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Advanced Healthcare Technology Management Workshop Mombasa, Kenya — 9-12 August 2006 Quality Management & HT Baset Khalaf Tshwane University of Technology
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What is Quality in Health Care? “The Right People Doing the Right Thing (at the Right Time).” Deming The Right Thing = Highest Quality Care Defined by the USA National Institutes of Health A measure or indicator of the degree to which health care is expected to increase the likelihood of desired health outcomes and is consistent with established standards of health care.
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Measure & Improve Quality through Appropriate quality culture & quality improvement (QI) infrastructure Prioritized QI initiatives based on disease burden, best practice & broad relevance Appropriate QI indicators & tools Performance feedback Evidence-based medicine & CE practices
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Quality Improvement cont. All healthcare services must be delivered accurately and correctly Such indicated services must be delivered at the right time Avoid Healthcare services that not helpful to the patient Avoid services that not reasonably cost-effective Avoid Safety hazards and errors that harm patients and employees The patient’s unique needs and preferences are respected.
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Principles of Quality Culture & QI Infrastructure Leadership : unity of purpose, create environment for people to become fully involved, achieve objectives Factual approach to decision making : based on logical analysis, manage what you can measure Involvement of people : enable their ability for the organization’s benefits Customer focus : know your clients, their current & future needs, strive to exceed their expectations Process approach : resources & activities are managed as a process; accuracy-staff effectiveness-cost reduction Systems approach to management : system of interrelated processes for a given objective
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Principles of Healthcare Delivery Prevention of harmful events extends resources life Reduce inappropriate variation in diagnosis & treatment Patient must be the center of HC delivery Those who know how to must lead the improvement process Multi-disciplinary teams is the right approach for most efficient QI Measure-feedback and intervene Good management practice: medicine-lab- equipment
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Typical QI indicators used in HTM PM Type/number of devices scheduled for service Type/number devices inspected Type/number of devices that failed an inspection Type/number: on-demand service Type/number found with physical damage Type/number of no problem found Type/number serviced more than once in 7-days Type/number involved in incident Type/number requiring abnormal labor or parts Inspections failed No inspection-equipment not located or in use
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Typical QI indicators used in HTM Repair Downtime (uptime) Specific equipment failure Number of repairs Average time per repair Downtime due to repairs Repair turnaround time Response time for repairs Repeat repairs Repairs delayed due to parts order Downtime due to parts order Mean time to repair
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Typical QI indicators used in HTM Users 1. User-related problems 2. % user errors associated with high risk devices 3. Number of user errors 4. Number of repairs caused by user misuse/abuse 5. Frequency repairs by user errors 6. Frequency user errors on same shift/ same unit Miscellaneous 1. Complaints 2. Incident investigations 3. Equipment Recalls
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Quality Assurance Focused Approach, Binseng Wang, USA 2000 Program components 1. Equipment Acquisition 2. Inspection and Maintenance 3. Staff Management & Quality Improvement 4. Quality Compliance 5. Regulatory Compliance
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QA-focused Approach Program components 1,2,& 3 are covered in other presentations Quality Monitoring 1. At service center, separate staff inspects equipment scheduled & random 2. At branches, central staff inspects and reports to senior management 3. Overdue inspection reports are provided monthly 4. Customer complaints are aggregated centrally 5. Each technician’s service reports reviewed for accuracy & completeness
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QA-focused Approach, cont. Regulatory Compliance 1. Medical device recall info is collected, analyzed & followed up 2. Medical device tracking reports acquisition of tracked devices to OEM 3. Device incident reporting includes investigation of every equipment-related death or serious injury 4. Upcoming regulations are continually watched
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Limited Resources Does Not Mean Limited Quality Examples from “Soft Side of Technology”: Leadership, Truth, and Team Focus Leadership and Staff Commitment Use of Best Available Medical Evidence Right People with Right Training Recognizing Importance of Local Empowerment
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Practical Quality Work Smarter Not Harder (and using less money and other resources) Examples Centralized versus Distributed Facilities and Services Centralized versus Bulk Acquisition of Supplies Standardization in HT purchase
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Quality and You How to be ready for future change Be a leader others will want to follow Act responsibly and professionally Improve yourself – make a plan of action Learn from your colleagues
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EHTP Links Quality & Technology Link between resources and delivery of quality care is achieved by identifying all HT resources needed to provide well-delineated health interventions Issues Addressed by EHTP How to enhance Provider Performance What are the best Clinical Interventions for your population How do you best manage existing (or new) health resources Allows CE practitioners & health planners to potentially conduct optimal HT planning
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References Clinical Engineering Handbook 1. Thomas Judd 2. Andrei Issakov 3. Peter Heimann
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Advanced Healthcare Technology Management Workshop Mombasa, Kenya — 9-12 August 2006 Quality Management & HT Questions? Comments?
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