• Can Fam Physician · Oct 2021

    Are quality improvement plans perceived to improve the quality of primary care in Ontario? Qualitative study.

    • Kim Tran, Fiona Webster, Noah M Ivers, Andreas Laupacis, and Irfan A Dhalla.
    • First Nations, Inuit and Métis Lead for System Performance at the Canadian Partnership Against Cancer in Toronto, Ont.
    • Can Fam Physician. 2021 Oct 1; 67 (10): 759-766.

    ObjectiveTo explore primary care administrators' perceptions of provincially mandated quality improvement plans, and barriers to and facilitators of using quality improvement plans as tools for improving the quality of primary care.DesignQualitative descriptive study using semistructured interviews.SettingOntario.ParticipantsEleven primary care administrators (ie, executive directors, director of clinical services, office administrators) at 7 family health teams and 4 community health centres.MethodsAll interviews were audiotaped and transcribed verbatim. Data were analyzed deductively to generate a framework based on a conceptual model of structural, organizational, individual, and innovation-related factors that influence the success of improvement initiatives and, inductively, to generate additional themes.Main FindingsProvincially mandated quality improvement plans seem to have raised awareness of and provided an overall focus on quality improvement, and have contributed to primary care organizations implementing initiatives to address quality gaps. Four factors that have contributed to the success of quality improvement plans relate to attributes of the quality improvement plans (adaptability and compatibility) and contextual factors (leadership and organizational culture). However, participants expressed that the use of quality improvement plans have not yet led to substantial improvements in the quality of primary care in Ontario, which may be owing to several challenges: poor data quality, lack of staff and physician engagement and buy-in, and lack of resources to support measurement and quality improvement.ConclusionAwareness of and focused attention on the need for high-quality patient care may have increased, but participants expressed that substantial improvements in quality care have yet to be achieved in Ontario. The lack of perceived improvements is likely the result of multifaceted and complex challenges primary care organizations face when trying to improve patient care. To effect positive change, organization- and health system-level efforts are needed to improve measurement capabilities, improve staff and physician engagement, and increase capacity for quality improvement among organizations.Copyright © the College of Family Physicians of Canada.

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