Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) in Health Care.

Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) in Health Care is a structured organizational process that involves physicians and other personnel in planning and implementing ongoing proactive improvements in processes of care to provide quality health care outcomes.

Part of the study done was to evaluate the quality care and to determine what good care is; whether the care nurses give is proper and effective, or of good quality.

Usmanu Danfodiyo University Teaching Hospital (Uduth) is one of the largest University-based hospitals in Sokoto State, Nigeria. In terms of the CQI tracking, Aminu John Garba stated that the Uduth hospital along with four others have just completed and are now tracking and appraising the CQI mechanisms and processes in the clinical nursing divisions and have developed quality care indicators to measure and monitor quality of care amongst clinical-based nurses in these teaching hospitals.

Our hospital has asserted, as he stated, that evaluating the quality of nursing care is an essential part of professional accountability. Literature also suggests that in providing high quality care, it is important that nurses develop appropriate evaluative measurement tools to ensure professional aspect of nursing. Conversely, that has been a concern that in the clinical nursing division of these teaching hospitals, CQI mechanisms/processes (such as a structured auditing, monitoring and measuring quality of nursing care, established systems of continuing professional learning/ In-service Education Unit) were not more evident, particularly when these teaching hospitals were supposed to be seen as models for providing quality care services. It was not certain what CQI activities were present in similar hospitals, and if such activities were present, there was uncertainty as to how these activities were performed. In addition, the type of instrument/tools available for nursing care measurement was uncertain. There is a paucity of published evidence relating to the quality of nursing care measurement in these five teaching hospitals. Therefore, the gaps identified in the study would form the basis for future training and education of nurses involved in care-giving to promote quality care. Findings from the study provided evidenced-based scientific rationale for practice in relation to quality nursing care measurement in the health care institutions, thus adding to the body of knowledge of quality improvement. He also stated that the methodology employed in the study is an action research; with a mixed method-Sequential explanatory incorporated. Quantitative data was collected and analysed, followed by the collection and analyses of qualitative data. The study was done in five cycles which included a survey that elicited responses from the participants on general knowledge and perceptions about CQI. Cycle two included generating promising solutions and an action plan. In cycle three, established quality-care indicators were analysed, developed and thereafter, the newly adapted instrument for nursing care measurement was tested for applicability to settings. Participants reflected on the testing of the new tool in the fourth cycle and lastly, implementation/testing outcomes were evaluated in the fifth cycle.  

According to an articled presented on the important of nurses as key players in improving quality of care, “nurses today have many roles. In addition to meeting the needs of patients and serving as part of the health care team, nurses also play a key role in meeting the Joint Commission’s National Patient Safety Goals (JCPSG), in such areas as medication safety, communication and patient safety. This role allows nurses to contribute to quality improvement”( Medical News Today, 2009).

Established quality-care indicators were adapted in each of the five hospital settings for quality nursing care measurement. The newly adapted quality care indicators were tested for applicability on two acute-care wards in three of the five participating hospitals. The results of the study could be used in Nigeria and elsewhere, as a means to protect the rights of the patient; by measuring and monitoring the quality of nurses’ care.

Reference:

http://www.hschange.com/CONTENT/972/
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/134633.php