. The PHN supervisor for Foster Care told us it was her understanding that Foster Care PHNs were not used because of requirements associated with their funding source as well as the priority for increasing compliance rates for health and dental examinations. The PHN supervisor for Children’s Services stated that Children’s Services PHNs who were not assigned to the outbreak picked up the regular caseload work for PHNs who were, and that outbreak assignments affected PHNs’ ability to meet deadlines for eligibility determination in some cases.

Furthermore, the Health Agency’s data showed that 92 PHNs worked overtime as part of the hepatitis A response. The average hepatitis A‑related overtime per PHN in 2017 was 29 hours, or less than five hours per month. However, the actual overtime worked ranged from less than one hour to 361 hours per PHN. An Epidemiology and Immunization Services Branch PHN supervisor worked 361 hours of overtime related to the hepatitis A response, or an average of about 60 overtime hours per month. In fact, the three PHNs who worked the most overtime hours for the hepatitis A outbreak response—more than 212 overtime hours each and collectively nearly one‑third of the total hepatitis A overtime that PHNs worked—were PHN supervisors in the Epidemiology and Immunization Services or Public Health Preparedness and Response branches. Given the large scale of the outbreak, we do not consider the average of 29 overtime hours worked over six months by PHNs excessive.

In their responses to our survey, some PHNs criticized the Health Agency for how it handled the hepatitis A outbreak. Specifically, 10 PHNs raised concerns related to the Health Agency’s management of the outbreak, including five with concerns related to PHNs’ roles as part of the response effort. One of the five PHNs stated that when there is an emergency like the hepatitis A outbreak, the Health Agency should “have a plan in place rather than taking nurses from current positions, leaving current programs and remaining staff to suffer.” Furthermore, 50 of 71 PHNs (70 percent) responded “yes” to our survey question about whether the hepatitis A emergency affected their ability to maintain their normal caseload or workload.

Concerns regarding caseloads notwithstanding, protecting the public’s health is one of PHNs’ key roles. Directors of Public Health Nursing, an organization of the directors of nursing within local California health jurisdictions that provides input to the California Department of Public Health, the Legislature, and others on health issues, describes protecting the public’s health during disasters or emergencies as a main role of public health nursing. Specifically, the organization states that providing mass vaccinations for disease outbreaks, pandemic influenza preparedness, seasonal immunizations, and other large‑scale disease prevention events and exercises is a key activity of PHNs. Based on this description of PHNs’ roles, San Diego County PHNs’ activities in responding to the hepatitis A outbreak were not outside the scope of their work, despite the impact those activities may have had on their regular caseloads.

Furthermore, to help the county with its hepatitis A response and to support its vaccination efforts, the Health Agency issued requests for quotation to obtain temporary nurses for its regions in August 2017. According to its after action report, San Diego County used an additional 158 staff for vaccination efforts as follows: 121 contract nurses, seven nurses from its intermittent worker list, and 30 Medical Reserve Corps nurses. Furthermore, according to a PHN in its Epidemiology and Immunization Services Branch, the Health Agency contracted with hospitals and fire departments for an additional 131 vaccination staff. Health Agency billing summaries show that temporary nurses worked nearly 6,800 hours responding to the outbreak, work that likely reduced the amount of time that the Health Agency’s PHNs needed to spend on outbreak response efforts.

Although the Health Agency appears to have followed its surge plan during the hepatitis A outbreak, the plan was in draft form during the outbreak. The Health Agency finalized the surge plan on June 15, 2018, and a PHN supervisor told us that the Health Agency will assign the plan to PHNs as required reading. Distributing the surge plan to the Health Agency’s PHNs and training them on its protocols will better ensure that PHNs understand their responsibilities during future public health emergencies.

Recommendation

To better ensure that its PHNs are prepared for future public health emergencies, the Health Agency should distribute its surge plan to its PHNs and train them on its protocols.


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Other Areas We Reviewed

To address the audit objectives approved by the Joint Legislative Audit Committee (Audit Committee), we looked at several other issues. Specifically, we reviewed the Health Agency’s practices for recruiting and hiring PHNs, including examining its PHN vacancies. We also assessed the sufficiency of its financial resources regarding PHN staffing. Below are the results of our reviews.

The Health Agency Uses the County’s Civil Service Framework to Fill Its Vacancies and Relies on the County for Formal Recruiting

San Diego County’s civil service practices and procedures require the Health Agency to fill its PHN vacancies from a list established through the county’s certification process, wherein names of eligible candidates are provided to the Health Agency based on the Health Agency’s criteria. According to its group human resources director, the Health Agency uses the county’s civil service hiring and recruitment processes because the Health Agency is not a separate entity. The Health Agency appears to have an adequate supply of qualified PHN applicants: its group human resources director reported that the county has had a qualified candidate pool for the PHN classification that meets the definition of a full certification list under the civil service rules. For example, from September 12, 2016, to March 24, 2017, 117 people applied for a PHN position, of which 90 qualified and were placed on the civil service list, and from which the Health Agency hired 12 PHNs. Similarly, from March 27, 2017, to November 10, 2017, 142 people applied for a PHN position, of which 107 were placed on the list, and from which the Health Agency hired 13 PHNs.

The group human resources director also told us that although San Diego County formally recruits on its behalf, the Health Agency coordinates recruitment jointly with the county’s human resources department. She said this recruitment outreach includes a strategy to reach out to local colleges and that the Health Agency also occasionally attends job fairs at local universities by sending one or two PHNs alongside the county human resources representative to provide specialized information to prospective applicants. She also told us that the Health Agency recruits at colleges in regions that have higher PHN vacancies. For example, when the North Coastal and North Inland regions struggled with PHN vacancies, the Health Agency recruited at California State University San Marcos, located nearby.

In addition to reviewing the Health Agency’s practices for recruiting PHNs, we examined its PHN vacancies during fiscal years 2014–15 through 2016–17. The vacancy rate for PHN positions as of October 31 was 9 percent in 2015 and 2016, and 12 percent in 2017. Although these rates were comparable to vacancy rates for other public health organizations we identified, the Health Agency does not have a target vacancy rate that it uses to monitor PHN staffing. Because the Health Agency was working toward filling its vacancies, we also looked at the amount of time it took the Health Agency to fill its PHN vacancies over our audit period. According to its group human resources director, the Health Agency does not have a benchmark regarding the amount of time it should take to fill a PHN vacancy; however, she said one could expect it to take four to six months. On average over the three years we reviewed, we found that the Health Agency filled its PHN vacancies within four months. However, as indicated in Figure 6, the annual average amount of time to fill vacancies exceeded this time frame in at least one year for all but one of the six regions.

Figure 6
Time to Fill PHN Positions Varies Significantly by Region

Figure 6 is a bar chart that shows the time to fill PHN positions varied significantly by region for the three fiscal years we examined.

Source: Analysis of Health Agency’s human resources data.

The Health Agency’s Financial Resources for PHNs Appear Adequate

Based on our review of financial information from Public Health Services branches and each of the Health Agency’s regions for the past three fiscal years, we did not find financial impediments that would prevent the Health Agency from filling its 192 currently authorized PHN positions to meet the needs of its programs. According to data provided by the Health Agency, state (including realignment) and federal money make up the primary funding sources for programs that employ PHNs, although San Diego County also provides county and miscellaneous fund revenue. According to its finance officer, the Health Agency has some flexibility in how it budgets and recognizes realignment revenue, and it tries to ensure that each division as a whole stays within budget rather than that individual programs stay within budget.

We also specifically reviewed the funding sources for the Foster Care and Children’s Services programs. State and federal funds make up the primary sources for these programs. San Diego County’s contributions are matched by these state and federal funds at percentages dictated by Health Care Services guidelines. Each year, Health Care Services sends a letter to Foster Care and Children’s Services describing their applicable federal and state allocations. According to their respective administrative coordinator and administrative manager, Foster Care spends its entire state allocation annually and draws federal funding based on the percentage of time each staff member spends on foster care duties, while Children’s Services does not always spend its entire annual state allocation due to vacancies. The programs’ administrators submit annual staffing and services budget worksheets to Health Care Services listing the number of PHNs and other program employees and the total number of cases for each program. Health Care Services requires the Health Agency to comply with all federal, state, and relevant Health Care Services rules pertaining to the respective program as a condition of accepting allocated funds. Importantly, the state and federal funding sources for Foster Care limit PHN activities to administrative and case management functions; for this reason, the Health Agency did not allow Foster Care PHNs to participate in responding to the hepatitis A outbreak, as we discussed here.


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Scope and Methodology

The Audit Committee requested that the California State Auditor audit San Diego County’s Health Agency to determine whether adequate levels of county PHNs are available to appropriately serve the residents of San Diego County, including underserved and at‑risk populations. Table 3 lists the objectives that the Audit Committee approved and the methods we used to address them.


Table 3
Audit Objectives and the Methods Used to Address Them
Audit Objective Method
1 Review and evaluate the laws, rules, and regulations significant to the audit objectives. Reviewed relevant laws, policies and procedures, industry standards and best practices, and contracts and memoranda related to PHN staffing.
2 Determine whether the Health Agency is meeting its statutory obligation to provide care and appropriate staffing levels to San Diego County’s children in foster care by:
  • Evaluated the management controls the Health Agency has in place to ensure that it provides adequate care to the county’s children in foster care.
  • Identified the caseload and other metrics that the Health Agency records and how it uses them to inform decision makers, including about allocating PHN staff.
  • Identified and calculated average foster care caseloads for the Health Agency’s PHNs on July 1 of 2015, 2016, and 2017 and compared them to state benchmarks.
  • Reviewed California Child Welfare Indicators Project data to identify the statewide trend in the number of foster care youth.
  • Interviewed key personnel to determine whether the Health Agency monitors the ratio of foster children to PHNs and what actions, if any, it has taken to reduce the ratio of foster children to PHNs. Foster Care managers did not identify any specific action the Health Agency has taken to reduce the ratio of foster children to PHNs.
  • Surveyed and interviewed Foster Care PHNs to determine whether they were aware of any instances in which clients were negatively affected as a result of the Health Agency’s PHN staffing practices.
a. Identifying the average foster care caseload for the Health Agency’s PHNs over the last three years.
b. Identifying what actions, if any, the Health Agency has taken to reduce the ratio of foster children to PHNs.
3 Evaluate the Health Agency’s allocation of its PHN resources by determining: Because average caseloads vary significantly depending on the programs to which PHNs are assigned, calculating an average caseload for all Health Agency PHNs collectively is not meaningful. Therefore, other than our assessment of Foster Care as part of Objective 2, we focused most of our work for this objective primarily on Children’s Services, a program for which 81 percent of PHNs responding to our survey said high caseloads limited their effectiveness.
  • Interviewed key staff and reviewed program policies, procedures, and internal guidelines and time frames.
  • Calculated average caseloads for Children’s Services on July 1 of 2015, 2016, and 2017 and compared them to state benchmarks.
a. Whether the Health Agency’s PHN allocations comply with state guidelines and time frames. Further, identify the average caseload for the Health Agency’s PHNs over the last three years.
b. To the extent possible, whether the Health Agency’s PHN allocations are appropriate in relation to current public health impacts.
  • Interviewed key personnel to identify recent public health events that could affect PHN allocations. Health Agency personnel identified the 2017 hepatitis A outbreak as the most severe event; we therefore focused our work for this objective on this event because it was ongoing during our audit period.
  • Examined the Health Agency’s surge plan and interviewed key staff regarding the plan, the Health Agency’s use of PHNs, its contracting of temporary nurses, and overtime issues related to the 2017 hepatitis A outbreak.
  • Reviewed responses to our survey of all PHNs in relation to the 2017 hepatitis A outbreak.
  • Analyzed PHNs’ overtime data for January 1, 2015, through December 1, 2017.
  • Examined San Diego County’s after action report and the 2017/2018 grand jury report related to the hepatitis A outbreak.
c. Whether the Health Agency has adequate financial resources to address PHN staffing deficiencies, if any exist.
  • Analyzed the Health Agency’s budget requests, and approved budgets, for Health Agency programs that employ PHNs for fiscal years 2014–15 through 2016–17.
  • Interviewed key personnel and reviewed relevant documents to determine what discretion the Health Agency has in using various sources of funding for its PHNs, and what the Health Agency has done to obtain additional financial resources for its PHNs for fiscal years 2014–15 through 2016–17.
4 Evaluate the Health Agency’s PHN staffing levels and vacancies by determining:
  • Interviewed key personnel and reviewed relevant documents regarding the Health Agency’s hiring policies and procedures and recruiting programs.
  • Analyzed vacancies for the Health Agency’s PHN positions for fiscal years 2014–15 through 2016–17.
a. Whether the Health Agency has developed and implemented recruiting programs, policies, procedures, and hiring practices to ensure there are appropriate levels of county PHNs available to serve the public.
b. Whether the Health Agency has adequately staffed its facilities with PHNs and filled its PHN vacancies.
5 Review and assess any other issues that are significant to the audit. Surveyed the 171 PHNs the Health Agency employed as of January 3, 2018 regarding their perspectives on the audit’s objectives.

Sources: Analysis of the Audit Committee’s audit request number 2017‑124, planning documents, and information and documentation identified in the table column titled Method.

Assessment of Data Reliability

In performing this audit, we obtained electronic data files extracted from the data sources listed in Table 4. The U.S. Government Accountability Office, whose standards we are statutorily required to follow, requires us to assess the sufficiency and appropriateness of computer‑processed information that we use to support our findings and conclusions. Table 4 describes the analyses we conducted using data from these sources, our methods for testing, and the results of our assessments. Although these determinations may affect the precision of numbers we present, there is sufficient evidence in total to support our audit findings and conclusions.


Table 4
Methods Used to Assess Data Reliability
DATA SOURCE PURPOSE METHOD AND RESULT CONCLUSION
Social Services

Child Welfare Services/Case Management System
To determine the number of foster care cases per PHN at specific points in time from January 1, 2015, through December 31, 2017
  • Performed data-set verification procedures and electronic testing of key data elements and did not identify any significant issues.
  • Did not perform accuracy or completeness testing on these data because physical source documents did not exist during our audit period.
Undetermined reliability for this audit purpose.

Although this determination may affect the precision of numbers we present, there is sufficient evidence in total to support our findings, conclusions, and recommendations.
Health Agency

Kronos
To determine the annual number of overtime hours per PHN from January 1, 2015, through December 31, 2017.
  • Performed data-set verification procedures and electronic testing of key data elements and did not identify any significant issues.
  • Did not perform accuracy or completeness testing on these data because physical source documents did not exist during our audit period.
Undetermined reliability for this audit purpose.

Although this determination may affect the precision of numbers we present, there is sufficient evidence in total to support our findings, conclusions, and recommendations.
Health Agency

Oracle (General Ledger System)
To determine the funding amounts for selected programs with PHNs for fiscal years 2014–15, 2015–16, and 2016–17.
  • Performed data-set verification procedures and electronic testing of key data elements and did not identify any significant issues.
  • Did not perform accuracy or completeness testing on these data because physical source documents did not exist during our audit period.
Undetermined reliability for this audit purpose.

Although this determination may affect the precision of numbers we present, there is sufficient evidence in total to support our findings, conclusions, and recommendations.
Health Agency

PeopleSoft
To determine the number of days that PHN positions remained vacant and how long each PHN incumbent filled a position during the period January 1, 2014, through December 31, 2017.
  • Performed data-set verification procedures and electronic testing of key data elements and did not identify any significant issues.
  • Did not perform accuracy or completeness testing on these data because physical source documents did not exist during our audit period.
Undetermined reliability for this audit purpose.

Although this determination may affect the precision of numbers we present, there is sufficient evidence in total to support our findings, conclusions, and recommendations.

Source: Analysis of various documents, interviews, and data from the entities listed in this table.


We conducted this audit under the authority vested in the California State Auditor by Section 8543 et seq. of the California Government Code and according to generally accepted government auditing standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives specified in the Scope and Methodology section of the report. We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives.

Respectfully submitted,

ELAINE M. HOWLE, CPA
State Auditor


Date:
July 26, 2018

Staff:
Dale A. Carlson, MPA, CGFM, Audit Principal
Rachel Hibbard, JD
Senay Hawelti, MIA
Bonnie Roy, PhD
Joe Wilson

Legal Counsel:
J. Christopher Dawson, Senior Staff Counsel

For questions regarding the contents of this report, please contact
Margarita Fernández, Chief of Public Affairs, at 916.445.0255.




Footnotes

1 State regulations require foster children to receive health assessments and dental exams according to schedules established by the Child Health and Disability Prevention Program. For example, between the ages of 3 and 18 years, foster children should receive a health assessment annually and a dental exam every six months. Additionally, foster children residing in out‑of‑home placements should receive a medical and dental exam within 30 days of initial placement. Go back to text

2 We relied on Social Services’ 1999 All County Letter Number 99‑108 and Health Care Services’ 2017 Child Health and Disability Prevention Program Letter Number 01‑2017 for Foster Care caseload benchmarks and on Health Care Services’ current Children’s Medical Services Plan and Fiscal Guidelines, which have been in effect since fiscal year 2013–14, for Children’s Services caseload benchmarks. Go back to text

3 Health Care Services’ Children’s Medical Services Plan and Fiscal Guidelines (plan) mentions a staffing ratio of 1 nurse to 400 cases. This staffing ratio applies to PHNs and other types of nurses. Because the Health Agency’s 25 Children’s Services nurses are all PHNs, we refer to the plan’s staffing ratio as a PHN ratio for audit purposes. Go back to text



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