Perspectives on quality in nursing Flashcards

1
Q

CLINICAL GOVERNANCE

A

for everything that helps to
maintain and improve high standards of patient care’.12 It draws together a range of
quality and safety activities (such as incident monitoring, risk management, auditing,
morbidity and mortality meetings) in a way that ensures an organisational focus on the
development of a culture, systems and processes that promote quality of care as the
main focus of the organisation

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2
Q

measurement of quality is facilitated

A

the use of standards, performance

indicators and outcome measures

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3
Q

measurement of quality in healthcare varies

A

Population:
Organisation:
Individual:

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4
Q

Population:

A

This level includes entire nations, or broad groups and communities
such as newborn babies or indigenous communities.

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5
Q

Organisation:

A

: This level includes any organisation that provides healthcare, such as
a hospital, community health service or diagnostic imaging practice, to groups of
consumers.

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6
Q

Individual

A

This level includes nurses, allied health professionals, medical
practitioners and anyone who provides healthcare interventions in partnership with
individual consumers, patients and carers.

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7
Q

Population Measures

A

The first of the three domains, health
status, addresses policy on the general health of Australians
determinants of health, takes into account factors that influence the health status of Australians
The third
domain, health system performance, measures variables such as access to and equity of
service provision, safety and sustainability

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8
Q

Organisational Measures

A

external accreditation/inspection against a set of recognised standards
internal audit against standards and policies
patient/consumer feedback
clinical and other performance indicators
incident and adverse event monitoring
patient health outcome measures

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9
Q

Standards are developed for two primary reasons

A

to protect the public from harm;

to improve the quality of services

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10
Q

Standards provide a framework

A

that identifies the boundaries and essential
elements for practice, and in doing so links three key professional practice
accountabilities: care, quality and competence

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11
Q

Accreditation

A

is a mechanism whereby an external body assesses an organisation to
determine its performance and compliance with agreed standards

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12
Q

Evidence-based Practice

A

deliberate use of current best research evidence in

making decisions about the care of individual patients.

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13
Q

INDICATORS OF QUALITY

A

Clinical Indicators
Outcome Measures
Benchmarking

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14
Q

Clinical Indicators

A

is simply a measure of the clinical management and/or outcome of
care. It is a quantitative measurement that can be compared over time or with other
services that use the same definition. Indicators provide a useful method of assessing
the quality and safety of care at a system level.

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15
Q

Outcome Measures

A

realise that it is important to assess not only how healthcare is
delivered, but also to assess changes in clients’ condition as a result of these
interventions. The potential for those data to inform clinical decision making
underpins the increasing interest in valid outcome indicators of care

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16
Q

Benchmarking

A

an improvement tool whereby a company measures its performance or
process against other companies’ best practices, determines how those
companies achieved their performance levels, and uses the information to
improve its own performance

17
Q

Benchmarking four stages

A
  1. Choose a range of indicators or topic areas to look at and measure.
  2. Compare your workplace to other similar workplaces, using these measures.
  3. Identify your weaknesses and their strengths.
  4. Learn from others how they achieve their results and how you can improve.
18
Q

Clinical risk management

A

the systematic approach to developing strategies that
enable healthcare organisations and clinicians to learn from past events in order to
minimise future risk.

19
Q

Incident Reporting

A

errors in health, and some will become
adverse events. Incidents are any failure of a planned or expected action to be
completed as intended.

20
Q

Risk Management

A

Incident analysis can lead to identification of specific systemic risks across an
organisation – for example, patient falls. Multiple incidents can indicate a systemic risk
that can be stratified using a risk assessment matrix to quantify the consequences and
likelihood of such incidents recurring

21
Q

CONSUMER PERSPECTIVES

A

consumer is more
frequently used today, as it implies agency, choice and voice in choosing and using
healthcare services

22
Q

Complaints

A

A quality improvement approach promotes the integration of complaints management
into a comprehensive quality program

23
Q

Consumer Surveys

A

Consumer satisfaction and experience surveys have frequently been used by clinicians,
facilities and government to provide a quality measure. Results are used to monitor
performance, identify trends, inform policy and service development, assess the
effectiveness of policies and programs, benchmark with similar health services and
identify opportunities for improvement

24
Q

Consumer Participation

A

is driven by a patient-centred care philosophy. Patient-centred
care is healthcare that is responsive to and respectful of the needs, values and rights of
consumers and carers.