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How do hospital boards govern for quality improvement? A mixed methods study of 15 organisations in England. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Health boards globally are being held responsible for the quality of patient care, but there’s limited understanding of how they effectively manage quality improvement (QI).
  • A study over 30 months in 15 English healthcare organizations showed that boards with advanced QI governance prioritize QI, balance short-term needs with long-term investments, use data for QI purposes, involve staff and patients, and promote a continuous improvement culture.
  • The findings highlight that strong clinical leadership at the board level is crucial for effective QI governance, suggesting future research should focus on the roles and practices of these clinical leaders.

Article Abstract

Background: Health systems worldwide are increasingly holding boards of healthcare organisations accountable for the quality of care that they provide. Previous empirical research has found associations between certain board practices and higher quality patient care; however, little is known about how boards govern for quality improvement (QI).

Methods: We conducted fieldwork over a 30-month period in 15 healthcare provider organisations in England as part of a wider evaluation of a board-level organisational development intervention. Our data comprised board member interviews (n=65), board meeting observations (60 hours) and documents (30 sets of board meeting papers, 15 board minutes and 15 Quality Accounts). We analysed the data using a framework developed from existing evidence of links between board practices and quality of care. We mapped the variation in how boards enacted governance of QI and constructed a measure of QI governance maturity. We then compared organisations to identify the characteristics of those with mature QI governance.

Results: We found that boards with higher levels of maturity in relation to governing for QI had the following characteristics: explicitly prioritising QI; balancing short-term (external) priorities with long-term (internal) investment in QI; using data for QI, not just quality assurance; engaging staff and patients in QI; and encouraging a culture of continuous improvement. These characteristics appeared to be particularly enabled and facilitated by board-level clinical leaders.

Conclusions: This study contributes to a deeper understanding of how boards govern for QI. The identified characteristics of organisations with mature QI governance seemed to be enabled by active clinical leadership. Future research should explore the biographies, identities and work practices of board-level clinical leaders and their role in organisation-wide QI.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5750431PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjqs-2016-006433DOI Listing

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