1. Quality improvement in chronic care by self-audit, benchmarking and networking in general practices in South Tyrol, Italy: results from an interventional study.
- Author
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Piccoliori, Giuliano, Mahlknecht, Angelika, Abuzahra, Muna E, Engl, Adolf, Breitenberger, Vera, Vögele, Anna, Montalbano, Carmelo, and Sönnichsen, Andreas
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DOCUMENTATION ,ELECTRONIC health records ,WILCOXON signed-rank test ,PHYSICIANS ,MEDICAL quality control ,BENCHMARKING (Management) ,RESEARCH ,FERRANS & Powers Quality of Life Index ,KEY performance indicators (Management) ,FAMILY medicine ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CLINICAL medicine ,QUALITY assurance ,IMPACT of Event Scale ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background: Systematic strategies promoting quality of care in general practice are yet under-represented in several European countries.Objective: This interventional study assessed whether a combined intervention (self-audit, benchmarking, quality circles) improved quality of care in Salzburg, Austria and South Tyrol, Italy. The present publication reports the Italian results.Methods: We developed quality indicators for general practice in a consensus process based on pre-existing quality programmes. The indicators addressed diagnosis and treatment regarding eight common chronic conditions. A quality score comprising 91 indicators was calculated (0-5 points per indicator depending on fulfilment, maximum 455 points). We collected anonymous data from the electronic health records of the participating physicians in 2012, 2013 and 2014. Wilcoxon signed-rank tests were used for pre-post analysis.Results: Thirty-six GPs participated in the study. The median quality score increased significantly from 177.0 points at baseline to 272.0 points at the second follow-up (P = 0.000). Improvements concerned process and intermediate outcome indicators particularly between baseline and the first follow-up.Conclusion: Performance was relatively low at baseline and improved considerably, mainly in the first study period. The intervention investigated in this study can serve as a model for future quality programmes. A customized electronic health record for the implementation of this intervention as well as standardized and consistent documentation by GPs is a prerequisite. Use of a limited set of quality indicators (QIs) and regular QI modification is probably advisable to increase the benefits. Long-term prospective studies should investigate the impact of QI-based interventions on end-result outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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