Quality Circles and Feedback Loops
In
Health Care
In
health care there are three main areas of concern when it comes to total quality
management and continuous quality improvement which are job satisfaction,
safety issues (infection control/sanitation), and medical errors making the
delivery of care a crucial and necessary quality for any health care facility. Quality circles and feedback loops are used
in businesses to determine the progress and success of an organization. They also allow employers, employees, and
customers/patients to measure the satisfaction of quality of care or performance
and cut costs by resolving issues of waste.
A quality circle is defined as a group of people who do the same or
similar work in the same or work-related field.
The group is usually small in size and is led by someone in management,
considers and improves upon solutions or performances presented by the
workers
or employees. Feedback loops are sometimes
called complaint loops, but are mostly used for to determine cause-and-effect.
In the health care system in
organizations such as the Veterans Administration where thousands of military
and former military men, woman, and children are seen for health care needs on
a daily basis and just like any other organization the VA is met with concerns
and problems related to quality care.
Continuous quality improvement (CQI) in health care involve mountains of
data and the process involved in acquiring the information as shown below:
DATA-TO-DECISION
CYCLE
Health
information technology (HIT) is so important for patient and medical staff, the
collecting process and input of data into medical records can determine a
positive or negative outcome. What is
entered into the record must be accurate, necessary, meaningful, and error
free, especially when it comes to medication information (Sollecito &
Johnson, 2013, Pp. 338-339). Medication
errors have become a problem over the years, they cab be extremely costly. To make this process cost effective there
needs to be a certain amount of knowledge and education involved with the
delivery of improving the quality of issues related to the medication error
process. Decisions lead to action or
inaction, this result is feedback.
Feedback is motivation for improvement and takes knowledge and
collaboration of shared goals for a quality improvement team to use data information
to improve on a specific medication delivery system to rectify the onset of
medication errors (Sollecito & Johnson, 2013, p 340). Of course, this all depends on the data
collected and the availability of the data.
FEEDBACK LOOP
Below are listed
charts and processes in which to measure and deliver methods of analyzing the
success of the key elements of TQM and CQI when quality circle and feedback
loops are used in the health care industry.
·
Checklist
·
Pareto
Charts
·
Control
Charts
·
Histograms
·
Cause
& Effect
·
Process
Mapping
In conclusion, both
quality circles and feedback loops have been effective in
providing solutions
in work-related problems and are necessary to complete the
PDSA cycle. Essentially, there are negative and positive feedback in any organization and the only
way for improvement is to continually making the changes needed by taking the action related to the
issue be it job satisfaction, safety issues related to infection control, or medical errors. The one all
have in common is cost which is pasted on to the customer.patient and at more times than not
interferes with the quality of care received.
Reference
Sollecito, W. A. & Johnson, J.
K. (2013) Mclaughlin and Kaluzny’s
continuous quality
improvement
in health care. Jones & Bartlett Learning