Organization of outcome-based quality improvement in Dutch heart centres

AIMS: Fourteen Dutch heart centres collected patient-relevant outcomes to support quality improvements in a value-based healthcare initiative that began in 2012. This study aimed to evaluate the current state of outcome-based quality improvement within six of these Dutch heart centres. METHODS AND RESULTS: Interviews and questionnaires among physicians and healthcare professionals in the heart centres were combined in a mixed-methods approach. The analysis indicates that the predominant focus of the heart centres is on the actual monitoring of outcomes. A systematic approach for the identifica... Mehr ...

Verfasser: van Veghel, D. (Dennis)
Daeter, E.J. (Edgar J.)
Bax, M. (Matthijs)
Amoroso, G. (Giovanni)
Blaauw, Y. (Yuri)
Camaro, C. (Cyril)
Cummins, P.A. (Paul)
Halfwerk, F.R. (Frank R.)
Wijdh-den Hamer, I.J. (Inez J.)
de Jong, J.S.S.G. (Jonas S S G)
Stooker, W. (Wim)
Wees, P. (P.) van der
van der Nat, P.B. (Paul B.)
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2020
Schlagwörter: Outcome measures / Patient value / Qualitative study / Quality improvement / Value-based healthcare
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29035250
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : http://repub.eur.nl/pub/124296

AIMS: Fourteen Dutch heart centres collected patient-relevant outcomes to support quality improvements in a value-based healthcare initiative that began in 2012. This study aimed to evaluate the current state of outcome-based quality improvement within six of these Dutch heart centres. METHODS AND RESULTS: Interviews and questionnaires among physicians and healthcare professionals in the heart centres were combined in a mixed-methods approach. The analysis indicates that the predominant focus of the heart centres is on the actual monitoring of outcomes. A systematic approach for the identification of improvement potential and the selection and implementation of improvement initiatives is lacking. The organizational context for outcome-based quality improvement is similar in the six heart centres. CONCLUSION: Although these heart centres in the Netherlands measure health outcomes for the majority of cardiac diseases, the actual use of these outcomes to improve quality of care remains limited. The main barriers are limitat