Literature DB >> 22077852

Quality-of-care framework in urological cancers: where do we stand?

Tim T Wang1, Kamran Ahmed, Mohammed Shamim Khan, Prokar Dasgupta.   

Abstract

What's known on the subject? and What does the study add? Provision of high-quality care necessitates the identification and measurement of relevant quality indicators. Urological surgery currently does not have a validated quality-of-care framework to guide surgical quality improvement. This article aims to delineate quality of care processes, current status of quality indicators for major urological cancers as well as recommend a provisional framework for evaluation of quality for urological procedures. Growing demands for patient safety, lower cost and quality of care have resulted in several initiatives of quality measurement across urological surgery. Although candidate indicators have been proposed in various procedures, the field still lacks a valid quality framework. Better understanding of the interplay between patient selection, surgical expertise, preoperative-, intraoperative, postoperative processes and outcomes is needed. Consensus needs to be achieved in which validated structural, process and outcomes measures to employ, how this data should be collected, which agencies to share this data with and how to use this data to effect change in health policy. Compliance with quality framework needs to be continuously audited with its outcomes frequently benchmarked against international standards. Pursuit of quality improvement schemes require significant investment and need to be weighed against current budgetary constraints.
© 2011 THE AUTHORS. BJU INTERNATIONAL © 2011 BJU INTERNATIONAL.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 22077852     DOI: 10.1111/j.1464-410X.2011.10747.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BJU Int        ISSN: 1464-4096            Impact factor:   5.588


  3 in total

1.  National consensus quality indicators to assess quality of care for active surveillance in low-risk prostate cancer: An evidence-informed, modified Delphi survey of Canadian urologists/radiation oncologists.

Authors:  Narhari Timilshina; Antonio Finelli; George Tomlinson; Anna Gagliardi; Beate Sander; Shabbir M H Alibhai
Journal:  Can Urol Assoc J       Date:  2022-04       Impact factor: 1.862

2.  Self-assessment of surgical technique leads to reduction of positive surgical margins in partial nephrectomy.

Authors:  Igor Sorokin; Michael A Feuerstein; Paul Feustel; Ronald P Kaufman
Journal:  J Robot Surg       Date:  2014-08-20

Review 3.  Should surgical outcomes be published?

Authors:  Evelyn Chou; Hamid Abboudi; Mohammed Shamim Khan; Prokar Dasgupta; Kamran Ahmed
Journal:  J R Soc Med       Date:  2015-04       Impact factor: 5.344

  3 in total

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