Clinical Audit For HCQ MASTERS Class
Clinical Audit For HCQ MASTERS Class
Clinical Audit For HCQ MASTERS Class
Clinical effectiveness
Risk management
Use of information
Staff/staff management
Patient/public involvement
The 7 pillars of clinical governance
Definition – less formal
• Taking note of what we do
• Learning from it
• Changing it if necessary
• With the aim of improving care
Why do It?
• Development of professional education and self regulation
• Improvement of quality of patient care
• Increasing accountability
• Improvement of motivation and teamwork
• Aiding in the assessment of needs
• As a stimulus to research
• Clinical audit aims to lead to an improvement in the quality of
service providing:-
• improved care of patients
• enhanced professionalism of staff
• efficient use of resources
• aid to continuing education
• aid to administration
• accountability to those outside the profession
Fundamental Principles
• All about improving patient care
• Should be seen as part of day to day
practice
• Developing a critical eye on what we are
doing
• Trying to improve things all the time
Clinical Audit
What Is Happening?
Audit Is Not……
A computer or
A witch-hunt number crunching
exercise
Comparison Between Clinical Research
& Clinical Audit
Bases for
Testing Hypothesis Standard of Practice
Measurement
Methods New Treatment No New Treatment
Outcome Increased Knowledge Improved Practice
The Audit Cycle
Select a Topic
(what should be happening)
Observe
Implement Current
Change Practice
(What is
happening?)
Choosing a topic
• Relevant
• Potential benefit
– To patient or to the organization
• Must have a known standard.
• Own area of interest.
• Areas you can influence.
Some Ideas
• You can do an Audit of
• Structure ie facilities being provided
• Eg waiting times, availability of staff, record keeping (all patient
records should have a summary card), equipment
• Process ie what was done to the patient eg referrals, prescribing,
investigations
• Aspirin post MI, BP measurements 5 yearly in those aged 20-65
• Outcome ie result for the patient
• Eg patient satisfaction, patients with high BP aged between 20-35
should have a diastolic below 90mmHg within the first year of
treatment
• high risk practices (significant event audits) eg pneumococcal
vaccines in splenectomised patients, are significant events being
acted upon?
• The outcome is the ideal indicator for care but the most difficult to
measure.
Clinical Audit
Planning audit
Audit standard
The standard should reflect the clinical and
medico-legal importance of the criterion
In the example,
“80% of women should have had a cervical smear”
Methodology
• Plan methodology in detail.
• Keep it simple.
• Allow sufficient time.
• Share ownership, involve others.
• Get co-operation from those who might be effected.
• Carry your colleagues with you.
Standards
• How to set standards
• Look at national guidelines – EHSTG, HSTQ
• Literature (journals), textbooks
• Local guidelines
• Discussion with consultants/GPs
• Discussion with trainer/partners
• KEY POINT : Standards set should be realistic
and attainable. Justifiable reasons for the
standard set should be made explicitly clear.
Standards
Sample selection
• Sample selection:
– Retrospective
– Concurrent
• Sample size: appropriate
• Multi-professional
• All data should be anonymous
Presenting the Results
• Collect Results
• Analyse Results
• Summarise Results
• Present Results to the team
• Simple arithmetic calculations
• Use percentages
• Results of 2nd data collection presented in
the same way as the 1st
Discussion – Data Collection 1
Comparing Results to Standards
Criterion Standard Observed Result
Implement Plan
Changes Methodology
IMPLEMENT REPEAT
CHANGES PROCESS
SET STANDARD
COMPARE
WITH
STANDARD
Clinical Audit