Overview
Quality health care means doing the right thing, at the right time, in the right
way, for the right person—and having the best possible results. Although we would
like to think that every health plan, doctor, hospital, and other provider
gives high-quality care, this is not always so. Quality varies, for many reasons.
At no time in the history of medicine has the growth in knowledge and technologies
been so great. New technologies offer the promise of increasing longevity, improving
health, and alleviating pain and suffering. For several years, health care has been
shifting from acute, episodic care to care for chronic conditions. Chronic conditions
are now the leading causes of illness, disability and death. More than 40% of people
with chronic conditions have more than one condition. This trend requires a more
complete communication structure and coordination of care. Yet, physicians, hospitals
and other health care organizations operate independently and often do not share
information about the patient's condition, medical history, services provided in
other settings, or medications prescribed. As medical science and technology have
advanced, and patients have become more complex, the health care system has not
been able to provide consistently high quality care to all Americans. Research on
the quality of care shows that the health care system falls short in translating
knowledge into practice, and applying new technology safely and in a timely
manner. Many types of medical errors require additional health care
services to treat patients who have been harmed. The health care system is fragmented
and lacks the clinical information systems to prevent unnecessary duplication of
services, long waiting times and delays in services. The health care system does
not make the best use of its resources.
Six Aims for Improvement
In response to these challenges, the Institute of Medicine has established six aims
for improvement. The health care should be:
Safe – avoiding injuries to patients from the care that is intended
to help them.
Effective – providing services based on scientific knowledge to
all who could benefit and refraining from providing services to those not likely
to benefit (avoiding underuse and overuse)
Patient-centered – providing care that is respectful of and responsive
to individual patient preferences, needs and values and ensuring that patients values
guide all clinical decisions.
Timely – reducing waits and sometimes harmful delays for both those
who receive and those who give care.
Efficient – avoiding waste, including waste of equipment, supplies,
ideas and energy.
Equitable – providing care that does not vary in quality because
of personal characteristics such as gender, ethnicity, geographic location, and
socio-economic status.
(Excerpt: Crossing The Quality Chasm, A New Health System
for
the 21st Century, Institute of Medicine, 2001, National Academy of Sciences.)
Quality Measurement
Fortunately, there are scientific ways to measure health care quality. These tools
have mostly been used
by health professionals. They use measures
to review and improve the quality of care they provide. A quality measure is information
from a patient's record or an operational process that is converted into a rate,
percentage or time that shows how well providers are taking care of
their patients. Quality measures give you information about how well providers care
for some, but not all of their patients. Most quality measures have been designed
to measure evidence based care. Patient who should not get the recommended care
treatments are not counted in the measures.
Quality measurement is a relatively new science and requires a large amount of resources
to develop and collect the information. Fully developed and tested measures are
only available for reporting on some of the most common conditions or processes
of care. Over the past few years, an increased interest in this science has occurred
which may increase the rate of quality measurement development and reporting over
time. But there is some quality information you can use right now to help you compare
your health care choices. Many public and private groups are working to improve and expand health care quality
measures. The goal is to make these measures more reliable, uniform, and helpful
to consumers in making health care choices.
Reporting Leads to Improvement
South Carolina hospitals are united around one concept: to improve patient care in the communities
they serve. They also agree: you can't improve what you don't measure.
That is why they have committed to measuring and publicly reporting their performance.
|