» Articles » PMID: 10985266

Defining and Measuring Quality of Care: a Perspective from US Researchers

Overview
Specialty Health Services
Date 2000 Sep 14
PMID 10985266
Citations 91
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The modern quality field in medicine is about one-third of a century old. The purpose of this paper is to summarize what we know about quality of care and indicate what we can do to improve quality of care in the next century. We assert that quality can be measured, that quality of care varies enormously, that improving quality of care is difficult, that financial incentives directed at the health system level have little effect on quality, and that we lack a publicly available tool kit to assess quality. To improve quality of care we will need adequate data and that will require patients to provide information about what happened to them and to allow people to abstract their medical records. It also will require that physicians provide patient information when asked. We also need a strategy to measure quality and then report the results and we need to place in the public domain tool kits that can be used by physicians, administrators, and patient groups to assess and improve quality. Each country should have a national quality report, based on standardized comprehensive and scientifically valid measures, which describes the country's progress in improving quality of care. We can act now. For the 70-100 procedures that dominate what physicians do, we should have a computer-based, prospective system to ensure that physicians ask patients the questions required to decide whether to do the procedure. The patient should verify the responses. Answers from patients should be combined with test results and other information obtained from the patient's physician to produce an assessment of the procedure's appropriateness and necessity. Advanced tools to assess quality, based on data from the patient and medical records, are also currently being developed. These tools could be used to comprehensively assess the quality of primary care across multiple conditions at the country, regional, and medical group level.

Citing Articles

Common Mistakes in Managing Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease.

Gisbert J, Chaparro M J Clin Med. 2024; 13(16).

PMID: 39200937 PMC: 11355176. DOI: 10.3390/jcm13164795.


Quality measures in primary care skin cancer management: a qualitative study of the views of key informants.

Spanos S, Singh N, Laginha B, Arnolda G, Smith A, Wilkinson D BMJ Open. 2024; 14(7):e080670.

PMID: 38991668 PMC: 11243125. DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-080670.


Evidence-based interventions for identifying candidate quality indicators to assess quality of care in diabetic foot clinics: a scoping review.

Lusendi F, Vanherwegen A, Doggen K, Nobels F, Matricali G BMC Public Health. 2024; 24(1):996.

PMID: 38600498 PMC: 11005120. DOI: 10.1186/s12889-024-18306-2.


Development of consensus quality indicators for cancer supportive care: a Delphi study and pilot testing.

Hyatt A, Gough K, Chung H, Wood W, Aston R, Cockwill J BMC Health Serv Res. 2024; 24(1):377.

PMID: 38539185 PMC: 10967216. DOI: 10.1186/s12913-024-10876-6.


Which aspects of patient experience are the 'moment of truth' in the healthcare context: a multicentre cross-sectional study in China.

Chen X, Yuan J, Zhao W, Qin W, Gao J, Zhang Y BMJ Open. 2024; 14(2):e077363.

PMID: 38326249 PMC: 10860089. DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-077363.