Nuclear Medicine and Diagnostic Imaging Section, Division of Human Health, International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, Austria.
Department of Nuclear Medicine, Centro de Investigaciones Clinicas, La Habana, Cuba.
Semin Nucl Med. 2017 Nov;47(6):680-686. doi: 10.1053/j.semnuclmed.2017.07.003. Epub 2017 Jul 25.
An effective management system that integrates quality management is essential for a modern nuclear medicine practice. The Nuclear Medicine and Diagnostic Imaging Section of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has the mission of supporting nuclear medicine practice in low- and middle-income countries and of helping them introduce it in their health-care system, when not yet present. The experience gathered over several years has shown diversified levels of development and varying degrees of quality of practice, among others because of limited professional networking and limited or no opportunities for exchange of experiences. Those findings triggered the development of a program named Quality Management Audits in Nuclear Medicine (QUANUM), aimed at improving the standards of NM practice in low- and middle-income countries to internationally accepted standards through the introduction of a culture of quality management and systematic auditing programs. QUANUM takes into account the diversity of nuclear medicine services around the world and multidisciplinary contributions to the practice. Those contributions include clinical, technical, radiopharmaceutical, and medical physics procedures. Aspects of radiation safety and patient protection are also integral to the process. Such an approach ensures consistency in providing safe services of superior quality to patients. The level of conformance is assessed using standards based on publications of the IAEA and the International Commission on Radiological Protection, and guidelines from scientific societies such as Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging (SNMMI) and European Association of Nuclear Medicine (EANM). Following QUANUM guidelines and by means of a specific assessment tool developed by the IAEA, auditors, both internal and external, will be able to evaluate the level of conformance. Nonconformances will then be prioritized and recommendations will be provided during an exit briefing. The same tool could then be applied to assess any improvement after corrective actions are taken. This is the first comprehensive audit program in nuclear medicine that helps evaluate managerial aspects, safety of patients and workers, clinical practice, and radiopharmacy, and, above all, keeps them under control all together, with the intention of continuous improvement.
一个有效的质量管理体系对于现代核医学实践至关重要。国际原子能机构(IAEA)的核医学和诊断成像科的使命是支持低收入和中等收入国家的核医学实践,并帮助它们在尚未存在的情况下将其引入其医疗保健系统。多年来积累的经验表明,实践的发展水平各不相同,质量水平也各不相同,部分原因是专业网络有限,经验交流机会有限或没有。这些发现促使制定了一个名为核医学质量管理审计(QUANUM)的计划,旨在通过引入质量管理文化和系统的审计计划,将核医学实践的标准提高到国际公认的标准,从而改善低收入和中等收入国家的核医学实践标准。QUANUM考虑到了世界各地核医学服务的多样性和多学科对实践的贡献。这些贡献包括临床、技术、放射性药物和医学物理学程序。辐射安全和患者保护方面也是该过程的组成部分。这种方法确保为患者提供一致的安全优质服务。使用基于 IAEA 和国际辐射防护委员会出版物以及核医学和分子成像学会(SNMMI)和欧洲核医学协会(EANM)等科学协会指南的标准来评估符合程度。根据 QUANUM 指南并通过 IAEA 开发的特定评估工具,内部和外部的审核员将能够评估符合程度。然后将对不符合项进行优先排序,并在退出简报中提供建议。然后可以应用相同的工具来评估采取纠正措施后的任何改进。这是核医学领域的第一个全面审计计划,有助于评估管理方面、患者和工作人员的安全、临床实践和放射性药物,并将所有这些方面都控制在一起,旨在不断改进。