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Your Quality Improvement Plan. Gerald A. Hoeltge, MD Special Commissioner for Complaint Investigations, PTES Oversight & Equivalency Determinations CAP Laboratory Accreditation Program. Objectives. To clarify the checklist differences between quality improvement and quality control
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Your Quality Improvement Plan Gerald A. Hoeltge, MD Special Commissioner for Complaint Investigations, PTES Oversight & Equivalency Determinations CAP Laboratory Accreditation Program
Objectives • To clarify the checklist differences between quality improvement and quality control • To identify aspects of laboratory service pivotal to patient care • To help choose those indicators to monitor quality improvement
6 questions 13 questions on quality improvement
We will point outthe new questions. 13 questions on quality improvement
QI is central to accreditation • Standard III • Quality Control • Proficiency Testing • Instrument Maintenance • Quality Improvement / Performance Improvement • Most checklist questions are Phase 2 • Featured in the new individual grading report
Grading Summary (partial example) Distribution of Performance by Peer Group LAB BGS STD EXC Personnel and safety EXC 8.2% 51.0% 40.8% Technical processes STD 4.3% 83.0% 12.6% Quality improvement EXC 19.1% 0.0% 80.9% Proficiency testing STD 7.4% 87.0% 5.6% LAB = laboratory performanceBGS = below peer group standardSTD = standardEXC = excellent
Standard III • The Director shall... • monitor and evaluate quality and appropriateness • address systematic problems • participate in institutional QI programs and outcome studies • direct efforts to continuing improvement in quality
Checklist questions on quality INFORMATION MANAGEMENT LAB INFORMATION SYSTEMS SPECIMEN MANAGEMENT REPORTING INTERPRETATION TESTING/REVIEW PROCESSING SPECIMEN TRANSPORT SPECIMEN COLLECTION 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 after Nevalainen DE, Berte LM. CAP Today, March, 1997
Why have a quality plan? • No different than EOP, safety plan, FVPM statement • Its purpose is not to please the inspection team, but the inspector should use it as a tool to make the inspection more efficient.
Phase 2 Does the quality improvement program follow a written plan? • Was it approved by the Director? • Is it comprehensive? • Is it structured?
Sahney’s Second Law of Quality Progress: Qp = E x M2 E = employees’ commitment to quality M = management’s commitment to quality
“Approved by the Director” • Evidence that the director is involved • Responsibility under Standard I: “Assume responsibility for implementation of the quality improvement plan. The director and professional laboratory personnel must participate as members of the various quality improvement committees of the institution.” • Quality is still everyone's responsibility! The best labs are those with a culture of quality.
ISO 9000 series 1. management responsibility 2. quality system 3. contract review 4. design control 5. document control 6. purchasing 7. purchaser-supplied product 8. product identification and traceability 9. process control 10. inspection and testing 11. inspection, measuring and test equipment 12. inspection and test status 13. control of nonconforming product 14. corrective action 15. handling storage, pack aging and delivery 16. quality records 17. internal quality audits 18. training 19. servicing 20. statistical techniques
organization and management quality management system document control referral of examinations to other laboratories external services and supplies control of nonconformities consultative services and resolution of complaints preventive actions corrective actions quality and technical records internal audits management review ISO DIS 15189 ISO/TC 212/WG 1: “Quality Management in the Medical Laboratory,” Draft International Standard
NCCLS Guideline GP-22 “Continuous Quality Improvement” • Team management • Plans management • Improvement management • Selecting an improvement process • Systematic improvement in the path of workflow • The TQM interface
quality system essentials operating systems 1. patient assessment 2. test requests 3. specimen collection 4. specimen transport 5. specimen receipt 6. testing and review 6. lab interpretation 7. results reporting 8. post-test specimen management 9. laboratory information system 10. interpretation and consultation 1. quality program organization 2. personnel selection, training, education 3. equipment 4. purchasing and inventory 5. process control 6.. documents and records 7. occurrence management 8. internal assessment 9. process improvement 10. service, satisfaction GP26Q SU YA SL TI ET MY S after NCCLS GP26-P (1998) “Quality System Model for Healthcare”
GP26Q SU YA SL TI ET MY S • organization • personnel• equipment• purchasing• process control• records• occurrence management• internal assessment interpretationand consultation patientassessment • process improvement• customer satisfaction
Importantaspects of care critical to patient care high volume experientially problematic
Phase 1 Does the lab follow the plan? Has the QI plan been implemented as designed? • refer to the design document. • based upon the document that was in effect ~ 12 months prior to the inspection. NEW
Monitoring and Evaluation design measure improve assess
Shewhart Cycle do plan check act
Phase 2 Benchmarks of performance? • Are key indicators of quality monitored and evaluated for opportunities for improvement? • Are the chosen indicators being measured against a benchmark such as a practice guideline, Q-Probe data, published references, or trend analysis? • Sufficient indicators for the laboratory’sscope of care? measure
Measurement does not improve quality. • Documentation must not become its own goal. • Organizations may decouple related processes. • Rigid external benchmarks stifle quality improvement. Caution!
Phase 1 Pre-analytic measures? • Do the chosen indicators include measures of pre-analytic variation appropriate to the laboratory’s scope of care? • transmission of physicians’ orders • shipment of provider-collected samples • requisition accuracy • phlebotomy statistics • specimen acceptability rates NEW
Phase 1 Post-analytic measures • Do the chosen indicators include measures of post-analytic variation appropriate to the laboratory’s scope of care? • reflexive testing • concordance of analytic data • off-site printing and posting of lab reports • report readability NEW
Phase 2 Adequate design? • Is the QI program comprehensive? • Each section of the laboratory, e.g., chemistry, transfusion medicine, anatomic pathology, microbiology, hematology, etc. • The program must include and integrate all aspects of the lab’s scope of care, such as inpatient and outpatient services, reference laboratory services, satellite and point-of- care testing, and consultative services. design
Typical table of organization in 2000: • Anatomic Pathology • Surgical Pathology • Cytopathology • Autopsy Pathology • Specimen Procurement and Processing Lab • Automated Laboratory • Manual Testing • Microbiology • Immunology • Special Chemistry • Cytogenetics • Laboratory Information Systems • Outpatient Clinic Labs
Phase 2 Problem resolution • Is there a systematic program to identify and correct problems that may interfere with patient care services? • Follow a plan? • Statistics available? • All problems recorded? • Resolution documented? NEW Mistakes are opportunities.
Phase 1 Actions taken? • Are appropriate actions taken whenever opportunities for improvement are identified? • Each opportunity should eventuate in an appropriate action. • Records should be organized in such a way as to facilitate identification of opportunities to improve care. NEW
Phase 1 Customer satisfaction • Have the referring physicians’ and patients’ satisfaction with the laboratory service been measured within the past 2 years? physicians patients telephone survey questionnaire direct indirect referral statistics waiting times NEW (examples)
Phase 2 Annual appraisal • Is the QI program appraised at least annually for effectiveness? • by the director or qualified designee • new and redesigned activities • follow-up and problem resolution • address recurrent problems • revise summary document when indicated NEW
Phase 1 Charts and graphs? • Are graphical tools used to communicate quality findings effectively? • Examples:• Pareto charts • cause-and-effect (fishbone) diagrams• frequency histograms• trend graphs• force-field analyses• flow charts NEW
One or more improvement activities were chosen after consultation with the medical staff. Phase 2 Clinical relevancy of QI program • Is a physician responsible for ensuring that the program is coordinated with those of the medical, surgical, and nursing services? • The intent is to consider quality improvement of patient care services a medical process.
Phase 1 Is quality improving? • Is there evidence that the laboratory’s quality has improved in the preceding 2 years? NEW
QI records may be peripheralized or centralized. If records are distributed in many locations, summaries of the content should be available at the central facility.
How does the CAP inspector evaluate the QI program? • Requirements are directive but not prescriptive. • There is an opportunity for post-inspection dialog. • The goal is laboratory improvement.
The CAP inspector should be aware of the facility’s needs • Where is the lab in its “QI evolution”? • What is are the characteristics of the lab’s external and internal markets? • What are the lab’s customers demanding? The program must be fair to all other applicants.
Prepare for the inspection! • Be familiar with the Standards and the checklist. • Anticipate your inspector’s questions. • Organize your QI records into a presentation. • Have examples of QI reports. Show how they’re used to improve quality. • Don’t be passive! Take the initiative! Show enthusiasm!
Summary • A systematic program is essential. • Your documentation should be complete. • Emphasize clinical relevance. This may be the most important part of the entire inspection!