| Literature DB >> 32455972 |
Federica Veronese1, Francesca Graziola1, Edoardo Cammarata2, Marco Andreassi2, Vanessa Mazzoletti2, Camilla Taglietti3, Gaia Navarra3, Paola Savoia2, Rossana Tiberio1.
Abstract
Background and objectives: Psoriasis (Pso) is a common skin condition characterized by a strong psychosocial impact, and is nowadays accepted as a systemic immune-mediated inflammatory disease. Diagnostic-Therapeutic Care Pathways (DTCPs) represent a predefined sequence of diagnostic, therapeutic, and assistance activities that integrate the participation of several specialists to obtain, for each patient, the correct diagnosis and thus the most appropriate therapy. A DTCP was validated in our dermatology clinic (AOU Maggiore della Carità, Novara, Italy). The validation process included the detailed elaboration of a protocol of diagnosis, staging of care, therapies, and follow-up of the patient with Pso. The formalization and adaptation of our DTCP resulted in ISO 9001: 2015 certification in May 2019. Materials and methods: This process involved several stages, including analysis of context and the identification of (i) targets, (ii) indicators, and (iii) service providers. The evaluation was based on a cohort of over 200 patients affected by moderate to severe Pso, who were treated and followed-up at our institution from September 2017 to April 2019.Entities:
Keywords: ISO 9001:2015 certification; diagnostic–therapeutic care pathway; psoriasis; quality improvement; quality management system
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32455972 PMCID: PMC7279378 DOI: 10.3390/medicina56050253
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.430
Figure 1The validated Diagnostic–Therapeutic Care Pathway (DTCP) for Pso patients.
Figure 2Deming cycle: Plan, Do, Check, Act (PDCA).
The three macro-processes of certification.
|
Preliminary analysis of context and interested parties Accurate risk and opportunity analysis following risk-based thinking Identification of aims and definition of managerial, clinical, and result indicators to achieve them through the quality policy and mission |
Definition of guidelines and technical, organizational, and structural standards of the final result Personalization and humanization of services Improvement of waiting times Monitoring of patient/user and hospital staff satisfaction |
Identification of adverse events (unconformity) and implementation of corrective and preventing actions to improve overall quality management Constant measurement, through analysis and data collection, of the quality of services/performance Evaluation of service providers (e.g., other hospital units) to ameliorate them |
Figure 3SWOT analysis.
Targets, indicators, and action.
| Targets | Indicators | Actions/Commitments | Responsible Party |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reduction of the waiting time from referral to first visit through an improvement of appropriateness in access to the psoriasis center | Time difference between referral and the first visit | Create a document for general practitioners and territorial specialists which serves as guideline for correct identification of psoriasis patients for the center | Working group |
| Improved treatment adherence | Proportion of patients lost to follow-up | Raise awareness of the importance of treatment adherence. | Working group |
| Implementation of a dedicated nurse | Obtained dedicated nursing staff | Communicate to the medical director the need for dedicated nursing staff. | Medical director and hospital medical management |
| Increased resources for medical students and residents | Number of participants at national and international courses Number of publications | Involve students and residents in clinical and basic research activities. | Working group |
| Increased participation in clinical trials | Number of clinical trials | Identify barriers to clinical trial participation to enable interventions that could help to increase participation. | Working group |
Key performance indicators (KPIs).
| Structural Indicators (Activity, Diagnosis and Appropriateness) | Outcome Indicators | Process Indicators |
|---|---|---|
|
Number of patients Number of new patients Access channel to the center Total number of visits Disease severity (PASI-BSA-DLQI) Percentage of patients sent for multidisciplinary assessment Enhancement of multidisciplinary assessments Volume of treatments Compliance with the one-month follow-up for patients under systemic biological therapy Compliance with the three-month follow-up for patients under systemic biological therapy |
Percentage of patients achieving PASI 75 Percentage of patients achieving PASI 90 |
Waiting time for first visit Waiting time for biological treatment |
Plan of improvement.
| Action | Times | Responsible Party |
|---|---|---|
| Attracting the interest of staff regarding report policy disclosure in accordance with company policy | July 2019 | Medical director |
| Attracting interest of staff regarding ministerial recommendations through periodic meetings | December 2019 | Medical director |
| Sharing, with all the staff, performance indicators of the psoriasis center | December 2019 | Medical director and working group |
| Sharing, with colleagues inside the hospital and with those in the district, the certification obtained by the center | December 2019 | Medical director and working group |
Figure 4ISO 9001:2015 certificate.