HEALTH CARE SERVICES
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INTRODUCTION
ients with disease and injury to improving the health of entire communities. Proce
ark. Throughout most of the last half of the twentieth century, American health ca
tors of population health place Americans surprisingly lower in health status tha
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INITIATIVES FOR CHANGE
e as it is consumed. Such prepaid financing is supposed to change the incentives f
ces required. In managed care systems there is often an emphasis on improving the
patterns of use deviate from prevailing patterns among their peers. The controls
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INITIATIVES FOR CHANGE
outpatient offices and clinics. Only 15 years ago, cataract surgery required a wee
Health care leaders are also using these comparative data and internal “balanced
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FOUR ARENAS OF IMPROVED PROCESS
could be safer and more effective than it is.
counters, and lapses in continuity of care. An average physician office visit take
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FOUR ARENAS OF IMPROVED PROCESS
ry healthy, and do not notice. But others are at high risk of suffering devastatin
chines, costly hospital space, and equipment) less fully, and we use many more futi
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FURTHER POTENTIAL IMPROVEMENT
s for potential improvement of American health care:
. Reduce the use of inappropriate surgery, admissions, and tests.
ces. Improve health status through reduction in “upstream” causes of illness, incl
e cesarean section rates to below 10 percent, without compromise in maternal or fe
ife. Reduce the use of unwanted and ineffective medical technologies at the end o
t simplified formularies, and streamline pharmaceutical use.
ase the frequency with which patients participate actively in decision making abo
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FURTHER POTENTIAL IMPROVEMENT
s forms.
Reduce the total supply of high-technology medical and surgical care. Consolidat
ncy of duplicate data entry and of recording of information never used in medical
the racial gap in infant mortality and low birth weight.
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APPROACHES TO QUALITY CONTROL IN HEALTH CARE : HISTORY AND PREVAILING METHODS
is (the physician’s) fingers.” Standards of ethical conduct were established in the
ew consists of reviews of care processes against written criteria. For example, su
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APPROACHES TO QUALITY CONTROL IN HEALTH CARE : HISTORY AND PREVAILING METHODS
effects of various forms of health care insurance on the processes and outcomes o
e of access, and appropriateness, as well as the more traditional definitions of h
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APPROACHES TO QUALITY CONTROL IN HEALTH CARE : HISTORY AND PREVAILING METHODS
h century, a virtual subindustry developed in the United States of both public an
tilization of resources or, sometimes, their degree of adherence to protocols for
e leaders mainly seek to assure quality through accreditation of facilities and p
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QUALITY IMPROVEMENT
n to serious problems, some of which are remedied correctly, and others which invi
nd seat to inspection, are not so new at all in medicine.
on hospital boards and in health care management, health care organizations beca
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QUALITY IMPROVEMENT
o make systems more patient-friendly. In general, the health care models for manag
sts as inevitable. (All these constraints are, of course, quite real, unless the pr
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QUALITY IMPROVEMENT
t to reduce waiting times and delays. Frustrated by delays in operating room start rovement model (Figure on next slide) based on a common aim, to reduce the delay b
improvement in handoffs and queueing. Each team worked to learn and to apply the
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QUALITY IMPROVEMENT
teams as well . Two subsequent learning sessions reinforced skills and encouraged
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QUALITY IMPROVEMENT
ng with substantial cost reductions; these teams proved that customer satisfactio
en exclusive control over activities within their own boundaries. computerization, health care is awash in data.
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QUALITY IMPROVEMENT
o health care organizations, an allergic reaction occurred. “I don’t have ‘customers y dawning.
hat levels of savings can be achieved while improving quality through a thorough
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QUALITY IMPROVEMENT
tion from each other. Few doctors routinely visit with colleagues to discover dif cently most organizations have had difficulty tapping that energy to support syst raditional payment systems.
) reimbursed for each day of stay, and in some cases for the analysis of each tes
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THE FUTURE
about the performance of health care organizations, consumers and payers are begi
xpect fewer specialists, hospital beds, and sites of high-technology service per c
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THE FUTURE
l public will maintain and increase investments in injury prevention, smoking ces
example in choosing between medical and surgical treatment for prostate disease, i
of information management than in diagnosis and treatment. By the early twenty-fi
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THE FUTURE
hnicians, and dozens of others—reflect the historical configuration of care syste
reallocated. Repetitive technical tasks may be done more competently and less exp
tem of the twentieth century—the hospital—may become a dinosaur in the twenty-fi
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THE FUTURE
firm hold in the coming years. Scientific evidence and public consciousness are c
as come from evidence, especially evidence owned by the competition.
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