ABQAURP News
ABQAURP News
ASQ Healthcare Division Newsletter
ABQAURP News
News from the
ASQ Healthcare Division Newsletter
ASQ Healthcare Division Newsletter
ASQ Healthcare Division Newsletter
EHR Supports Healthier Patients and a Healthier Bottom Line
EHR Supports Healthier Patients
and a Healthier Bottom Line
Graybill Medical Group boasts 130,000 patient
visits per year and annual revenues of more than $22 million. But in
the tightly regulated and highly competitive Southern California
market, the practice, which serves patients from three site locations
in Escondido, Fallbrook, and San Marcos, is always looking for ways to
enhance outcomes, increase patient safety and satisfaction, and reduce
expenses.
Tests of Change: Simulated Design of Experiments in Healthcare Delivery
Tests of Change:
Simulated Design of Experiments in Healthcare Delivery
Hospital administrators and quality department personnel seeking to improve hospital processes often find it difficult to implement change. This is true especially when
recommended changes potentially are highly disruptive, directly affect
patient quality of care, or must be tested in a trial-and-error
approach. The risk aversion that arises from past failed attempts and
lack of confidence in the success of proposed changes exacts a
significant toll on continuous improvement efforts.
Biomedical Device Integration: The Impact on Clinicians at the Point of Care
Biomedical Device Integration:
The Impact on Clinicians at the Point of Care
Hospitals are constantly evaluating new
technologies that promise to improve the quality of care, create a
safer care environment, and improve both clinical and operational
efficiency. If, however, technologies are evaluated solely on their
individual merits, they may introduce problems to the clinician’s
complex work environment. When new technologies are deployed, there is
often some impact to the clinical workflow.
Medication Safety Technologies: What Is and Is Not Working
Medication Safety Technologies:
What Is and Is Not Working
Almost ten years ago, the Institute of Medicine report, To Err Is Human
(2000), galvanized healthcare, patients, Congress, and the media to pay
attention to the problems of patient and medication safety. In the
years that followed, hospitals made enormous investments to improve
practice and implement safety technologies. How far have we come? Where
are we now? Is there any way to anticipate what happens next?