What Gets Measured Gets Improved-Setting Standards and Accreditation for Quality Improvement for Diabetes Services in Australia

被引:2
|
作者
Andrikopoulos, Sofianos [1 ,2 ]
James, Steven [3 ]
Wischer, Natalie [2 ]
机构
[1] Australian Diabet Soc, Sydney, NSW, Australia
[2] Natl Assoc Diabet Ctr, 145 Macquarie St, Sydney, NSW 2000, Australia
[3] Univ Sunshine Coast, Sch Nursing Midwifery & Paramed, Petrie, Qld, Australia
来源
关键词
standards of care; accreditation; quality improvement; diabetes management; audit; registry; HOSPITAL-CARE; ADULTS;
D O I
10.1177/19322968211009910
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
The purpose of this article is to illustrate that setting standards of care is the cornerstone for excellence in diabetes management. This is underpinned by 3 activities: a standards and accreditation process, an audit and benchmarking program and a linked quality improvement plan. While there are many examples of local auditing and quality improvement programs, there are very few that are at a national level. The National Association of Diabetes Centres (NADC) was formed by the Australian Diabetes Society and the Australian Diabetes Educators Association to set standards of diabetes care in Australia. A rigorous accreditation process was put in place to recognize primary, secondary, and tertiary level diabetes centers that meet these standards. The NADC accreditation process is underpinned by a quality improvement plan, which must be submitted for accreditation to be granted and is informed by the Australian National Diabetes Audit (ANDA). ANDA is conducted annually to gather information about treatments, complications, self-care practices and quality of life outcomes and provides a national as well as an individual report to the participating center that is used to benchmark against other like centers. The ANDA reports are important to inform national policy and advocacy for diabetes care and to also provide information for quality improvement purposes for the individual participating center. We believe that the NADC Standards and Accreditation can be an exemplar for other countries to adapt and adopt to standardize diabetes care at the highest level.
引用
收藏
页码:748 / 754
页数:7
相关论文
共 10 条
  • [2] Developing Metrics for Assessing Engineering Instruction: What Gets Measured Is What Gets Improved.
    Rios-Aguilar, Cecilia
    REVIEW OF HIGHER EDUCATION, 2010, 33 (03): : 429 - 431
  • [3] What Gets Measured Gets Improved: Monitoring Machine Learning Applications in Their Production Environments
    Protschky, Dominik
    Laemmermann, Luis
    Hofmann, Peter
    Urbach, Nils
    IEEE ACCESS, 2025, 13 : 34518 - 34538
  • [4] "What Is Measured Gets Improved" (or If You Cannot Measure It, You Cannot Improve It)*
    Kaufman, Jon
    Reichert, Kelly
    PEDIATRIC CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2018, 19 (03) : 267 - 268
  • [5] What gets published: the characteristics of quality improvement research articles from low- and middle-income countries
    Sifrim, Zoe K.
    Barker, Pierre M.
    Mate, Kedar S.
    BMJ QUALITY & SAFETY, 2012, 21 (05) : 423 - 431
  • [6] Using Evidence-Based Accreditation Standards to Promote Continuous Quality Improvement: The Experiences of the San Mateo County Human Services Agency
    Winship, Kathy
    Lee, Selina Toy
    JOURNAL OF EVIDENCE-INFORMED SOCIAL WORK, 2012, 9 (1-2): : 68 - 86
  • [7] Duration of participation in continuous quality improvement: a key factor explaining improved delivery of Type 2 diabetes services
    Veronica Matthews
    Gill Schierhout
    James McBroom
    Christine Connors
    Catherine Kennedy
    Ru Kwedza
    Sarah Larkins
    Elizabeth Moore
    Sandra Thompson
    David Scrimgeour
    Ross Bailie
    BMC Health Services Research, 14
  • [8] Duration of participation in continuous quality improvement: a key factor explaining improved delivery of Type 2 diabetes services
    Matthews, Veronica
    Schierhout, Gill
    McBroom, James
    Connors, Christine
    Kennedy, Catherine
    Kwedza, Ru
    Larkins, Sarah
    Moore, Elizabeth
    Thompson, Sandra
    Scrimgeour, David
    Bailie, Ross
    BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, 2014, 14
  • [9] What gets published: the characteristics of quality improvement research articles from low- and middle-income countries (vol 21, pg 423, 2012)
    Sifrim, Z. K.
    Barker, P. M.
    Mate, K. S.
    BMJ QUALITY & SAFETY, 2012, 21 (11) : 972 - 972
  • [10] Team-based multicomponent care improved and sustained glycaemic control in obese people with type 2 diabetes (T2D) in a Diabetes Centre setting: A quality improvement program with quasi-experimental design
    Lim, Lee-Ling
    Lau, Eric S. H.
    Ozaki, Risa
    So, Tammy T. Y.
    Wong, Rebecca Y. M.
    Chow, Elaine Y. K.
    Ma, Ronald C. W.
    Luk, Andrea O. Y.
    Chan, Juliana C. N.
    Kong, Alice P. S.
    DIABETES RESEARCH AND CLINICAL PRACTICE, 2022, 194