Back to Search Start Over

Hospitals' internal accountability.

Authors :
Kraetschmer N
Jass J
Woodman C
Koo I
Kromm SK
Deber RB
Source :
Healthcare policy = Politiques de sante [Healthc Policy] 2014 Sep; Vol. 10 (Spec issue), pp. 36-44.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

This study aimed to enhance understanding of the dimensions of accountability captured and not captured in acute care hospitals in Ontario, Canada. Based on an Ontario-wide survey and follow-up interviews with three acute care hospitals in the Greater Toronto Area, we found that the two dominant dimensions of hospital accountability being reported are financial and quality performance. These two dimensions drove both internal and external reporting. Hospitals' internal reports typically included performance measures that were required or mandated in external reports. Although respondents saw reporting as a valuable mechanism for hospitals and the health system to monitor and track progress against desired outcomes, multiple challenges with current reporting requirements were communicated, including the following: 58% of survey respondents indicated that performance-reporting resources were insufficient; manual data capture and performance reporting were prevalent, with the majority of hospitals lacking sophisticated tools or technology to effectively capture, analyze and report performance data; hospitals tended to focus on those processes and outcomes with high measurability; and 53% of respondents indicated that valuable cross-system accountability, performance measures or both were not captured by current reporting requirements.<br /> (Copyright © 2014 Longwoods Publishing.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1715-6580
Volume :
10
Issue :
Spec issue
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Healthcare policy = Politiques de sante
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25305387