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Lietuvos regioninių stacionarinių asmens sveikatos priežiūros įstaigų kokybės ir jos netolygumų vertinimas / Assessment of quality and quality variations of lithuanian regional hospitalsKalimavičius, Albinas 30 June 2014 (has links)
Darbo tikslas: Įvertinti Lietuvos regioninių stacionarinių asmens sveikatos priežiūros įstaigų teikiamų paslaugų kokybę ir jos netolygumus, remiantis statistiniais kokybės rodikliais.
Darbo uždaviniai: 1. Įvertinti Lietuvos regioninių stacionarinių asmens sveikatos priežiūros įstaigų paslaugų kokybę remiantis statistiniais paslaugų kokybės vertinimo rodikliais. 2. Išanalizuoti Lietuvos regioninių stacionarinių asmens sveikatos priežiūros įstaigų paslaugų kokybės rodiklių svyravimus priklausomai nuo amžiaus, lyties, dienos pobūdžio, paslaugos rūšies. 3. Įvertinti atvejų skaičiaus įtaką stacionarinių asmens sveikatos priežiūros įstaigų paslaugų kokybei
Tyrimo metodika: Tyrime vertintos 6 regioninės ligoninės. Kokybės rodikliai: Cezario pjūvio (CPO) operacijų dažnis, hospitalinis mirštamumas dėl ūmaus miokardo infarkto per 30 ir per 2 d. (ŪMI 30d. ir 2d.) ir dėl galvos smegenų insulto (GSI 30d. ir ŪMI 2d.). Papildomi rodikliai: vidutinės gulėjimo trukmės (VGT) analizė pagal gimdymo būdą ir tarp ligoninių, vertinta atvejų skaičiaus koreliacija su pasirinktų rodiklių rezultatais ir analizuotas perkeltų į kitą ligoninę tolimesniam gydymui pacientų srautai. Statistinė duomenų analizė atlikta SAS programa.
Rezultatai: Bendras CPO dažnis regioninėse ligoninėse buvo 18,45 proc. Amžiaus grupėse svyravo: <25 m. 15,38 proc., 25–35 m. 20,06 proc., >35 m. 20,55 proc. (p<0,05). CPO dažnis darbo dienomis buvo 19,82 proc., laisvadieniais 13,82 proc. (p<0,05). Lyginant tarp ligoninių:... [toliau žr. visą tekstą] / Aim of the study. To measure the quality of care in Lithuanian regional hospitals and its variations with statistical quality indicators.
Objectives. 1. to assess the quality of care in Lithuanian regional hospitals with statistical quality indicators. 2. To analyse the variations of quality indicators of Lithuanian regional hospitals depending on age, sex, nature of day, and type of delivery. 3. To assess the influence of case volume on service quality of hospitals.
Methods. 6 regional hospitals were assessed during the research period from 2010 to 2012. Quality indicators: Caesarean section (CS) rate, in-hospital 30-day and 2-day mortality rates due to Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI) and in-hospital 30-day and 2-day mortality rates following stroke. Additional indicators: analysis of average length of stay (ALS) according to the mode of childbearing and among hospitals; assessment of correlation of the results between selected indicators and patient case volume; and the analysis of patient flows transferred to another hospital for further treatment. Statistical analysis was performed by means of SAS program.
Results. The overall rate of CS in regional hospitals was 18.45 %. Ages in the groups ranged as follows: <25 y.o. - 15.38 %; 25-35 y.o. - 20.06 %; > 35 y.o. - 20.55 % (p <0.05). CS rate on weekdays was 19.82 %, at weekends - 13.82 % (p <0.05). Comparing among hospitals: the rate of CS in hospital performing least CS was 13.19 %; the highest indicator value was 28.9 %... [to full text]
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Quality of Health Care: The Patients' Perspective on Quality of Care for Type 2 DiabetesTabrizi, Jafar Sadegh Unknown Date (has links)
BACKGROUND Quality improvement literature usually conceptualises two principal dimensions of quality, technical and service. Technical quality is what the customers receive relative to what is known to be effective and largely reflects issues related to the health care providers. Service quality is how the customers receive the services and reflects the way and the environment in which health services are provided. This thesis proposes and tests a third principal dimension, Customer Quality, which is the characteristics that customers need for effective involvement in health care processes, decision making and action to improve the quality of care delivered and received. This model is applied in the context of care for people with Type 2 diabetes as an example of the high priority common chronic diseases and one of the most important public health problems in Australia and worldwide. The study also examines the feasibility of using patient reports of received care as a way of measuring service and technical quality on a population basis. OBJECTIVE The present study aims to assess the quality of delivered care as perceived by people with Type 2 diabetes. Specifically it aims to measure service quality, technical quality, customer quality; and finally an overall quality index by combining all three dimensions. METHODS A community based cross-sectional survey of 603 people with Type 2 diabetes was carried out in Queensland, Australia in 2005/06 using a self-administered questionnaire. The eligible participants were Diabetes Australia-Queensland members over 25 years old with diagnosed Type 2 diabetes at least one year prior to the study. Adherence to the eleven clinical, lifestyle and management indicators, derived from standard Diabetes Australia Guidelines, were measured from the patients reports as a representative of technical quality to explore the likely gap between received services and what should have been received in the 12-month period. Focus Group Discussions were used to determine the elements of service quality that were important from the patients perspective. Twelve service quality indicators, derived from the review of the literature and the focus groups, were assessed to calculate service quality as perceived by people with Type 2 diabetes. The validated, reliable and practical 13- item Patient Activation Measure was used to evaluate customer quality in terms of customers knowledge, skills and confidence. Demographic and disease related information was obtained using a self-reported questionnaire. Two types of outcome variables were used in this study: participantreported binary variables (having complications, continuity of care and diabetes control status) and calculated continuous variables (technical quality rating, service quality and customer quality scores and, finally, the overall quality index). RESULTS The response rate from the 1500 mailed out questionnaires was 40%. Nonrespondents were a little younger (P<0.001) than study participants and matched on gender (P> 0.05). Participants were mostly over 65 years old, over 50% were male, almost half of them were obese and a quarter were studying or had completed tertiary level of education. Almost two-thirds reported well controlled diabetes and 60% had diabetes for more than five years. Most of them were not treated by specialists and maintained continuity of care for their diabetes management. The majority of participants were treated with insulin or oral agents (72%) and 37% reported diabetes complications. Overall adherence rate for top 5 clinical and top 3 management and lifestyle indicators were 49.7% and 18.8% respectively. Over 90% of participants reported an appropriate level of checks of HbA1c, blood pressure and serum cholesterol. For lifestyle and management indicators, reported adherence rates to guidelines were lower than for clinical indicators. Participants who reported care as recommended for blood pressure measurements; feet examinations; self-management, diabetes knowledge and nutritional consultation reviews were more likely to report their diabetes as being well controlled. Participants maintaining continuity of care also reported fewer complications and well controlled diabetes. Of the twelve service quality indicators, the highest service quality score were for support group, basic amenities, dignity and confidentiality. Inadequate quality was identified for overall service quality (86.2), choice of care provider, continuity, timeliness, safety, prevention and accessibility. Younger participants reported lower service quality scores (P=0.001) and participants with good control of their diabetes had higher scores (P<0.001). Overall reported Customer Quality score was 64.5. Ten percent of participants did not achieve the Customer Quality score for the confidence stage and 26% did not reach the actual action stage. Nearly three quarters of respondent reported the capacity to take action for self-management but only 38% reported the highest Customer Quality score equating to perceived ability to change the action by changing health and environment. Participants with a higher level of education and those who maintain continuity of care reported a higher Customer Quality score. Participants with a higher Customer Quality score were also more likely to report well controlled diabetes status. An overall imperfect Quality Index score (70) reflects significant room for overall quality improvement of diabetes care services. The younger participants reported lower Quality Index scores than older ones. Higher Quality Index scores were highly significantly associated with reporting better diabetes control status and continuity of care. There were no significant differences in the Quality Index scores in terms of gender, participants education level and diabetes complications. CONCLUSION Customer quality appears to be a useful third dimension in conceptualising quality in health care, particularly in the context of chronic disease where good selfmanagement can improve the outcomes of care. A substantial proportion of Queensland adults with Type 2 diabetes reported receiving suboptimal care. From the perspective of people with Type 2 diabetes there is a notable gap between their expectations and what they have actually received in most aspects of provided care. The overall service quality and choice of care provider, accessibility, prevention, continuity, timeliness and safety were identified to be of inadequate quality. Participants also reported relatively low customer quality scores based on the personal knowledge, skills and confidence as well as low overall quality score for delivered diabetes care. Thus, there was a significant opportunity to improve the quality of diabetes care on all three dimensions. The study demonstrated that a patient selfadministered survey is a potentially useful way of measuring all three dimensions of quality of care for diabetes.
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Quality aspects of maternal health care in Tanzania /Urassa, David Paradiso, January 2004 (has links)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Uppsala : Univ., 2004. / Härtill 4 uppsatser.
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Kunskap, förtrogenhet och upplevd vårdkvalitet - barnmorskors resonemang och kvinnors erfarenheter och upplevelser på den populationsbaserade cervixscreeningen i Stockholm /Lundgren, Eva-Lisa. January 2006 (has links)
Licentiatvhandling (sammanfattning) Stockholm : Karolinska institutet, 2006. / Härtill 2 uppsatser.
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Quality of care in the psychiatric setting : perspectives of the patient, next of kin and care staff /Schröder, Agneta, January 2006 (has links)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Linköping : Linköpings universitet, 2006. / Härtill 4 uppsatser.
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The effect of nurse staffing on organizational outcomes /Pappas, Sharon Holcombe. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D. in Nursing) -- University of Colorado Denver, 2007. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 176-188). Free to UCD affiliates. Online version available via ProQuest Digital Dissertations;
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Impact of an electronic medical record on adherence to current diabetes guidelines in a family medical centerEnglish, Thomas MacAndrew. January 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Alabama at Birmingham, 2008. / Title from first page of PDF file (viewed Feb 11, 2009). Includes bibliographical references (p. 73-94).
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In-hospital mortality differences for patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) in the state of Michigan are volume-targeted policy initiatives appropriate?Dechert, Ronald E. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (D.P.H.)--University of Michigan.
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In-hospital mortality differences for patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) in the state of Michigan are volume-targeted policy initiatives appropriate?Dechert, Ronald E. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (D.P.H.)--University of Michigan.
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Preventing patient harm : the role of nurse competency /Kendall-Gallagher, Deborah Leslie. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D. in Nursing) -- University of Colorado Denver, 2008. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 113-132). Free to UCD Anschutz Medical Campus. Online version available via ProQuest Digital Dissertations;
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