Literature DB >> 7726814

Quality improvement in health care organizations: a general systems perspective.

G Yank1.   

Abstract

A systems analysis of healthcare organizations demonstrates that methods for improving quality involve the effective feedback regulation of key organizational performance parameters. Information flow is impaired in dysfunctional healthcare organizations, which often disregard significant clinical problems while preferentially tracking nonclinical indicators and clinical data considered most likely to meet the organization's standards. Such organizations thus achieve "pseudocompliance" with external requirements, but do not systematically work to improve the quality of clinical care or their performance as organizations. Efforts by government agencies and national organizations to foster quality improvement activities have had limited success precisely because local organizations perceive these efforts as externally imposed. Leaders' anxieties about their own and their organizations' autonomy, control, and performance can cause unwillingness to review data indicating performance problems, oversimplification of decision criteria, and reluctance to formulate meaningful conclusions and act on them. Contemporary quality improvement models, such as Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) and Total Quality Management (TQM), reconnect leaders to their organizations' quality processes by emphasizing the leaders' roles in promoting quality as an organizational value, setting meaningful quality goals, and actively u sing information to improve organizational effectiveness.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7726814     DOI: 10.1002/bs.3830400202

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Sci        ISSN: 0005-7940


  2 in total

1.  PATIENTS' SATISFACTION WITH HEALTH SERVICES AT THE NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF PUBLIC HEALTH OF KOSOVA.

Authors:  Naser Ramadani; Valbona Zhjeqi; Merita Berisha; Rina Hoxha; Sanije Gashi; Ilir Begolli; Drita Salihu; Sefedin Muçaj
Journal:  Mater Sociomed       Date:  2016-06-01

Review 2.  Development of key performance indicators to evaluate centralized intake for patients with osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis.

Authors:  Claire E Barber; Jatin N Patel; Linda Woodhouse; Christopher Smith; Stephen Weiss; Joanne Homik; Sharon LeClercq; Dianne Mosher; Tanya Christiansen; Jane Squire Howden; Tracy Wasylak; James Greenwood-Lee; Andrea Emrick; Esther Suter; Barb Kathol; Dmitry Khodyakov; Sean Grant; Denise Campbell-Scherer; Leah Phillips; Jennifer Hendricks; Deborah A Marshall
Journal:  Arthritis Res Ther       Date:  2015-11-14       Impact factor: 5.156

  2 in total

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