Lecture for medical students King Fahad
Medical City Riyadh 2014 October 29, 2014
Definitions
1: Quality Control (QC)
·
The concept of quality control (QC)
started in industry where the aim was to detect defective parts and products and
not allow them to be sold to the consumer.
·
Quality inspectors were trained and
inspection methods were developed to be able to certify that products were good
before release into the market.
·
Statisticians working for
manufacturing companies have developed very sophisticated approaches of error
analysis.
Definitions
2: Quality Assurance (QA)
·
The concept of quality assurance
(QA) is more advanced than that of quality control.
·
QA assumes that there is a definable
quality level that is acceptable and efforts are made to make sure that
performance does not fall below that.
·
QA has a disadvantage of being
static in nature in a rapidly changing and improving field.
Definitions
3: Quality Improvement (QI)
·
The concept of quality improvement
(QI) assumes that whatever is done could be done better and that the criteria
or levels of performance have to improve on a continuous basis.
·
QI is a more dynamic concept than
the two described above.
·
QI is the trend of the future
because the increasingly competitive health care industry will insist on
quality.
·
Health care providers as well as
managers will be interested in methods of
not only assuring but of improving that quality.
Definitions
4: Health Care Providers (HCP)
·
This term refers to the
professionals who take care of patients. It includes physicians, nurses, and
other professional support personnel.
·
The basic interest of all HCPs is to
provide professionally competent care. They have a professional and moral
responsibility to do the best for their patients.
·
In the traditional mode of health
care HCPs were not supposed to consider resources in their clinical decisions.
They would aim at quality care whatever the price.
·
Today’s managed care, they are
finding it increasingly difficult not to consider resources and health
economics.
·
HCPs are also becoming resentful of
cost and profit-conscious business managers who want to control their
consumption of health care resources and remind them that these resources are
limited.
Definitions
5: Health care consumers (HCC)
·
Healthy and ill persons who seek
preventive or curative health services are generally referred to as health care
consumers.
·
The aim of HCCs is to get quality
care in a respectful atmosphere.
·
Today’s consumer is more demanding
because of higher education and more general knowledge about medicine.
·
The increasing trends of private
care are making consumers demand quality for the price they pay.
·
The definition of quality used to be
left to the professional health care providers. This situation is changing with
consumers being interested as well.
Definitions
6: Health care Managers (HCM)
·
HCMs is a new breed in the health
care industry whose basic interests may be more related to business efficiency
and perhaps profits.
·
Without being health care professionals,
HCMs exert a powerful impact on the way health care is delivered by controlling
the health care resources.
·
HCM’s control of health care often
goes out of bounds when business managers in a hospital seem to be dictating
what types of treatment modalities a physician must use or what types of
medication he should prescribe.
·
HCMs cannot be dismissed as an
unwelcome interference. They play a vital role because in the long run,
economics cannot be divorced from medicine.
Quality
process 1: Betterment of Care
·
The quest for quality is an integral
part of good medical practice. QI should not be looked at as looking over the
shoulders of health care providers to discover their mistakes and thus condemn
or penalise them.
·
Successful quality programs should
be welcomed by the care providers and they should look at them as a means of
improving their work.
·
QI is team-work. It is a
misconception to look at QI consultants as policemen prowling around the hospital
to catch culprits who are violating standards of good practice.
Quality
process 1: Betterment of Care … cont
·
All care providers are members of
the QI team and all share the same purpose of improving care. All will share
the credit of improved care as a result of QI efforts.
·
The quality process can not be
generic. Each institution or even each department has its own approach to
quality. There can not be one prescription that fits all situations.
·
The quality process must be simple,
practical, and relevant to the local situation.
·
All people involved in the process
must be able to understand it. As soon it becomes too complex or too technical
it loses its major impact.
Quality
process 2: Identifying and Defining Problems
·
Mistakes and errors are part of life
and are not completely avoidable. Errors of omission or commission will occur
in any system managed by humans. A biological system will also develop errors
inevitably.
·
Some of the errors may be
no-differential, occur purely by chance. Others may be differential reflecting
a consistent bias or trend.
·
QI is more meaningful for non-random
errors because a causal pathway can be established and something can be done
about them.
Quality
process 2: Identifying and Defining Problems…cont
·
QI does not set itself the purpose
of establishing an error-free system because that is not possible. The
important issue is detecting errors early and resolving them.
·
The purpose of QI detects trends and
factors that are pre-cursors of major problems.
·
Random errors cannot be predicted
accurately but there are conditions that are conducive to their occurrence.
·
Non-random events are easier to
detect and study because they are consistent and associated causal or
aggravating factors can be discovered.
Quality
Process 3: Anticipating, Preventing, and Resolving Problems
·
QI does not confine itself to detecting
problems, it aims at looking for solutions and preventing future recurrence. A
QI report is incomplete without a series of recommendations on how to improve.
·
A QI report about a problem that is
un-resolvable given the existing and real constraints in manpower, knowledge,
technology, and resources is not of much benefit.
Quality
Process 3: Anticipating, Preventing, and Resolving Problems… cont
·
The QI consultant does not confine
himself to identifying or describing problems and recommending solutions, he
must go a step further to persuade, convince, and cajole the care providers to
change their ways and adopt his recommendations.
·
The QI consultant must also follow
up on the implementation of the recommendations. New problems may appear as a
result of that implementation. Sometimes the implementation may fail and the
reasons for that must be found.
Quality
process 4: Education and reassurance of care providers
·
The QI process identifies problems
and bottle-necks that the care provider cannot see easily in the daily heavy
routines of hospital work.
·
QI provides a new and different
perspective to the health care delivery process such that the health care
delivery personnel can undertake corrective or ameliorative measures. They thus
become educated and definitely better at whatever they are doing.
·
QI could be looked at as a process
of learning from mistakes. To achieve this purpose the QA process must be
continuous and comprehensive.
·
When the QI process finds that the
providers are doing a good job and they are told so, they are reassured. This
reassurance is needed a lot in the situation of continuous stress experienced
by health-care givers.
Quality
process 5: Protection of Consumers
·
Consumers need to be protected from
dangerous, wasteful, or ineffective treatment modalities.
·
The QI process could play the role
of overseeing and detecting problems, pointing them out, and suggesting
solutions.
·
In the era of rapidly-evolving
technologies and treatment modalities, serious problems appear frequently and
require urgent and effective solutions.
·
QI is likely to become a major
pre-occupation of the health-care profession because of the privatisation of
health care.
·
Since the profit motive is always
suspected to compromise care, both the consumers and the government want to
make sure that quality care is provided.
Quality
process 6: Legal and Business Factors:
·
The health-care providers, including
hospital and HMO managers as well as health insurance companies, are also
interested in setting up a good QI program to be able to detect and correct
problems.
·
Two purposes would be achieved by
this: (a) reassure clients and thus gain their loyalty in a very competitive
field and (b) Decrease mistakes that could result in litigation and heavy court
fines and penalties.
·
Today’s consumers are more educated
and more aware of medical matters and will not hesitate to go to court if they
feel that they were given sub-standard or poor care.
Organization of QI 1: Policy
·
QI should have strong institutional
backing. The head of the hospital or institution should lend his personal
backing.
·
A QI policy and procedures should be
approved by the governing board of the institution concerned.
·
Care should be taken in formulating
the QI policy and procedures to make sure that all providers of care are
involved and that the policy has grass-roots support.
·
HCPs should ‘own’ the policy and not
look at it as an imposition from above.
·
The QI policy should not be rigid.
It should be flexible and easy to adapt to changing circumstances without going
through a major restructuring process.
Organization of QI 2: External QI
·
It is always an advantage to have an
QI reviewer from outside the institution. His reports are easier to accept
because he has no personal connections or interests within the institution. He
may also bring a new insight to the problems that people within the institution
cannot have.
·
Recommendations for change from an
external reviewer are easier to accept.
·
A favourable QI report by an
outsider gives the institution more credibility.
·
The best way to carry out external
QI review is to have an independent consultant do it. He should not be a
permanent employee of the institution but is paid a consultancy fee based on a
clear consultancy contract.
Organization of QI 3: Internal QI
·
In addition to external QI review,
the institution should appoint internal QI reviewers.
·
A QI review nurse normally suffices
to collect the data needed. A QI physician could then work with her to analyse
the data and reach conclusions.
·
The nurse could do the follow-up on
the recommendations.
·
The physicians should however always
be personally involved in discussions with other care providers.
Organizational
of QI 4: Departmental or divisional responsibility
·
The QI process could be organised by
department or section.
·
Each department could set up its own
QI committee and appoint QI reviewers.
·
Each department could also decide on
its own procedures.
QI personnel
1: All care providers
·
QI succeeds most when it is part of
the institution’s organisational culture.
·
Thus all care providers should be
educated to think of themselves as stake-holders in the QI process.
·
This can be achieved by holding
special seminars and workshops on QI.
QI personnel
2: QI nurse
·
A QI nurse usually suffices for data
collection both on routine and more sophisticated cases. She should be
specially trained for this job.
·
She should be given opportunities to
visit other institutions and also attend seminars and conferences to stay up to
date in this rapidly-evolving field.
·
She should be given due recognition
and status in the institution so that other care providers do not look at her
as a person interfering in their work.
·
Working as a QI nurse should not be
career.
·
Every 2-3 years there should be a
rotation so that another person becomes a QI nurse and the former QI nurse
returns to the ward where she will be more quality-minded.
QI personnel
3: QI Physician
·
A QI physician can be selected on a
part-time basis to cover a department or section of the hospital. It is not
good practice to have a full-time QI physician; he will soon lose effectiveness
by being out of touch with the realities of the ward.
·
A QI physician may also start being
looked at as a ‘policeman’ which will jeopardise his role.
·
It is best for the QI physician to
be from the junior ranks again to emphasise that QI in not control or
supervision from above.
·
The role of the QI physician should
be to supervise the QI nurse and also analyse the data she collects.
·
QI physician is the one to present
the QI report to his peers because they may not easily accept it from the
nurses.
·
The position of QI physician should
also be held in rotation every 1-2 years.
QI personnel
4: QI Manager
·
For very large institutions with
many QI nurses and physicians scattered in many departments, there is need for
administrative co-ordination. This can be achieved by appointing a hospital QI
Manager.
·
Main functions of QI Manager are:
(a) make sure that QI procedures of each department are co-ordinated and that
everybody knows what everybody else is doing (b) convey QI recommendations to
top hospital management in situations that require high-level decisions
involving material and human resources to resolve the outstanding problems (c)
ensure inter-departmental co-ordination in resolving common problems.
QI personnel
5: QI committee
·
QI committees at the institutional
and departmental levels should be set up chaired by the most senior physician
available.
·
They should meet on a monthly basis to
listen to summary reports of problems identified, how they were resolved, and
measures to prevent recurrence in the future.
·
They should set themselves the task
of giving general guidelines and not working on the details.
Methods of QI 1: Setting criteria
·
The first step in any quality
process is to define the criteria to be used. The criteria should not be too
rigid because each health care delivery situation has its own peculiarities.
The criteria used in an emergency room should be different from those of a
cardiac clinic. The criteria should also change with time. As some problems are
resolved, new ones appear or take up a higher profile and should be given
priority.
·
Simply stated a criterion is a
simple statement of the expected standard or quality care. The criterion should
be simple and defined in such a way that it is possible to quantify it.
·
The process of setting criteria
should involve all those concerned and everybody should know by which criteria
they are being judged.
·
The criteria may be simple routine
issues like proper documentation of the patient record (identification numbers,
dates & times, signatures of providers, vital signs).
Methods of QI 1: Setting criteria… cont
·
Criteria may involve more
specialised issues of proper case management (diagnosis, treatment, and
follow-up).
·
Some criteria are related to drug
prescriptions (indication, dose, route, interactions, contra-indications, and
side-effects).
·
There are other criteria that focus
on consumer satisfaction both in a physical or psychological sense.
·
The concept of criteria in practice
requires agreeing on common protocols or approaches for managing various
conditions such that each physician does things in pretty much the same way.
·
Some physicians may find this
interference in their professional independence but experience has shown that
it can result in better, more efficient, and predictable care that can be
evaluated easily.
Methods of
QI 2: Sampling
·
The quality process attempts to draw
conclusions about the total health care process by observing in detail some
cases or events. Thus some form of sampling is needed.
·
The sampling is not primarily driven
by the need to get a representative sample. It is driven first by problem
identification. Then the records and other sources of information that have
relevance to that problem and can give a valid picture are examined.
·
The worst form of quality assurance
is to take a representative sample and start fishing for problems.
·
The sampling units could be charts,
wards or departments, patients, diagnoses, or procedures. Usually 10-20 units
are sufficient to provide a valid picture of what is going on.
Methods of
QI 2: Sampling… cont
·
It is a mistake for the QI reviewer
to single out cases or procedures by an individual physician or nurse for
review.
·
In some cases critical incidents
happen. They reflect the strengths and weaknesses of the health care system.
The QI reviewer must have a system of surveillance to make sure that such
incidents are detected. A critical incident is normally a problem or a major
mistake. It is very useful in that it is sometimes on the final causal pathway
of several problems in the health care delivery system.
·
Analysing a critical incident well
can unravel many problems that would normally take a long time to identify
using the normal sampling techniques.
Methods of
QI 3: Collecting Data:
·
The best source of data in hospital
practice and perhaps in most health care situations is the patient chart. The
patient chart is supposed to be a comprehensive record of physician, nursing,
prescription, and other activities.
·
The first aim of QI managers is to
make sure that records are complete, accurate, and updated. Thus chart review
is the bed-rock of most QI programs.
·
Additional information can be
obtained from attending ward rounds, discussions with patients and physicians,
or special questionnaires and surveys undertaken on specific problems.
Methods of
QI 3: Collecting Data… cont
·
Data could be collected over a given
period of time to describe the incidence of particular problems and establish
trends. Data collection should be continuous and regular. The best is to have
weekly reviews if there is sufficient manpower.
·
QA reviews once a fort-night are
possible.
·
Monthly reviews are too far apart to
be of much use.
·
Very useful data could be collected
from critical incidents that occur.
Methods of
QI 4: Analysing data:
·
The analysis needed in QI is very
simple. Use of sophisticated statistics could only serve to confuse the
picture.
·
The QI analyst must first establish
the incidence of a particular event or problem over a given time frame. He then
should next consider the trend; is it increasing, decreasing, or is it steady.
·
The co-factors associated with a
particular trend are then studied and correlations are established.
·
More detailed investigations are
then undertaken to find the mechanism involved, how exactly the co-factor(s)
operate(s) to cause the identified problem. The co-factors could be related to
the care provider (attitude, job satisfaction, knowledge, skills), to health
care resources (physical facilities, manpower, time), to the patient (attitude,
co-operation, compliance), or the general organisational culture
(laissez-faire, fastidious, efficiency, effectiveness, customer service).
Methods of
QI 4: Analysing data… cont
·
The data analysis by the QI reviewer
should not be considered final. He should sit with the care providers and
managers and review the basic data with them without telling them his own
conclusions and biases. He should listen carefully to their perspectives of the
problems since they could come up with a different conclusion.
·
The reviewer should be prepared to
change his own conclusions in the light of the discussions with the care
providers.
·
In some cases the providers may not
be forth-coming in terms of analysing the data in which case the QI reviewer
could give them his own conclusions and ask for their reactions.
Common
problems 1: Documentation
·
The most common problem is that of
documentation. Care providers in their rush to deal with a heavy work-load do
not take the time to document fully.
·
The date and time procedures carried
out or when the patient is seen are vital to make sure that there is a correct
time-frame for follow-up.
·
Care providers forget to sign their
names and indicate their title; notes and instructions cannot be appreciated
fully unless their author is identified. An observation by a consultant is not
the same as that of an intern.
·
In many records the daily recording
of the vital signs (temperature, blood pressure, pulse, and respiratory rate)
is forgotten.
·
Documentation is sometimes
incomplete for example a chart may have an instruction to take blood pressure
without mentioning how often or whether it is supine or prone.
·
Careful review of charts sometimes
reveals problems like results of an investigation being found without any notes
indicating who ordered the investigation and why.
Common
problems 2: Investigations
·
The availability of many
radiological and laboratory tests has made physicians lazy; they do not exert
the mental effort needed to be selective and order only those investigations
that make sense in terms of the findings from history taking and physical
examination.
·
Review of some charts reveals that
the physician does not even bother to take a history and examine the patient
carefully, he just orders a plethora of tests in the hope that one will
indicate what the diagnosis is.
·
Ignorance of physicians of the costs
of these tests or a non-caring attitude since someone else is responsible for
the bill also encourages this behaviour. The matter becomes worse if the
physician has financial incentives to order too many investigations.
Common
problems 2: Investigations… cont
·
The other side of this story is failure
to order investigations that are obviously necessary given the patient’s
symptoms and signs.
·
Sometimes the physician makes a note
about making investigations but does not actually write the order.
·
In many cases there is no follow-up
to make sure that the results are obtained and are in the chart with the result
that the physician orders the same test several times and it is done that many
times, a wasteful situation.
Common
problems 3: Prescriptions
·
Many mistakes are made in
prescriptions. Fortunately few involve prescribing the wrong drug. In most
cases mistakes are in the dosage or frequency.
·
Mistakes about the route of
administration are rare and if they occur are easily identified by the nursing
or pharmacy staff.
·
Poor history-taking is responsible
for drug interactions and allergic reactions.
·
Review of many charts indicates that
many physicians are not aware of the side-effects of the drugs they prescribe
because there is often no notation in the chart that they enquire about
symptoms of possible side-effects when they review the patients.
Common
problems 4:L Follow-up
·
The concept that case management is
a complete job involving follow-up even after cessation of treatment does not
seem to be well appreciated by many physicians.
·
Review of charts does not show
planned follow-up of discharged patients.
Follow up of
QI findings 1: Basic Philosophy
·
The basic philosophy involved in
presenting QI findings is not to apportion blame but to identify problems and
resolve them. The QI process should be a win-win for all involved. The patient
gets good care.
·
The providers are reassured if they
are doing well or they are educated to improve their care so that they will
shine next time around. The institution gains the loyalty of its patients and
is saved from costly legal battles that could arise out of poor quality care
and professional malpractice.
Follow up of
QI findings 2: QI Caucus meeting
·
The QI findings in a department
should be discussed in a small caucus of providers concerned in that
department. Many issues that were seen as problems may actually not turn out to
be so when additional information is obtained from people who are involved
directly.
·
The meeting could also suggest
solutions to the problems and decisions are taken about what to do with clear
tasks being assigned to individuals. The initial report should be modified to
reflect new information from the caucus.
·
The report should be up-dated after
the next meeting of the caucus when the results of intervention decisions taken
at the last meeting are available and can be incorporated in the report.
Follow up of
QI findings 3: The departmental QI Report
·
A departmental QI report, based on
QI caucus reports, must be written on a
regular basis. It is best done on a monthly basis. A more frequent one does not
identify trends well.
·
The QI reports should be sequential.
The next report should discuss follow-up and solution of problems identified in
the previous report. It should also comment on any trends seen earlier.
·
The report should mention whether
they have increased or decreased during the reporting period. Preventive
anticipatory measures taken must be also mentioned.
·
The report should not in the normal
circumstances mention any names of care providers or of patients. It should
focus on the problem and not seek to apportion blame.
·
The institution should issue a QI
report either every 6 months or every year. The report should mainly mention
problems encountered in the year, how they were resolved, and the results.
·
The Institutional QI report is a
valuable document that stakeholders in the institution may want to read once in
a while.
·
The distribution of this report has
to be thought about seriously. It is a very important document that if it falls
in the hands of competitors or aggrieved parties could be misused either to
generate bad publicity or institute some legal action.
·
The institutional report should
therefore always be treated as a confidential internal document.
Follow up of
QI findings 5: Follow-up of reports
·
It is not enough to write a report
and distribute it. It may lie unattended on people’s desks or get filed away
and is forgotten.
·
The QI reviewer should take the
initiative to discuss the draft report with the care providers concerned before
it is officially published or is issued. He should also solicit their views and
plans of action for dealing with them.
·
A summary of these plans could be
included in the final report.
Follow up of
QI findings 6: Problems that arise out of the QA process
·
Personal clashes could arise if some
care providers feel that the QA report was biased against them or was an
attempt to show them in bad light.
·
Patients or their lawyers could use
the QA report as written admission by the institution of wrong-doing and they
may sue in courts of law.