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Learning from Quality Improvement
Author Bio
Introduction
The Challenges of Pragmatic Science
The First Element
The Second Element
The Third Element
The Fourth Element
Self Test
Currently selected section: Conclusion

 


Chapter 13: Learning from Quality Improvement in Healthcare Systems: Conclusion
 
     

Efforts to improve the quality of healthcare involve many challenges during the design, testing, and implementation of new systems. To overcome those challenges, an integrated system of learning is needed. One such system, suggested in this chapter, is based on the following four elements essential to reliable learning through quality improvement:

  1. A description of the system;
  2. Determining the performance of the system over time;
  3. A trial and learning approach to improvement; and
  4. An aggregation of the learning across a variety of sites or conditions.

These elements give rise to the following set of factors that researchers and clinicians can use to evaluate the rigor of a proposed quality improvement project. Researchers can use these factors as an outline for the methods section of a proposal or, with slight variation, as a mechanism to weigh the results from different quality improvement projects when they perform systematic analysis:

  • The aim of the project is focused on performance improvement;
  • A balanced set of performance measures is included that is sufficiently related to the aim;
  • The description of the redesigned system is clear;
  • The learning that took place during the evolution to the new system is documented;
  • Time series of the key measures annotated with the sequence of the changes and other significant events are provided; and
  • The time series continue well after the changes have been made to ensure sustainability.
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