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Program Evaluation Center at Fredonia

 

The Program Evaluation Center at SUNY Fredonia (PEC):

A Health and Human Services Research and Training Center

     Overview: 

The Program Evaluation Center was established in 2017 as a collaboration between the Chautauqua County Mental Hygiene Services and Chautauqua Tapestry. The Center faculty, staff, and partners are committed to contributing to health and human services research and program evaluation, educating and training students and health services research professionals, and ensuring that SUNY Fredonia faculty have an avenue to share their expertise with community agencies, and professionals interested in evaluating the outcomes of their programs and services. Support for the PEC is derived from grants and subcontracts that support Chautauqua County and Western New York systems of care initiatives. 

PEC evaluation activities include a broad array of evaluation and assessment activities including conducting and consulting on clinical outcomes, workforce development initiatives, and implementation science research projects. The staff also participates in analyzing service needs and provider gaps through data analysis and needs assessments. 

A pillar of the Program Evaluation Center (PEC) is participation in the conduct of health and human services training and research. Training is available to SUNY Fredonia students and faculty members, as well as regional providers and community leaders. For SUNY Fredonia students, research assistantships may be available. An interdisciplinary faculty fellowship program has also been established to develop a culture of interdisciplinary research and collaboration at the university and in the community. 

The Program Evaluation Center (PEC; the Center) supports regional mental hygiene services, schools, and agencies by contributing to ways that the systems of care and human services are evaluated. The Center develops and helps implement evaluation strategies to investigate which interventions work and under what circumstances within the human services system, and to document the need for continuation, expansion, or extinction of programs and services. This evidence-based approach examines program outcomes and efficiencies by analyzing and synthesizing data that informs the most effective and efficient care for clients. 

                The PEC represents a strong university – community partnership between SUNY Fredonia, the Chautauqua County systems of care initiative, Chautauqua Tapestry, and the county Certified Community Behavioral Health Center (CCBHC) programs. The Certified Community Behavioral Health Center (CCBHC IA) and Tapestry grants are federally funded by The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). The PEC provides program evaluations of services for these initiatives. 

                The purpose of the Chautauqua County CCBHC IA is to transform the community behavioral health systems and provide comprehensive, coordinated behavioral health care by providing a range of outreach, screening, assessment, treatment, care coordination, and recovery support in the county. The CCBHC IA supports recovery from mental illness and/or substance use disorders by providing access to high-quality mental health and substance use services, regardless of an individual’s ability to pay. 

                The Chautauqua Tapestry operates locally under the auspices of the Chautauqua County Department of Mental Hygiene (CCDMH). Chautauqua Tapestry focuses on children and youth 0 to 21 years of age who are at risk for or diagnosed with Serious Emotional Disturbance (SED) and their families. The grant seeks to integrate behavioral health services into every level of the community. 

Goals:

The PEC team is comprised of interdisciplinary faculty members and research assistants at SUNY Fredonia from Speech-Language Pathology, Social Work, Psychology, Education, and other disciplines. Team members collaborate with Fredonia faculty and students, and county mental health service providers, to enhance education, research, and training, and prepare future mental health care professionals

The Center’s goals include:

Facilitating the use of data to evaluate services throughout the system of care to provide outcomes driven care that best serves clients receiving mental health services.

Increasing the use of data to evaluate services throughout the system of care and establish the efficacy and credibility of programsand interventions.

Identifying and sharing practical ways to use existing data to evaluate interventions and practices and assisting providers to evaluate their practices.

Building collaborations with and between practitioners, academics, families, and service providers.

Working with SUNY Fredonia faculty and students, and county mental health services providers, to enhance student training opportunities and prepare future professionals in health and human services. 

 

PEC Guiding Principles

The PEC is guided by the following principles:

Accelerate: 

Provide individualized technical assistance to meet the needs of diverse communities to evaluate mental hygiene and educational services and drive impactful interventions.

Advocate: 

Establish evidence for what is effective in individual communities and provider systems and serve as change agents committed to equity and inclusion.

Engage: 

Connect county, regional, and state networks of community partners, enabling them to share ideas, create milestones, and assess the impact of programs and services.

Inform: 

Analyze, synthesize, and distill data and research to create relatable tools and usable resources for all constituents.

Program Evaluation Center

Dr. Kevin Kearns

Director, Fredonia Program Evaluation Center (716) 673-3202

Dr. Michael Clarkson-Hendrix

Associate Professor of Social Work (716) 673-4611

Dr. Lisa Denton

Associate Professor of Psychology (716) 673-3893

Biographical Sketch

Kevin Kearns Biographical Sketch

Dr. Kevin P. Kearns is the Director of the Fredonia Program Evaluation Center, and Professor of Communication Disorders and Sciences at SUNY Fredonia. He has served in various academic, research, and administrative positions at the university including Interim Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs; Vice President for Advancement, Engagement, and Economic Development; campus Operations Manager (chief research officer) for the SUNY Research Foundation, and Associate Provost for Graduate Studies and Research. He currently serves on the advisory boards of the Brooks - TLC Hospital System, the Chautauqua County Visitors Bureau, the Fredonia Technology Incubator, and the Research Advisory Council of the Educational Advisory Board (EAB; Washington, D.C.). Dr. Kearns previously held academic appointments at Northeastern University, the Massachusetts General Hospital Institute of Health Professions (MGH-IHP), and the MIT-Harvard Speech and Hearing Bioscience and Technology (SHBT) program. He has published and lectured extensively in the areas of neurologically based communication disorders, clinical research designs, and the measurement of clinical outcomes.

Michael Clarkson-Hendrix Biographical Sketch

Dr. Michael Clarkson-Hendrix, PhD MSW is an Associate Professor of Social Work with the Department of Sociocultural and Justice Sciences at SUNY Fredonia. Dr. Clarkson-Hendrix holds a Master of Science in School Psychology from the College of Saint Rose and a Master of Social Work and Doctor of Philosophy in Social Welfare from the University at Albany. His research interests center on the intersection of behavioral health, disability, and workforce development. Dr. Clarkson-Hendrix is skilled in quantitative, qualitative, and mixed-methods research. Dr. Clarkson-Hendrix’s program evaluation experience includes projects assessing kinship navigation services, enhanced case management for women experiencing opioid addiction, and an MSW training initiative to address shortages of behavioral health providers for veterans and rural communities. He currently is serving as lead evaluator for Chautauqua County Mental Hygiene Department’s Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinic – Improvement and Advancement grant. He also evaluated a cross-institutional addictions services leadership program funded through the Chautauqua County Mental Hygiene Department. Dr. Clarkson-Hendrix has over 10 years of practice experience in behavioral health and child welfare.

Lisa Denton Biographical Sketch

Dr. Lisa Denton is an Associate Professor of Psychology at SUNY Fredonia. She earned a Ph.D. in Counseling Psychology from Indiana University, with a concentration in Public Health. She completed her doctoral clinical internship at the University Counseling Center at Florida State University. At Fredonia, Dr. Denton teaches undergraduate coursework in Psychological Disorders and Counseling, and mentor’s students in Clinical Psychology research. 

Dr. Denton’s research focuses on the impact of substance use on health outcomes, the use of substances during pregnancy, and the sharing of health information among expectant mothers. Her recent publications include studies on the safety of psychotropic medication use during pregnancy, and online message boards as platforms for peer health advice about prescription medications and cannabis. She has also published multiple studies on building and supporting successful group therapy programs in clinical settings.

Program Evaluation Center

  • Kevin P. Kearns, Ph.D., Director Communication Disorders and Sciences Department, Thompson W123 º£½ÇÉçÇø Fredonia, NY 14063

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