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How can clinicians measure safety and quality in acute care?

journal contribution
posted on 2011-03-01, 00:00 authored by Peter J Pronovost, Thomas Nolan, Scott Zeger, Marlene Miller, Haya Rubin, Elizabeth ManiasElizabeth Manias
The demand for high quality care is increasing and warranted. Evidence suggests that the quality of care in hospitals can be improved. The greatest opportunity to improve outcomes for patients over the next quarter century will probably come not from discovering new treatments but from learning how to deliver existing effective therapies. To improve, caregivers need to know what to do, how they are doing, and be able to improve the processes of care. The ability to monitor performance, though challenging in healthcare, is essential to improving quality of care. We present a practical method to assess and learn from routine practice. Methods to evaluate performance from industrial engineering can be broadly applied to efforts to improve the quality of healthcare. One method that may help to provide caregivers frequent feedback is time series data--ie, results are graphically correlated with time. Broad use of these tools might lead to the necessary improvements in quality of care.

History

Journal

International journal of nursing studies

Volume

48

Pagination

347-358

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

eISSN

1873-491X

Language

eng

Publication classification

CN.1 Other journal article

Copyright notice

2010, Elsevier Ltd.

Issue

3

Publisher

Elsevier

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