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Learning from Quality Improvement
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Currently selected section: Introduction
The Challenges of Pragmatic Science
The First Element
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The Third Element
The Fourth Element
Self Test
Conclusion

 


Chapter 13: Learning from Quality Improvement in Healthcare Systems: Introduction
 
     

Photo of elderly man in a wheelchairQuality improvement is an empirical, goal-oriented method of improving the performance of a system. Although systems sometimes improve serendipitously, experience shows that things tend to stay the same or get worse without deliberate efforts at improvement. The goal of quality improvement in health care is to improve delivery of scientifically based care in order to prevent or cure a disease or ameliorate the effects of a disease.

Effective system improvement requires identifying and understanding aspects of a system that are primarily responsible for its performance so that changes can be efficiently focused and replicated. Such changes are more likely to be effective if they are evidence-based and implementation is guided by empirical knowledge of the system rather than ideology or unexamined hunches.

Complex social systems, however, present researchers with qualitatively different subjects than is typical in medical science. Traditional research tools such as tightly controlled experiments, double-blind trials, and standardized interventions are appropriate and effective for investigating the molecular basis of metabolism, for instance, but are often difficult to use in the examination of large, diffuse social systems such as hospitals and hospital systems. It is not always obvious how to conduct research that would lead to system improvements, such as making regional hospital systems work well with local long term care providers, or providing for patient pain relief regardless of time of day, or day of the week.

An approach to this dilemma that has been embraced by many thoughtful scholars and leaders in health care is a system of quality improvement dubbed "pragmatic science" (Berwick and Nolan, 1998). "Pragmatic science" means learning about a system and its operation by using all available evidence, including evidence generated by the participants in an investigation through an iterative process that repeatedly makes changes and measures their effects over time. This approach to quality improvement is more fluid, more dynamic, less controlled, and less precise than "traditional" research methodology, but it remains fundamentally empirical and is often the only cost-effective and time-effective option open to busy practitioners.

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