The Joint Commission journal on quality improvement
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In 1991 the University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics formed a pain management QI team whose goal was to improve pain management through education, outcome monitoring, and the development of programs intended to improve clinical practice. Longitudinal monitoring mechanisms were established to audit medical records and survey patients to examine both staff practice patterns and patient outcomes. The QI team targeted use of meperidine, one of the most widely used opioid analgesics for the treatment of moderate to severe pain, which is now discouraged as a first-line agent for most painful conditions. ⋯ Use of a QI approach in pain management has been shown to affect the visibility of pain as a clinical priority, enhance interdisciplinary collaboration, facilitate the implementation of clinical guidelines at the bedside, and improve the quality of care for patients.
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Jt Comm J Qual Improv · Dec 2000
Using a new method of gathering patient satisfaction data to assess the effects of organizational factors on primary care quality.
As health care in the United States evolves increasingly toward managed care, there are continuing concerns about maintaining the quality of the physician-patient interaction, of which patient satisfaction is one measure. A quality assessment tool that measures both patient satisfaction with care and the ways organizational factors affect satisfaction will enable clinicians and administrators to redesign the care process accordingly. SURVEY METHODOLOGY: The measure of the quality of a physician office visit includes both the administration of a standardized satisfaction instrument and direct observation of the patient throughout the care process. This methodology was tested in 1997-1998 on an initial sample of 291 patients at a large multispecialty medical group in northern California. The surveyor recorded objective characteristics of the visit, surveyed patients about their impression of certain aspects of the visit related to satisfaction, and administered a standardized visit satisfaction survey. A second set of control patients who visited the same physician on the same day was contacted by phone and given the satisfaction survey two to four weeks later. ⋯ Measuring patient satisfaction concurrently during a physician office visit offers an attractive alternative to other methods of measuring this key aspect of quality.