Immediate outcome indicators in perioperative care: a controlled intervention study on quality improvement in hospitals in Tanzania.

INTRODUCTION: Outcome assessment is the standard for evaluating the quality of health services worldwide. In this study, outcome has been divided into immediate and final outcome. Aim was to compare an intervention hospital with a Continuous Quality Improvement approach to a control group using benc...

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Main Authors: Goetz Bosse, Ferdinand Mtatifikolo, Wiltrud Abels, Christian Strosing, Jan-Philipp Breuer, Claudia Spies
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3680445?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-fdb170d0a5c945dab5349b45ce1a24202020-11-25T01:25:47ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0186e6542810.1371/journal.pone.0065428Immediate outcome indicators in perioperative care: a controlled intervention study on quality improvement in hospitals in Tanzania.Goetz BosseFerdinand MtatifikoloWiltrud AbelsChristian StrosingJan-Philipp BreuerClaudia SpiesINTRODUCTION: Outcome assessment is the standard for evaluating the quality of health services worldwide. In this study, outcome has been divided into immediate and final outcome. Aim was to compare an intervention hospital with a Continuous Quality Improvement approach to a control group using benchmark assessments of immediate outcome indicators in surgical care. Results were compared to final outcome indicators. METHOD: Surgical care quality in six hospitals in Tanzania was assessed from 2006-2011, using the Hospital Performance Assessment Tool. Independent observers assessed structural, process and outcome quality using checklists based on evidence-based guidelines. The number of surgical key procedures over the benchmark of 80% was compared between the intervention hospital and the control group. Results were compared to Case Fatality Rates. RESULTS: In the intervention hospital, in 2006, two of nine key procedures reached the benchmark, one in 2009, and four in 2011. In the control group, one of nine key procedures reached the benchmark in 2006, one in 2009, and none in 2011. Case Fatality Rate for all in-patients in the intervention hospital was 5.5% (n = 12,530) in 2006, 3.5% (n = 21,114) in 2009 and 4.6% (n = 18,840) in 2011. In the control group it was 3.1% (n = 17,827) in 2006, 4.2% (n = 13,632) in 2009 and 3.8% (n = 17,059) in 2011. DISCUSSION: Results demonstrated that quality assurance improved performance levels in both groups. After the introduction of Continuous Quality Improvement, performance levels improved further in the intervention hospital while quality in the district hospital did not. Immediate outcome indicators appeared to be a better steering tool for quality improvement compared to final outcome indicators. Immediate outcome indicators revealed a need for improvement in pre- and postoperative care. CONCLUSION: Quality assurance programs based on immediate outcome indicators can be effective if embedded in Continuous Quality Improvement. Nevertheless, final outcome indicators cannot be neglected.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3680445?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Goetz Bosse
Ferdinand Mtatifikolo
Wiltrud Abels
Christian Strosing
Jan-Philipp Breuer
Claudia Spies
spellingShingle Goetz Bosse
Ferdinand Mtatifikolo
Wiltrud Abels
Christian Strosing
Jan-Philipp Breuer
Claudia Spies
Immediate outcome indicators in perioperative care: a controlled intervention study on quality improvement in hospitals in Tanzania.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Goetz Bosse
Ferdinand Mtatifikolo
Wiltrud Abels
Christian Strosing
Jan-Philipp Breuer
Claudia Spies
author_sort Goetz Bosse
title Immediate outcome indicators in perioperative care: a controlled intervention study on quality improvement in hospitals in Tanzania.
title_short Immediate outcome indicators in perioperative care: a controlled intervention study on quality improvement in hospitals in Tanzania.
title_full Immediate outcome indicators in perioperative care: a controlled intervention study on quality improvement in hospitals in Tanzania.
title_fullStr Immediate outcome indicators in perioperative care: a controlled intervention study on quality improvement in hospitals in Tanzania.
title_full_unstemmed Immediate outcome indicators in perioperative care: a controlled intervention study on quality improvement in hospitals in Tanzania.
title_sort immediate outcome indicators in perioperative care: a controlled intervention study on quality improvement in hospitals in tanzania.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description INTRODUCTION: Outcome assessment is the standard for evaluating the quality of health services worldwide. In this study, outcome has been divided into immediate and final outcome. Aim was to compare an intervention hospital with a Continuous Quality Improvement approach to a control group using benchmark assessments of immediate outcome indicators in surgical care. Results were compared to final outcome indicators. METHOD: Surgical care quality in six hospitals in Tanzania was assessed from 2006-2011, using the Hospital Performance Assessment Tool. Independent observers assessed structural, process and outcome quality using checklists based on evidence-based guidelines. The number of surgical key procedures over the benchmark of 80% was compared between the intervention hospital and the control group. Results were compared to Case Fatality Rates. RESULTS: In the intervention hospital, in 2006, two of nine key procedures reached the benchmark, one in 2009, and four in 2011. In the control group, one of nine key procedures reached the benchmark in 2006, one in 2009, and none in 2011. Case Fatality Rate for all in-patients in the intervention hospital was 5.5% (n = 12,530) in 2006, 3.5% (n = 21,114) in 2009 and 4.6% (n = 18,840) in 2011. In the control group it was 3.1% (n = 17,827) in 2006, 4.2% (n = 13,632) in 2009 and 3.8% (n = 17,059) in 2011. DISCUSSION: Results demonstrated that quality assurance improved performance levels in both groups. After the introduction of Continuous Quality Improvement, performance levels improved further in the intervention hospital while quality in the district hospital did not. Immediate outcome indicators appeared to be a better steering tool for quality improvement compared to final outcome indicators. Immediate outcome indicators revealed a need for improvement in pre- and postoperative care. CONCLUSION: Quality assurance programs based on immediate outcome indicators can be effective if embedded in Continuous Quality Improvement. Nevertheless, final outcome indicators cannot be neglected.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3680445?pdf=render
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