Public Reporting (public + reporting)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Role of volume outcome data in assuring quality in HPB surgery

HPB, Issue 5 2007
BERNARD LANGER
Abstract Many studies have shown an association between both surgeon and hospital operative procedure volumes and outcomes, particularly operative mortality. It is also recognized that volume is only one of a number of factors, including 1) surgeon training and experience, and 2) hospital resources, organization, and processes of care, which can also influence outcomes. The Surgical Oncology Program at Cancer Care Ontario has included hospital volumes in a set of standards for the conduct of major pancreatic cancer surgery, along with recommendations for surgeon training and hospital resources, organization, support services, and processes of care to encourage regionalization of major HPB surgery. Cooperation with these recommendations was encouraged by the public reporting of mortality data and by an educational program directed at both surgeons and senior administrators in Ontario hospitals with the support of the provincial health ministry. The provincial mortality rate from major pancreatic cancer surgery has decreased by more than 50% since the introduction of this program. [source]


Public disclosure of comparative clinical performance data: lessons from the Scottish experience

JOURNAL OF EVALUATION IN CLINICAL PRACTICE, Issue 2 2003
Russell Mannion PhD
Abstract There is growing international interest in making information available on the clinical quality and performance of health care providers. In the United States of America, where public reporting is most advanced, comparative performance information in the form of ,report cards', ,provider profiles' and ,consumer reports' has been published for over a decade. In Europe, Scotland has been at the forefront of releasing clinical performance data and has disseminated such information since 1994. This paper reviews the Scottish experience of public disclosure and distils the key lessons for other countries seeking to implement similar programmes. It is based on the findings of the first empirical evaluation of a national clinical reporting initiative outside the United States. The study examined the impact of publication of Scottish (CRAG) clinical outcome indicators on four key stakeholder groups: health care providers, regional government health care purchasers, general practitioners and consumer advocacy agencies. We conclude that those responsible for developing clinical reporting systems should not only pay close attention to developing technically valid and professionally credible data which are tailored to the information needs of different end users, but should also focus on developing a suitable incentive structure and organizational environment that fosters the constructive use of such information. [source]


Mining and sustainable development: considerations for minerals supply

NATURAL RESOURCES FORUM, Issue 4 2001
Ian B. Lambert
Abstract Sustainable development involves meeting the needs of human societies while maintaining viable biological and physical Earth systems. The needs include minerals: metals, fuels, industrial and construction materials. There will continue to be considerable demand for virgin mineral resources, even if levels of recycling and efficiency of use are optimal, and rates of population growth and globalisation decrease significantly. This article aims to stimulate debate on strategic issues for minerals supply. While the world has considerable stocks of mineral resources overall, international considerations of the environmental and social aspects of sustainable development are beginning to result in limitations on where mining will be conducted and what types of deposits will be mined. Current and emerging trends favour large mines in parts of the world where mining can be conducted within acceptable limits of environmental and social impact. Finding new deposits that meet such criteria will be all the more challenging given a disturbing global decline in the rate of discovery of major economic resources over the last decade, and the decreasing land area available for exploration and mining. To attract responsible exploration and mining, governments of mining nations will need to provide: regional-scale geo-scientific datasets as required to attract and guide future generations of exploration; resource access through multiple and sequential land use regimes, and frameworks for dealing with indigenous peoples' issues; and arrangements for consideration of mining proposals and regulation of mines that ensure responsible management of environmental and social issues. The minerals industry will need to continue to pursue advances in technologies for exploration, mining, processing, waste management and rehabilitation, and in public reporting of environmental and social performance. [source]


Improving the Quality of Long-Term Care with Better Information

THE MILBANK QUARTERLY, Issue 3 2005
VINCENT MOR
Publicly reporting information stimulates providers' efforts to improve the quality of health care. The availability of mandated, uniform clinical data in all nursing homes and home health agencies has facilitated the public reporting of comparative quality data. This article reviews the conceptual and technical challenges of applying information about the quality of long-term care providers and the evidence for the impact of information-based quality improvement. Quality "tools" have been used despite questions about the validity of the measures and their use in selecting providers or offering them bonus payments. Although the industry now realizes the importance of quality, research still is needed on how consumers use this information to select providers and monitor their performance and whether these efforts actually improve the outcomes of care. [source]


Performance indicators and the public reporting of healthcare-associated infection rates

CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTION, Issue 10 2008
H. Humphreys
Abstract Surveillance of healthcare-associated infections (HCAIs) makes evident the importance of the quality of patient care, and the increasing demand for public reporting of HCAI surveillance data and related quality indicators is thus not surprising. However, there is little evidence that public reporting results in improved patient care. Debate continues about which HCAI-related indicators are the best measures of performance and thus the most appropriate for public reporting. Suitable indicators should allow improvements leading to better patient outcomes, and should be comparable among hospitals and countries. Appropriate examples include central vascular catheter infections, surgical prophylaxis and surgical site infections. [source]