1. Health Care Project Improvement Design
- Author
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Patrice Griffith, Gary Reed, Angela F. Gardner, Heather Salinas, Tiffany B. Kindratt, Lona Sandon, Venetia L. Orcutt, and Raymond L. Fowler
- Subjects
Medical education ,Quality management ,Universities ,business.industry ,030503 health policy & services ,Health Policy ,education ,University faculty ,MEDLINE ,Faculty ,Quality Improvement ,03 medical and health sciences ,Patient safety ,0302 clinical medicine ,Needs assessment ,Health care ,Humans ,Medicine ,Lack of knowledge ,Curriculum ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Faculty development ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Delivery of Health Care - Abstract
The purpose was to measure faculty members': (1) knowledge of quality improvement and patient safety (QIPS), (2) attitudes and beliefs about their own QI skills, and (3) self-efficacy toward participating in, leading, and teaching QIPS. Faculty completed an online survey. Questions assessed demographic and academic characteristics, knowledge, attitudes/beliefs, and self-efficacy. Knowledge was measured using the Quality Improvement Knowledge Assessment Tool-Revised (QIKAT-R). Participants provided free-text responses to questions about clinical scenarios. Almost half of participants (n = 236) self-reported that they were moderately or extremely comfortable with QIPS skills. Few were very (20%) or most (15%) comfortable teaching QIPS. Ninety-one participants attempted the QIKAT-R, and 78 participants completed it. The mean score was 16.6 (SD = 5.6). Despite positive attitudes and beliefs about their own QIPS skills, study results demonstrate a general lack of knowledge among surveyed faculty members. Faculty development efforts are needed to improve proficiency in participating, leading, and teaching QIPS projects.
- Published
- 2021
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