View on the Problem of Managing of Medical Care Quality

 
 

Olga M. Posnenkova, Anton R. Kiselev*, Vladimir I. Gridnev, Yulia V. Popova, Vladimir A. Shvartz

 
  DOI 10.5001/omj.2012.63  
 
 
 
Centre of New Cardiological Informational Technologies, Saratov Research Institute of Cardiology, Saratov, Russia.

Received: 19 Mar 2012
Accepted: 26 Mar 2012

*Address correspondence and reprints request to: Anton R. Kiselev, Saratov Research Institute of Cardiology, 141, Chernyshevsky str., Saratov, Russia.
E-mail: antonkis@rambler.ru
 
 
 
 

How to cite this article

Posnenkova OM, Kiselev AR, Gridnev VI, Popova YV, Shvartz VA. View on the Problem of Managing of Medical Care Quality. Oman Med J 2012 May; 27(3):261-262.

How to cite this URL

Posnenkova OM, Kiselev AR, Gridnev VI, Popova YV, Shvartz VA. View on the Problem of Managing of Medical Care Quality. Oman Med J 2012 May; 27(3):261-262. Available from http://www.omjournal.org/fultext_PDF.aspx?DetailsID=253&type=fultext

 
 
 
 

To the Editor,

This article covers key aspects of quality medical care for patients. The basis of modern approach to improve the care quality is clinical guidelines, clinical audit and registers of diseases. The development of evidence-based medicine ensures that the personal experience of physicians ceases to be a leader in the treatment of patients. Evidences of emerging studies of interventions that are effective in the treating various diseases are accumulated in clinical guidelines for physicians. Quality of health care is determined by full physicians’ compliance with clinical guidelines. However, implementing clinical guidelines into clinical practice remains a major public health problem.1-4

In economically developed countries, results of evidence-based medical research used to reduce the costs associated with ineffective medical care.5,6 In some countries, the problem of providing quality medical care to patients is successfully solved by development of quality improvement programs. These programs provide structure, timing and sequence of activities to improve the medical care quality. An example is a program to improve the medical care quality for patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS), which was published in 2000 and was revised in 2008.7,8 Initially the focus was on timely thrombolysis in all ACS patients with elevation ST. This program has achieved its goal in most patients due to its implementation at the state level. In 2008, the focus has shifted to the availability and timeliness of primary angioplasty in ACS patients.

The implementation of such tasks is impossible without an adequate system to measure results. The key to quality care management is the development of clinical indicators. Clinical indicators are criteria for the implementation of clinical guidelines in clinical practice. Recently, the development of clinical guidelines was accompanied by the development of quality care indicators. For example in 2008, guidelines for familial hypercholesterolemia,9 and criteria for evaluating their performance was established.10

However, the system of clinical indicators is not enough for improvements in the quality of medical care, it also requires clinical indicators. The effectiveness of this method has been proven for many years. Clinical audit is a systematic evaluation of care quality by experts in order to improve quality of care, based on the adequate use of clinical indicators.11,12

The objectives of clinical audit are:

- Identifying deficiencies of health care and to develop measures to improve these,

- monitoring the implementation of improvements,

- Prevention of medical care errors.

Clinical audit is a cyclical process. Audit cycle consists of the following activities:

1) Identifying the problem to be solved,

2) Selection or development of clinical standards and clinical indicators for evaluation of clinical practice,

3) Comparison of clinical practice with clinical standard on the basis of clinical indicators,

4) Identifying reasons for problems of care,

5) Implementation of changes in medical care,

6) Evaluation of final effect of this implementation.

To solve most problems, one cycle of clinical audit is not enough. This cycle must be repeated until such time all problems are solved. The meaning of clinical audit is to assess the implementation of clinical guidelines in clinical practice. Therefore, one of the important goals is getting information about the clinical practice. The main sources of information on clinical practice are the registers of diseases.13 For example, the availability of the registry of arterial hypertension is itself an indicator of quality of care to patients with hypertension.14 The data of registers is processed by the expert group. Their final report on care quality assessment shall be communicated to all stakeholders.

National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (www.nice.org.uk) is one of the largest organizations dealing with quality of medical care. This organization publishes regular reports on care quality for patients with major social diseases and prepares evidence-based strategies for improving the care quality.

The main properties of the quality management system of care should be:

- Systematic approach;

- The duration and continuity of implementation;

- Public interest and support;

- involving a wide range of stakeholders;

- Transparency;

- basing on the data of evidence-based medicine;

- focus on the patient.

This system is constantly evolving, searching new areas and new ways of improving quality.An indisputable indicator of the success of modern model of quality care management is a steady decline in mortality from cardiovascular disease, which observed since 1980 according to the study Euro Heart Survey.15

 
 

References

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