Wasson John H, Anders Scott G, Moore L Gordon, Ho Lynn, Nelson Eugene C, Godfrey Marjorie M, Batalden Paul B
Center for the Aging, Dartmouth Medical School, Lebanon, New Hampshire, USA.
Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2008 Aug;34(8):445-52. doi: 10.1016/s1553-7250(08)34055-0.
Usual medical care in the United States is frequently not a satisfying experience for either patients or primary care physicians. Whether primary care can be saved and its quality improved is a subject of national concern. An increasing number of physicians are using microsystem principles to radically redesign their practices. Small, independent practices-micro practices-are often able to incorporate into a few people the frontline attributes of successful microsystems such as clear leadership, patient focus, process improvement, performance patterns, and information technology.
PATIENT FOCUS, PROCESS IMPROVEMENT, AND PERFORMANCE PATTERNS: An exemplary microsystem will (1) have as its primary purpose a focus on the patient-a commitment to meet all patient needs; (2) make fundamental to its work the study, measurement, and improvement ofcare-a commitment to process improvement; and (3) routinely measure its patterns of performance, "feed back" the data, and make changes based on the data.
The literature and experience with micro practices suggest that they (1) constitute an important group in which to demonstrate the value of microsystem thinking; (2) can become very effective clinical microsystems; (3) can reduce their overhead costs to half that of larger freestanding practices, enabling them to spend more time working with their patients; (4) can develop new tools and approaches without going through layers of clearance; and (5) need not reinvent the wheel.
Patient-reported data demonstrate how micro practices are using patient focus, process improvement, performance patterns, and information technology to improve performance. Pati ents should be able to report that they receive "exactly the care they want and need exactly when and how they want and need it."
在美国,常规医疗护理对患者和初级保健医生来说常常都不是一次令人满意的体验。初级保健能否得以挽救并提高其质量是一个受到全国关注的问题。越来越多的医生正在运用微系统原则对他们的医疗实践进行彻底重新设计。小型独立医疗实践——微型医疗实践——往往能够将成功微系统的一线特质融入少数人员身上,这些特质包括明确的领导力、以患者为中心、流程改进、绩效模式和信息技术。
以患者为中心、流程改进和绩效模式:一个堪称典范的微系统将(1)把关注患者作为其主要目的——致力于满足患者的所有需求;(2)将护理的研究、测量和改进作为其工作的根本——致力于流程改进;以及(3)定期测量其绩效模式,“反馈”数据,并根据数据做出改变。
关于微型医疗实践的文献和经验表明,它们(1)构成了一个重要群体,可在其中展示微系统思维的价值;(2)能够成为非常有效的临床微系统;(3)可以将其间接费用降低至大型独立医疗实践的一半,使它们能够有更多时间与患者相处;(4)能够在无需层层审批的情况下开发新工具和方法;以及(5)无需重复发明轮子。
患者报告的数据展示了微型医疗实践如何利用以患者为中心、流程改进、绩效模式和信息技术来提高绩效。患者应该能够报告说他们“在自己想要和需要的时间及方式下,确切地得到了自己想要和需要的护理”。