Literature DB >> 9736844

Health care quality: from data to accountability.

M Darby.   

Abstract

The many audiences for information about the quality of health care have different and sometimes conflicting interests and priorities. This is reflected in the diversity of current efforts to use health care data to identify, measure, and demonstrate quality. The author surveys three of these approaches in depth: (1) the professional approach, which relies on the actions of private-sector accreditation groups, trade associations and health plans, hospitals, and other providers to assure quality; (2) the market-driven approach, which relies on the use of quality data by health care purchasers and consumers in choosing plans and providers; and (3) the public-sector approach, which relies on the regulatory, oversight, and purchasing actions of government at the federal, state, and local levels to assure quality. The author concludes that efforts to measure and report the quality of health care invariably confront a variety of technical and political issues. Several observers maintain that it is more important for participants in quality issues to reach consensus on the issues than to reach technical perfection in the way the data are handled. Important obstacles in the technical realm include inadequate investment in sufficiently sophisticated and compatible information systems and the fact that where such systems are in place, they generally cannot be linked. But efforts, both technical and legal, are under way to overcome these obstacles. Even so, some of the issues of health care quality will remain moving targets because of constant changes in the health care environment and in technology. The author closes with the hope that the various actors within the health care industry may coordinate their efforts in dealing with these issues.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9736844     DOI: 10.1097/00001888-199808000-00009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Med        ISSN: 1040-2446            Impact factor:   6.893


  2 in total

1.  Limitations of and Barriers to Using Performance Measurement: Purchasers' Perspectives.

Authors:  Caren Ginsberg; Samantha Sheridan
Journal:  Health Care Financ Rev       Date:  2001

2.  Setting priorities in child health research in India for 2016-2025: a CHNRI exercise undertaken by the Indian Council for Medical Research and INCLEN Trust.

Authors:  Kerri Wazny; Narendra K Arora; Archisman Mohapatra; Hema S Gopalan; Manoj K Das; Mkc Nair; Sandeep Bavdekar; Reeta Rasaily; Vasantha Thavaraj; Malabika Roy; Chander Shekhar; Rakesh Kumar; Vishwa M Katoch; Igor Rudan; Robert E Black; Soumya Swaminathan
Journal:  J Glob Health       Date:  2019-12       Impact factor: 4.413

  2 in total

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