The 3 Elements of Quality Healthcare

3 Elements of Health Care QualityQuality healthcare could mean different things to different people but when you boil it down you essentially have to consider safetyefficacy, and efficiency.

Healthcare safety is not causing more harm to the patient with intervention.

Dr. David C. Classen, an associate professor of medicine at the University of Utah, uses a new method for identifying and reporting hospital errors. Using this new method, the researchers estimate that one in three people in the United States will encounter some kind of mistake during a hospital stay in the U.S.

This estimate is not to make people worry about seeking care in hospitals. Rather, hospital administrators and providers need to consider the factors that might contribute to poor patient safety (lack of resources, clinical protocols, etc.) Case complexity and/or acuity is one new trend contributing to medical errors. Because our ambulatory (outpatient) health care system is becoming increasingly advanced, the complexity and/or high acuity of cases that hospitals see is increasing. This increased level of care requires hospitals to be more prepared for emergencies and challenging circumstances. As complexity rises, so does the chance for error.

Healthcare efficacy is about whether the course of treatment achieved its intended effect.

Simply, is the course of medical treatment effective? Good healthcare providers have to manage a lot of variables–which is what makes medicine challenging–but If healthcare does not improve health, healing, or better manage end-of-life care (when inevitable) then what is the real purpose?

In an article in the New England Journal of Medicine entitled The Art of Doing Nothing , Dr. Rosenbaum writes: “we may choose to value an MRI more than the wisdom and experience of our physicians, but that does not mean that an MRI is inherently more beneficial to our health.” The long-run challenge for healthcare providers is to find and follow best practices, but be willing to accept new innovations as they’re properly vetted.

Healthcare efficiency is about getting good value for the money.

There are a plethora of ways to measure healthcare efficiency:

  • Physician Labor
  • Nursing Labor
  • Administrative Labor
  • Beds
  • Depreciation of assets (a measure of capital)
  • Medical Loss Ratio
  • Episode/Clinical/Cost Groups
  • Population-based
  • Cost of Care
  • Etc.

Each of these ratios has benefits and shortcomings, but whatever measurement method we use, we must consider the value we receive for the effort.

I’d like to make my last point by asking one question. Who is responsible for quality healthcare?

American Hospitals Receive Low Patient Satisfaction (HCAHPS) Scores

Bellevue Hospital Atrium

Bellevue Hospital in New York received a 73.5 (C) in the recent HCAHPS patient satisfaction survey. New York State, on average received a 80.2 (B-)

According to the latest HCAHPS patient satisfaction survey results, most states do not meet the top grade in hospital care.

Every year patients of American hospitals are given the opportunity to rate the care they receive by participating in the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Health Plans Survey (HCAHPS®).

According to the HCAHPS survey Web site: “The HCAHPS survey contains 18 patient perspectives on care and patient rating items that encompass eight key topics: communication with doctors, communication with nurses, responsiveness of hospital staff, pain management, communication about medicines, discharge information, cleanliness of the hospital environment, and quietness of the hospital environment.”

Ranking each state based on the results to the following questions we can compare, on average, what grade of care each state provides:

  • How often did doctors communicate well with patients?
  • How often did nurses communicate well with patients?
  • How often did patients receive help quickly from hospital staff?
  • How often did staff explain about medicines before giving them to patients?
  • How often was patients’ pain well controlled?
  • How often was the area around patients’ rooms kept quiet at night?
  • How often were the patients’ rooms and bathrooms kept clean?
  • Were patients given information about what to do during their recovery at home?
  • Would patients recommend the hospital to friends and family?
  • How do patients rate the hospital overall?

The United States hospital average came in at a disappointing 80.2 (B-). Below are the patient satisfaction scores and grades for each state.

Continue reading

Meaningful Use Ruling Delayed Until Jan 2010 – Updated

Meaningful Use Timeline

Meaningful Use Timeline

The Health IT Policy Committee convened for a meeting in Washington, DC on December 15, 2009. The purpose of the meeting was for the Committee to receive reports from its different workgroups and to listen to testimony from Health Plans on the use of directories and registries.

Continue reading

Which Hospital You’re More Likely to Die At

I’m a huge fan of performance based compensation. This Compare Hospital tool from the Department of Health and Human services should help empower health care patients to avoid poor health care treatment, and what to expect in terms of both treatment and cost.

The Hospital Compare tool lets you compare 1) how well your local hospitals care for their adult patients, 2) the RESULT of care or treatment – whether they lived or died within 30 days of treatment, 3) what patients are saying about their recent hospital stay, and 4) how much Medicare hospitals paid on average for certain conditions or procedures.

You should really check out your local hospitals, but return and let me know if you were surprised at the results of your local hospitals, like I was? Have you shared this with your friends and family, because it could save their lives – literally.



read more | digg story