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DUQuE quality management measures: associations between quality management at hospital and pathway levels

Authors :
Wagner, Cordula.
Groene, Oliver.
Thompson, Caroline A.
Dersarkissian, Maral
Klazinga, Niek.
Arah, Onyebuchi A..
Suñol Sala, Rosa
Kringos, Dionne.
Lombarts, Kiki.
Plochg, T.
Lopez, M. A.
Secanell, M.
Vallejo, P.
Bartels, Paul
Kristensen, S.
Michel, P.
Saillour-Glenisson, F.
Vlcek, F.
Car, M.
Jones, S.
Klaus, E.
Garel, Pascal.
Hanslik, K.
Saluvan, M.
Bruneau, Charles
Depaigne-Loth, A.
Shaw, C.
Hammer, A.
Ommen, O.
Pfaff, H.
Botje, Daan
Kutaj-Wąsikowska, Halina
Kutryba, B.
Escoval, A.
Franca, M.
Almeman, F.
Kus, H.
Ozturk, K.
Mannion, R.
Chow, Angela.
Thompson, C.
Wang, A.
Thompson, A.
APH - Amsterdam Public Health
Public and occupational health
Other Research
Center for Evidence Based Education
EMGO - Quality of care
Source :
Wagner, C, Groene, O, Thompson, C A, DerSarkissian, M, Klazinga, N S, Arah, O A & Sunol, R 2014, ' DUQuE quality management measures: associations between quality management at hospital and pathway levels ', International Journal for Quality in Health Care, vol. 26, pp. 66-73 . https://doi.org/10.1093/intqhc/mzu020, International journal for quality in health care, 26(Suppl. 1), 66-73. Oxford University Press, International Journal for Quality in Health Care, International Journal for Quality in Health Care, 26, 66-73. Oxford University Press
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Objective. The assessment of integral quality management (QM) in a hospital requires measurement and monitoring from different perspectives and at various levels of care delivery. Within the DUQuE project (Deepening our Understanding of Quality improvement in Europe), seven measures for QM were developed. This study investigates the relationships between the various quality measures. Design. It is a multi-level, cross-sectional, mixed-method study. Setting and Participants. As part of the DUQuE project, we invited a random sample of 74 hospitals in 7 countries. The quality managers of these hospitals were the main respondents. Furthermore, data of site visits of external surveyors assessing the participating hospitals were used. Main Outcome Measures. Three measures of QM at hospitals level focusing on integral systems (QMSI), compliance with the Plan-Do-Study-Act quality improvement cycle (QMCI) and implementation of clinical quality (CQII). Four measures of QM activities at care pathway level focusing on Specialized expertise and responsibility (SER), Evidence-based organization of pathways (EBOP), Patient safety strategies (PSS) and Clinical review (CR). Results. Positive significant associations were found between the three hospitals level QM measures. Results of the relationships between levels were mixed and showed most associations between QMCI and department-level QM measures for all four types of departments. QMSI was associated with PSS in all types of departments. Conclusion. By using the seven measures of QM, it is possible to get a more comprehensive picture of the maturity of QM in hospitals, with regard to the different levels and across various types of hospital departments.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13534505
Volume :
26
Issue :
Suppl. 1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International journal for quality in health care
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2da1ba51ca16e7adaab6621113fc55f9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/intqhc/mzu020