Quality Assessment in Healthcare

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Intro & Dimensions - Building Better Health

  • Quality in Healthcare: Degree to which health services ↑ likelihood of desired health outcomes, consistent with current professional knowledge. (AHRQ)
  • Core Approaches:
    • QA (Quality Assurance): Retrospective; measures compliance against set standards; problem-focused; "doing it right".
    • QI (Quality Improvement): Proactive, continuous process; data-driven; aims to improve systems & processes; "doing the right thing right".
    • TQM (Total Quality Management): Organization-wide philosophy; continuous improvement involving all staff; customer focus; strong leadership.
  • Donabedian Model: Classic framework for quality assessment.
  • IOM's Six Dimensions of Quality (STEEEP) 📌:
    • Safe: Avoiding patient harm from care.
    • Timely: Reducing waits & harmful delays.
    • Effective: Evidence-based care; avoiding under/overuse.
    • Efficient: Avoiding waste (equipment, supplies, energy).
    • Equitable: Care quality not varying by personal traits.
    • Patient-centered: Respectful, responsive to patient preferences/needs/values.

⭐ The Donabedian model (Structure-Process-Outcome) is the most widely accepted framework for assessing the quality of healthcare.

Donabedian Model of Healthcare Quality Assessment

Assessment & Indicators - Gauging Goodness

  • Quality Assessment Methods:
    • Audits: Medical (peer review of care), Clinical (systematic review vs. explicit criteria).
    • Sentinel Event Analysis: Analysis of unexpected occurrences causing death/serious harm.
    • Root Cause Analysis (RCA): Systematic process to find fundamental causes of incidents.
  • Donabedian Model (S-P-O): Framework for quality.
    • Structure: Resources, organizational setup.
      • E.g., Staffing levels (doctor:patient ratio), equipment availability, NABH accreditation.
    • Process: Care delivery activities.
      • E.g., Average waiting time, adherence to clinical guidelines, % children fully immunized.
    • Outcome: Effects of care on health.
      • E.g., Mortality rates (IMR, MMR), patient satisfaction scores, HAI rates, 30-day readmission rates.
  • Key Indian Standards/Bodies:
    • NABH: National Accreditation Board for Hospitals & Healthcare Providers.
    • NQAS: National Quality Assurance Standards (public health facilities).
    • ISO 9001: International standard for Quality Management Systems.

⭐ The Donabedian model (Structure-Process-Outcome) is the most widely accepted framework for assessing the quality of healthcare.

Improvement & Safety - Elevating Excellence

  • Quality Improvement (QI) Cycles & Tools:
    • PDSA Cycle (Plan-Do-Study-Act): Iterative model for testing changes.
*   **Root Cause Analysis (RCA):** Identifies underlying causes of problems.
    -   **Fishbone Diagram (Ishikawa):** Visualizes potential causes (📌 6Ms: Manpower, Methods, Machines, Materials, Measurements, Mother Nature/Environment).
    -   **5 Whys:** Repeatedly asking "Why?" to uncover root cause.
*   Other tools: Six Sigma (DMAIC), Lean (reduce waste).
  • Patient Safety: Focus on preventing harm to patients.
    • Medical Errors:
      • Types: Errors of commission (wrong action) vs. omission (no action taken).
      • Sentinel Event: Unexpected occurrence involving death or serious physical/psychological injury, or risk thereof. Requires immediate investigation (RCA).
    • Reporting Systems: Incident reporting (adverse events, near misses). Crucial for learning & prevention.
    • Safety Culture: Shared commitment to safety.
      • Blame-free reporting environment.
      • Just Culture: Balances accountability & system improvement.
    • WHO Surgical Safety Checklist: Proven to reduce complications.

⭐ Most medical errors are due to system flaws, not individual incompetence. A "Just Culture" encourages reporting by distinguishing between human error, at-risk behavior, and reckless behavior.

PDSA Quality Improvement Cycle Diagram

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Donabedian Model (Structure, Process, Outcome) is fundamental for quality assessment.
  • NABH is India's key hospital accreditation body, ensuring quality.
  • PDSA cycle (Plan-Do-Study-Act) drives continuous quality improvement (CQI).
  • Patient safety focuses on preventing sentinel events via Root Cause Analysis (RCA).
  • Six Sigma (DMAIC) methodology minimizes defects and improves efficiency.
  • Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) like infection rates measure healthcare quality.
  • ISO 9001 provides international quality management standards.

Practice Questions: Quality Assessment in Healthcare

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Which of the following is NOT a core component of the WHO's global STI control strategy?

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Flashcards: Quality Assessment in Healthcare

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Doctor-population ratio is an example of _____

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Doctor-population ratio is an example of _____

Health care delivery indicators (Utilization rate/Health care delivery indicator)

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