Gold Barbara, England Dawn, Riley William, Jacobs-Halsey Ginny, Webb Corinne, Daniels Bobbi
Dr. Gold: Executive Vice President of Medical Affairs, University of Minnesota Health, Minneapolis, MN, and Professor of Anesthesiology, Minneapolis, MN. Ms. England: Director of Infection Prevention, University of Minnesota Health, Minneapolis, MN. Dr. Riley: Professor, School for the Science of Health Care Delivery, ASU Nursing and Health Innovation, Arizona State University, Phoenix, AZ. Ms. Jacobs-Halsey: Director, Strategic Initiatives, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN. Ms. Webb: Medical Student, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, Minneapolis, MN. Dr. Daniels: Co-President, Professor of Medicine, University of Minnesota Health, Minneapolis, MN, CEO, University of Minnesota Physicians, Minneapolis, MN.
J Contin Educ Health Prof. 2016 Fall;36(4):307-315. doi: 10.1097/CEH.0000000000000118.
While quality improvement (QI) initiatives can be a highly effective means for improving health care delivery in academic medical centers (AMCs), many health care professionals are not formally trained in basic QI methodology, engaging clinicians in QI activities can be challenging, and there is often a lack of integration and coordination among QI functions (eg, Departments of Quality and Safety, Continuing Professional Development). In our AMC, we undertook a collaborative approach to achieve better vertical and horizontal integration of our QI education efforts. This article provides a case example describing our organizational context, what was done, and with what effect and makes our example and lessons learned available to others.
We developed a new educational QI program that was jointly planned and implemented by a group comprising major QI stakeholders. This project was intended to create horizontal organizational linkages between continuing professional development, clinicians, the hospital, and QI department and produce QI activities that aligned with the strategic objectives of senior management.
The group developed and implemented a curriculum based on Lean methodology and concepts from the Institute for Health Care Improvement Model for Improvement. Two cohorts (27 teams) completed the training and planned and implemented QI projects. All projects were aligned with organizational quality, safety, and patient experience goals. The majority of projects met their aim statements.
This case description provides an example of successful horizontal integration of an AMCs' QI functions to disseminate knowledge and implement meaningful QI aligned with strategic objectives (vertical integration).
虽然质量改进(QI)举措可能是改善学术医疗中心(AMC)医疗服务的一种非常有效的手段,但许多医疗保健专业人员并未接受过基本QI方法的正规培训,让临床医生参与QI活动可能具有挑战性,而且QI职能部门(如质量与安全部、继续职业发展部)之间往往缺乏整合与协调。在我们的AMC中,我们采取了一种协作方法,以更好地实现QI教育工作的纵向和横向整合。本文提供了一个案例示例,描述了我们的组织背景、所采取的措施、取得的效果,并将我们的示例和经验教训分享给其他人。
我们开发了一个新的教育性QI项目,该项目由主要的QI利益相关者组成的团队共同规划和实施。该项目旨在在继续职业发展、临床医生、医院和QI部门之间建立横向组织联系,并开展与高级管理层战略目标相一致的QI活动。
该团队开发并实施了一门基于精益方法和医疗保健改进研究所改进模型概念的课程。两个团队(27个小组)完成了培训,并规划和实施了QI项目。所有项目均与组织的质量、安全和患者体验目标相一致。大多数项目实现了其目标声明。
本案例描述提供了一个成功横向整合AMC的QI职能以传播知识并实施与战略目标相一致的有意义的QI(纵向整合)的示例。