Applying continuous improvement in public reporting

Purpose - This paper aims to describe the history and growth of mandatory public reporting of healthcare-associated infection rates and the philosophy and implementation of an evidence-based total-quality-oriented state government program and also to provide critical appraisal of recognized assumpti...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical governance 2010-04, Vol.15 (2), p.79-91
Hauptverfasser: Birnbaum, David, Van Buren, Jude
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container_title Clinical governance
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creator Birnbaum, David
Van Buren, Jude
description Purpose - This paper aims to describe the history and growth of mandatory public reporting of healthcare-associated infection rates and the philosophy and implementation of an evidence-based total-quality-oriented state government program and also to provide critical appraisal of recognized assumptions underlying this movement.Design methodology approach - This paper provides a narrative review of pertinent evaluation research literature and the authors' own experience.Findings - Washington is one of few states that hired experts in the subject area to develop its new program. It is one of the first exploring optimal ways to validate the rates reported, and one of very few taking evidence-based approaches to all aspects of program design.Practical implications - The work provides a model for less-developed agencies to follow.Originality value - This is a new and unprecedented role for state health departments, but offers opportunities to raise standards of practice through continuous quality improvement approaches with hospital partners while regaining public trust through transparency. Weak evidence supporting fundamental assumptions, and failure of prior approaches, indicate that we must explore new paths rather than follow established ones.
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source Emerald A-Z Current Journals; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
subjects Continuous quality improvement
Evaluative research
Evidence based
Experts
Government
Health
Hospitals
Infection
Mandatory reporting
Narratives
Patients
Public health
Quality
Safety
United States of American
title Applying continuous improvement in public reporting
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