TY - JOUR
T1 - Using clinical indicators to facilitate quality improvement via the accreditation process
T2 - An adaptive study into the control relationship
AU - Chuang, Sheu-Wen
AU - Howley, Peter P.
AU - Hancock, Stephen
PY - 2013/7
Y1 - 2013/7
N2 - Objective. The aim of the study was to determine accreditation surveyors' and hospitals' use and perceived usefulness of clinical indicator reports and the potential to establish the control relationship between the accreditation and reporting systems. The control relationship refers to instructional directives, arising from appropriately designed methods and efforts towards using clinical indicators, which provide a directed moderating, balancing and best outcome for the connected systems. Design. Web-based questionnaire survey. Setting. Australian Council on Healthcare Standards' (ACHS) accreditation and clinical indicator programmes. Results. Seventy-three of 306 surveyors responded. Half used the reports always/most of the time. Five key messages were revealed: (i) report use was related to availability before on-site investigation; (ii) report use was associated with the use of non-ACHS reports; (iii) a clinical indicator set's perceived usefulness was associated with its reporting volume across hospitals; (iv) simpler measures and visual summaries in reports were rated the most useful; (v) reports were deemed to be suitable for the quality and safety objectives of the key groups of interested parties (hospitals' senior executive and management officers, clinicians, quality managers and surveyors). Conclusions. Implementing the control relationship between the reporting and accreditation systems is a promising expectation. Redesigning processes to ensure reports are available in pre-survey packages and refined education of surveyors and hospitals on how to better utilize the reports will support the relationship. Additional studies on the systems' theory-based model of the accreditation and reporting system are warranted to establish the control relationship, building integrated systemwide relationships with sustainable and improved outcomes.
AB - Objective. The aim of the study was to determine accreditation surveyors' and hospitals' use and perceived usefulness of clinical indicator reports and the potential to establish the control relationship between the accreditation and reporting systems. The control relationship refers to instructional directives, arising from appropriately designed methods and efforts towards using clinical indicators, which provide a directed moderating, balancing and best outcome for the connected systems. Design. Web-based questionnaire survey. Setting. Australian Council on Healthcare Standards' (ACHS) accreditation and clinical indicator programmes. Results. Seventy-three of 306 surveyors responded. Half used the reports always/most of the time. Five key messages were revealed: (i) report use was related to availability before on-site investigation; (ii) report use was associated with the use of non-ACHS reports; (iii) a clinical indicator set's perceived usefulness was associated with its reporting volume across hospitals; (iv) simpler measures and visual summaries in reports were rated the most useful; (v) reports were deemed to be suitable for the quality and safety objectives of the key groups of interested parties (hospitals' senior executive and management officers, clinicians, quality managers and surveyors). Conclusions. Implementing the control relationship between the reporting and accreditation systems is a promising expectation. Redesigning processes to ensure reports are available in pre-survey packages and refined education of surveyors and hospitals on how to better utilize the reports will support the relationship. Additional studies on the systems' theory-based model of the accreditation and reporting system are warranted to establish the control relationship, building integrated systemwide relationships with sustainable and improved outcomes.
KW - Accreditation
KW - Clinical indicators
KW - Control relationship
KW - Feedback
KW - Quality measurement and reporting
KW - Systems theory
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U2 - 10.1093/intqhc/mzt023
DO - 10.1093/intqhc/mzt023
M3 - Article
C2 - 23587600
AN - SCOPUS:84878971901
SN - 1353-4505
VL - 25
SP - 277
EP - 283
JO - International Journal for Quality in Health Care
JF - International Journal for Quality in Health Care
IS - 3
ER -