www.hqip.org.uk
National and Local Clinical Audit30/04/2015Kate GodfreyDirector of Operations QI and Development
Who are HQIP?
Our work
National Clinical Audit and Patient Outcome Programme30+ national audits covering:
• Acute• Cancer• Children and
Women's Health• Heart• Long-term Conditions• Mental Health• Older People
Clinical Outcome Review Programmes 4 ongoing national programmes: • Maternal, Newborn
and Infant • Medical & Surgical • Mental Health • Child Health Programme
National Joint RegistryCollects joint replacement information, monitoring implant, hospital and surgeon performance:
• Holds 1.75m+ records• Includes hips, knees, ankles, elbows and shoulders • Covers England, Wales and Northern Ireland• Mandatory for NHS since 2011
Quality Improvement and Development Supports QI at local level nationally and internationally via:• Evidence based guidance • Practical tools and case studies• Patient and public involvement • Regional training events• eLearning and webinars• Network Support
Clinical audit and the quality of services
‘The quality of care varies. It varies between hospitals and between other care organisations. It varies within those organisations, between services, between wards, between shifts and between individual practitioners.’
Hard Truths: the journey to putting patients first. The government’s further response to Robert Francis QC’s report on the Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust public inquiry.
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/mid-staffordshire-nhs-ft-public-inquiry-government-response?dm_i=1V12,201LU,BL6PA6,7792D,1
What is clinical audit?
• Clinical audit is about checking that patients are treated correctly and receive the best care. It looks at the care given and compares it to standards of best practice.
• The priorities for national audits are set centrally by NHS England with advice from the National Advisory Group for Clinical Audit and Enquiries (NAGCAE)
• All NHS trusts are expected to participate in NCAPOP.
What is clinical audit?
• Most clinical audit activity in NHS trusts involves clinical teams evaluating aspects of care that they see as important and need improving. This is local clinical audit.
• National clinical audit is designed to improve patient outcomes across the country in a wide range of medical, surgical and mental health conditions.
• Clinical audit is only one of many quality improvement methods
Clinical audit
Example of National Stroke Audit Results
Complete Audit
Clinical Outcome Reviews Programme
• Tracheostomy Care: On the Right Trach?• Lower Limb Amputation: Working Together• Why Asthma Still Kills• NCISH Annual Report (2014)
• Child Health• Maternal, new born and infant mortality
NCAPOP Audits
• Lung Cancer• Head and Neck Cancer • Bowel Cancer • Oesophageal-gastric cancer • Prostate Cancer• Sentinel Stroke National Audit
Programme (SSNAP)• COPD• FFFAP (Falls, Fragility and
Fractures Audit Programme)• UK Inflammatory Bowel
Disease
• Rheumatoid Arthritis• Chronic Kidney Disease• National Diabetes – Adult• National Diabetes –
Paediatric• National Vascular Registry• Neonatal (NNAP)• Epilepsy 12• Paediatric Intensive Care
(PICANEt)
NCAPOP audits
• Adult Cardiac Surgery• Heart Failure • MINAP• Angioplasty Audit• Heart Rhythm Management• Congenital Heart
Disease/Paediatric Surgery• National Emergency
Laparotomy Audit
In development• Alcoholic Liver Disease• HIV/STI • Breast Cancer• Maternity • Dementia• Ophthalmology
Local Audit
• Clinical Effectiveness• Patient Safety – risks, complaints….• Local / Regional Importance• Patient Experience• Cross trust – non specialty specific areas• Patient pathway within and between organisations
Key Messages
• A clinical audit is not complete until the quality of services has improved.
• A clinical audit programme must be focussed on clinical priorities and risks to patient safety
• A clinical audit which does not result in improved services and increased patient safety is a waste of resources.
New website
May / June 2015• Improved search
function• More interactive• Easier to navigate
Questions/Comments?