首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


The Total Health Care Audit System: a systematic methodology for clinical practice evaluation and development in NHS provider organizations
Authors:Andrew Miles BSc  MSc  MPhil  PhD    Paul Bentley MB  ChB  PhD  FRCP  FRCPath    Nicholas Price BA    reas Polychronis MB  BCh    Joseph Grey BSc  MB  BCh  PhD  MRCP   Jonathan Asbridge DipN  RGN
Affiliation:Deputy Director, Centre for the Advancement of Clinical Practice, European Institute of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Surrey, UK, and Visiting Professor, University of Westminster, UK;Consultant Haematologist/Former Medical Director, Llandough Hospital and Community NHS Trust, Cardiff, UK;Clinical Audit Coordinator, National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, Queens Square, London, UK;House Physician, Department of Medicine, Llandough Hospital, Cardiff, UK;Senior Registrar in General Medicine, University of Wales College of Medicine, University Hospital of Wales, Cardiff, UK;Nursing Director, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UK
Abstract:Writing in Medical Education in 1982, Fowkes (1982) noted the lack of general agreement within the medical profession on methods of audit, a deficiency previously articulated by Shaw (1980) and later emphasized by McIntyre (1985). More recently, a study by Black & Thompson (1993) of consultant and junior medical staff in four London district general hospitals revealed that 'many doctors did not understand how to undertake audit', and major research by both Hopkins (1993, 1994) and Buttery et al. (1994) described a multiplicity of methodological deficiencies in the general approaches to audit adopted by clinicians since the promulgation of the White Paper definition in 1989. Soundness of methodological approach is fundamental to securing the success of clinical audit within Provider organizations and is thus central to the generation of measurable improvements in the quality of clinical care being delivered to patients. It is therefore disturbing that methodological deficiencies may still be observed in general approaches to audit (Buttery et al. 1994), with no author yet recommending a formal system for critical inquiry into clinical practice. It was the recognition of the unsatisfactory nature of this situation which led us to develop a system aimed at assessing, in a critical fashion, the quality of the totality of care dispensed within NHS provider organizations. The system is presented here for the first time.
Keywords:audit    change implementation    clinical guidelines    evidence-based medicine    methodology    organization
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号