Quality management in health care
-
Qual Manag Health Care · Jul 2016
Observational StudyShared Medical Appointments: Impact on Clinical and Quality Outcomes in Veterans With Diabetes.
Managing diabetes poses substantial challenges to the over 29.1 million Americans afflicted, and is financially overwhelming to the US health care system. One potential strategy is utilizing a group approach to care delivery or shared medical appointment (SMA). The purpose of this 3-year retrospective VA study was to investigate differences in clinical and quality outcome measures in veterans with type 2 diabetes who used SMAs and those who received only usual care (UC) one-on-one with their doctor. ⋯ SMA providers had statistically significant differences over UC cases on quality measures, including ordering annual ophthalmology and podiatry examinations (P < .001) and prescribing aspirin and angiotension-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACE-I). SMAs may provide a venue for assessing and delivering quality care for patients with type 2 diabetes. More research is needed to ascertain effective strategies for diabetes disease management in high-risk patients.
-
Multistakeholder alliances-groups of payers, purchasers, providers, and consumers that voluntarily work together to address local health goals-have increasingly been used to improve health care quality within their communities. Under the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Aligning Forces for Quality (AF4Q) initiative, 16 multistakeholder alliances were charged with advancing payment reform as part of a larger effort to achieve dramatic and sustainable quality improvement. ⋯ Quality improvement-focused multistakeholder alliances may play meaningful roles to advance payment reform, but they are not a panacea for overcoming well-documented barriers to reform.
-
Qual Manag Health Care · Oct 2015
Factors Associated With Reintubation in Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease.
Acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) increase morbidity, mortality, and health care costs in COPD patients. Patients who require mechanical ventilation and fail extubation often have longer hospital stays and/or increased mortality. Determining predictors to identify patients who might require reintubation could help respiratory care teams manage these patients better. ⋯ Sedative and analgesic drug use prior to extubation was associated with more frequent reintubation in patients with acute exacerbations of COPD. This study suggests that the judicious withdrawal of sedatives prior to extubation may reduce reintubations.
-
Qual Manag Health Care · Jan 2015
Hospitals as learning organizations: fostering innovation through interactive learning.
The article aims to provide an analytical understanding of hospitals as "learning organizations." It further analyzes the development of learning organizations as a way to enhance innovation and performance in the hospital sector. The article pulls together primary data on organizational flexibility, innovation, and performance from 95 administrators from hospital boards in Portugal, collected through a survey, interviews with hospital's boards, and a nominal group technique with a panel of experts on health systems. ⋯ The major implication arising from this study is that policy needs to combine instruments that promote innovation opportunities and incentives, with instruments stimulating the further development of the core components of learning organizations. Such a combination of policy instruments has the potential to ensure a wide external cooperation through a learning infrastructure.
-
Qual Manag Health Care · Apr 2014
Factors influencing the length of hospital stay in patients with acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease admitted to intensive care units.
The cost of hospital admissions for acute exacerbations of COPD (AECOPD) accounts for 70% of total costs for the treatment of COPD patients. We wanted to identify clinical parameters associated with a longer length of stay (LOS) in these patients. ⋯ Our study demonstrates that intubation for mechanical ventilation increased the LOS in patients with AECOPD. More intensive interventions in these patients might decrease the LOS and improve outcomes.