Literature DB >> 30505024

Improving the quality of health care across the health system.

Shamsuzzoha B Syed1, Sheila Leatherman2, Nana Mensah-Abrampah1, Matthew Neilson1, Edward Kelley1.   

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Year:  2018        PMID: 30505024      PMCID: PMC6249706          DOI: 10.2471/BLT.18.226266

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bull World Health Organ        ISSN: 0042-9686            Impact factor:   9.408


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Providing quality health services is key to achieving universal health coverage (UHC). Measuring and improving access alone is insufficient to ensure that people receive quality care and to monitor progress towards UHC. In 2018, three publications have significantly increased knowledge on the importance of the quality of health services.- The World Health Organization (WHO), the World Bank and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the National Academies of Sciences in the United States of America and the Lancet Global Health Commission all covered aspects of the quality of health systems in context of UHC and the sustainable development goals (SDGs). Authors of the reports call for quality to be a core UHC consideration, with attention to the measurement of quality at local, national and international levels. As summarized by WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, without quality, UHC remains an empty promise. WHO concurs with recommendations that health authorities develop a clear national direction for improving the quality of health services and establish mechanisms to measure progress. Explicit policies to address the quality of health services are needed, and where multiple quality-improvement initiatives exist, these are best combined in a systematic coordinated effort to improve care across the health system. Most national governments may need to clarify structures for governance, accountability and monitoring of effort to improve quality; to secure commitment for quality through consensus-building; and to create a culture shift in their health systems such that all providers deliver, and users demand, better quality. To support Member States in this process, WHO has launched a global effort to promote and improve national quality policies and strategies. This initiative has published the Handbook for national quality policy and strategy, which has been developed with national quality directorates and technical experts and is designed to support national efforts, recognizing the varied expertise of national health authorities., As the form and content of specific policies will vary with each country’s context, WHO outlines a sequential approach that can be adapted to each situation. Policies on quality-improvement must be linked with existing national health priorities to help meet the most pressing demands of the population and to ensure that the quality-improvement agenda is aligned to these priorities. The definition of quality must be developed locally, through a shared understanding of challenges and ambitions. Stakeholders from across the health system need to be identified and engaged. The current state of health service quality is assessed to identify key gaps that can be strengthened. Interventions are needed across all levels of the health system, along with clarification of governance arrangements, organizational structures and the information systems necessary for measurement, performance feedback and reporting. Finally, a set of indicators have to be agreed and tracked to measure the extent to which activities are producing a higher quality of care and leading to improved health outcomes. These elements are the foundation upon which to organize national efforts to improve the quality of healthcare services, avoiding the pitfall of creating a silo around the quality-improvement agenda. WHO’s handbook emphasizes the importance of integration with existing national health policies and with relevant population- and disease-specific programmes that address quality. Links can be made between quality-improvement efforts and the progress towards UHC in many countries; between quality-improvement and resilient health services as a foundation for health security; between quality-improvement and service delivery in fragile, conflict-affected and vulnerable settings; and between quality-improvement and reforms of primary healthcare. The need to collect and share experience on national quality efforts and to promote innovative, context-specific solutions underpins all these endeavours. The WHO Global Learning Laboratory for Quality UHC is an important contribution to this effort.
  3 in total

Review 1.  High-quality health systems in the Sustainable Development Goals era: time for a revolution.

Authors:  Margaret E Kruk; Anna D Gage; Catherine Arsenault; Keely Jordan; Hannah H Leslie; Sanam Roder-DeWan; Olusoji Adeyi; Pierre Barker; Bernadette Daelmans; Svetlana V Doubova; Mike English; Ezequiel García-Elorrio; Frederico Guanais; Oye Gureje; Lisa R Hirschhorn; Lixin Jiang; Edward Kelley; Ephrem Tekle Lemango; Jerker Liljestrand; Address Malata; Tanya Marchant; Malebona Precious Matsoso; John G Meara; Manoj Mohanan; Youssoupha Ndiaye; Ole F Norheim; K Srinath Reddy; Alexander K Rowe; Joshua A Salomon; Gagan Thapa; Nana A Y Twum-Danso; Muhammad Pate
Journal:  Lancet Glob Health       Date:  2018-09-05       Impact factor: 26.763

2.  How could health care be anything other than high quality?

Authors:  Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus
Journal:  Lancet Glob Health       Date:  2018-09-05       Impact factor: 26.763

3.  Measuring quality of health-care services: what is known and where are the gaps?

Authors:  Margaret E Kruk; Edward Kelley; Shamsuzzoha B Syed; Finn Tarp; Tony Addison; Yoko Akachi
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  2017-06-01       Impact factor: 9.408

  3 in total
  6 in total

1.  Steps to be taken to provide quality healthcare.

Authors:  Abhay Verma
Journal:  Future Healthc J       Date:  2020-02

Review 2.  Quality improvement in maternal and newborn healthcare: lessons from programmes supported by the German development organisation in Africa and Asia.

Authors:  Sophie Goyet; Valerie Broch-Alvarez; Cornelia Becker
Journal:  BMJ Glob Health       Date:  2019-09-06

3.  A programme to improve quality of care for patients with chronic diseases, Kazakhstan.

Authors:  Benjamin Tb Chan; Chris Rauscher; Arman M Issina; Laura H Kozhageldiyeva; Dametken D Kuzembaeva; Connie L Davis; Helena Kravchenko; Michael Hindmarsh; Jessie McGowan; Gulnara Kulkaeva
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  2019-01-27       Impact factor: 9.408

4.  Improving quality of care in fragile, conflict-affected and vulnerable settings.

Authors:  Shamsuzzoha Babar Syed; Sheila Leatherman; Matthew Neilson; Andre Griekspoor; Dirk Horemans; Mondher Letaief; Edward Kelley
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  2020-01-01       Impact factor: 9.408

5.  The quality-of-care agenda in fragile, conflict-affected and vulnerable settings.

Authors:  Matthew Neilson; Sheila Leatherman; Shamsuzzoha Syed
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  2021-03-01       Impact factor: 9.408

Review 6.  Aiming for quality: a global compass for national learning systems.

Authors:  Diana Sarakbi; Nana Mensah-Abrampah; Melissa Kleine-Bingham; Shams B Syed
Journal:  Health Res Policy Syst       Date:  2021-07-19
  6 in total

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