scholarly journals Clinical Pathway for Improving Quality Service and Cost Containtment in Hospital

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Boy Subirosa Sabarguna

The explanation begins with the Clinical Pathway in Hospital which describes how the Clinical Pathway is used in relation to 2 things: Components-Linkages and Step-Problems-Optimal Solution, followed by Linkages Clinical Pathway with Quality Improvement and Cost Containment, which describes the relationship of each. Followed by the Clinical Pathway for Service Quality: which consists of: (1) Clinical Pathway for Service Quality, (2) Patient Safety for Service Quality Improvement, (3) The role of alogarithm, thereby clarifying the form of clinical pathways in quality improvement efforts that ensure service improvement by still maintain the quality that is maintained during the cost containment. The Clinical Pathway in Cost Containment describes the roles of: (1) Link of Components, (2) Procedure, (3) Unit Cost, so that cost containment efforts can be made in the form of cost containment optimally while maintaining quality does not need to decrease. Clinical Pathway in New Era is a newly developed algorithm related to current and future conditions. This is related to: (1) New Era in Pandemic Covid-19, (2) Clinical Pathway in Non Curative Service, (3) Clinical Pathway in Technology Services, (4) Clinical Pathway in Technological Rerelated while continuing to carry out quality improvement and cost containment simultaneously. Concluton: clinical pathway in hospital can be used as a system for Quality Improvement and Cost Containment, related to New Era in Pandemic Covid-19, Non Curative Service, Technology Services and Technological Rerelated.

2014 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 1-122 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louise Locock ◽  
Glenn Robert ◽  
Annette Boaz ◽  
Sonia Vougioukalou ◽  
Caroline Shuldham ◽  
...  

BackgroundMeasuring, understanding and improving patients’ experiences is of central importance to health care systems, but there is debate about the best methods for gathering and understanding patient experiences and how to then use them to improve care. Experience-based co-design (EBCD) has been evaluated as a successful approach to quality improvement in health care, drawing on video narrative interviews with local patients and involving them as equal partners in co-designing quality improvements. However, the time and cost involved have been reported as a barrier to adoption. The Health Experiences Research Group at the University of Oxford collects and analyses video and audio-recorded interviews with people about their experiences of illness. It now has a national archive of around 3000 interviews, covering around 75 different conditions or topics. Selected extracts from these interviews are disseminated for a lay audience onwww.healthtalkonline.org. In this study, we set out to investigate whether or not this archive of interviews could replace the need for discovery interviews with local patients.ObjectivesTo use a national video and audio archive of patient experience narratives to develop, test and evaluate a rapid patient-centred service improvement approach (‘accelerated experience-based co-design’ or AEBCD). By using national rather than local patient interviews, we aimed to halve the overall cycle from 12 to 6 months, allowing for EBCD to be conducted in two clinical pathways rather than one. We observed how this affected the process and outcomes of the intervention.DesignThe intervention was an adapted form of EBCD, a participatory action research approach in which patients and staff work together to identify and implement quality improvements. The intervention retained all six components of EBCD, but used national trigger films, shortened the time frame and employed local service improvement facilitators. An ethnographic process evaluation was conducted, including observations, interviews, questionnaires, cost and documentary analysis including previous EBCD evaluation reports.SettingIntensive care and lung cancer services in two English NHS hospital trusts (Royal Berkshire and Royal Brompton and Harefield).ParticipantsNinety-six clinical staff (primarily nursing and medical) and 63 patients and family members.InterventionFor this accelerated intervention, the trigger film was derived from pre-existing national patient experience interviews. Local facilitators conducted staff discovery interviews. Thereafter, the process followed the usual EBCD pattern: the film was shown to local patients in a workshop meeting, and staff had a separate meeting to discuss the results of their feedback. Staff and patients then came together in a further workshop to view the film, agree priorities for improvement and set up co-design working groups to take these priorities forward.ResultsThe accelerated approach proved readily acceptable to staff and patients; using films of national rather than local narratives did not adversely affect local NHS staff engagement, and may in some cases have made the process less threatening or challenging. Local patients felt that the national films generally reflected important themes, although a minority felt that they were more negative than their own personal experience. However, they served their purpose as a ‘trigger’ to discussion, and the resulting 48 co-design activities across the four pathways were similar in nature to those in EBCD but achieved at reduced cost. AEBCD was nearly half the cost of EBCD. However, where a trigger film already exists, pathways can be implemented for as little as 40% of the cost of traditional EBCD. It was not necessary to do additional work locally to supplement the national interviews. The intervention carried a ‘cost’ in terms of heavy workload and intensive activity for the local facilitators, but also brought benefits in terms of staff development/capacity-building. Furthermore, as in previous EBCDs, the approach was subsequently adopted in other clinical pathways in the trusts.ConclusionsAccelerated experience-based co-design delivered an accelerated version of EBCD, generating a comparable set of improvement activities. The national film acted as an effective trigger to the co-design process. Based on the results of the evaluation, AEBCD offers a rigorous and effective patient-centred quality improvement approach. We aim to develop further trigger films from the archived material as resources permit, and to investigate different ways of conducting the analysis (e.g. involving patients in doing the analysis).FundingThe National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research programme.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Vera Marietha Meinar Rejeki ◽  
Atik Nurwahyuni

Abstrak Rumah Sakit sebagai pemberi layanan kesehatan saat ini dituntut untuk melakukan kendali mutu dan biaya, namun tetap berkualitas. Clinical pathway yang menjadi dasar pengendalian mutu dan biaya sudah ada tetapi belum diaudit penggunaan­nya oleh tim rumah sakit. Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk mengetahui unit cost layanan dan cost of treatment DBD di RS X Ja­karta. Penelitian kuantitatif melalui pengambilan data cross sectional dengan jumlah sampel penelitian sebanyak 190 pasien DBD. Hasil penelitian didapatkan adanya kesenjangan antara cost of treatment perawatan pasien DBD berdasarkan clinical pathway (Rp. 2.184.588) dan cost of treatment berdasarkan kondisi riil (Rp. 2.382.512) dengan selisih terbesar di rawat inap dan obat-obatan. Cost of treatment tanpa perhitungan gaji dan investasi untuk pasien DBD dapat berkurang menjadi 29% dari cost of treatment semula. Cost of Treatment tanpa perhitungan gaji maka cost of treatment dapat turun menjadi 42%. Diperlukan sistem pemantauan kepatuhan terhadap clinical pathway, pembentukan tim casemix rumah sakit untuk peman­tauan dan evaluasi implementasi JKN di rumah sakit .Abstract Hospitals as health care providers are now required to perform cost and quality control without neglecting the quality of services. Clinical pathways which underlying quality and cost control in the hospital are available but has not been audited. This study aims to determine the unit cost of services in RS X Jakarta, the utilization of hospital services for dengue disease and cost of treatment of DHF in RS X Jakarta. A cross-sectional study was performed in this study. A quantitative approach was done through data collection from hospital information system, medical record and financial data. The result showed that there was a gap between the cost of treat­ment of DHF patients which based on the clinical pathway (2,184,588 IDR) and the cost of treatment based on the real condition (2,382,512 IDR). The biggest difference between cost of treatment and real cost was in the hospitalization cost and medicine cost. Cost of treatment without salary and investation calculation for DHF patients can be reduced significantly by 29%. Cost of treatment without salary calculation for DHF patients can be reduced significantly by 42%. There is a need for monitoring system and the estab­lishment of hospital case mix team in order to optimize the hospital clinical pathway in the JKN era. 


2012 ◽  
Vol 256-259 ◽  
pp. 3068-3072
Author(s):  
Cheng Wen Liao ◽  
Tieh Min Yen

Traditional analysis methods cannot analyze the data of customer satisfaction and dissatisfaction and be applied to decision-making, thus are unable to identify the quality improvement priority sequence. This study treated the food and beverage (F&B) service providers in Taoyuan International Airport as the research subject, and applied the Taguchi quality analysis method to evaluate the F&B service and identify the improvement direction for the F&B service quality.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. e001309
Author(s):  
Jennifer Gosling ◽  
Nicholas Mays ◽  
Bob Erens ◽  
David Reid ◽  
Josephine Exley

BackgroundThis paper presents the results of the first UK-wide survey of National Health Service (NHS) general practitioners (GPs) and practice managers (PMs) designed to explore the service improvement activities being undertaken in practices, and the factors that facilitated or obstructed that work. The research was prompted by growing policy and professional interest in the quality of general practice and its improvement. The analysis compares GP and PM involvement in, and experience of, quality improvement activities.MethodsThis was a mixed-method study comprising 26 semistructured interviews, a focus group and two surveys. The qualitative data supported the design of the surveys, which were sent to all 46 238 GPs on the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) database and the PM at every practice across the UK (n=9153) in July 2017.ResultsResponses from 2377 GPs and 1424 PMs were received and were broadly representative of each group. Ninety-nine per cent reported having planned or undertaken improvement activities in the previous 12 months. The most frequent related to prescribing and access. Key facilitators of improvement included ‘good clinical leadership’. The two main barriers were ‘too many demands from external stakeholders’ and a lack of protected time. Audit and significant event audit were the most common improvement tools used, but respondents were interested in training on other quality improvement tools.ConclusionGPs and PMs are interested in improving service quality. As such, the new quality improvement domain in the Quality and Outcomes Framework used in the payment of practices is likely to be relatively easily accepted by GPs in England. However, if improving quality is to become routine work for practices, it will be important for the NHS in the four UK countries to work with practices to mitigate some of the barriers that they face, in particular the lack of protected time.


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