Department of Medicine

Joseph Hopkins

Publication Details

  • Improving and sustaining core measure performance through effective accountability of clinical microsystems in an academic medical center.

    Pardini-Kiely K, Greenlee E, Hopkins J, Szaflarski NL, Tabb K. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2010; 36 (9): 387-98

    Evidence-based performance measures, known as core measures, have been established by The Joint Commission to improve the quality of care for patient populations, such as those with acute myocardial infarction (AMI), heart failure, and community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), as well as to improve the quality of surgical care--the Surgical Care Improvement Project (SCIP) measures. Hospital administrators have traditionally held academic and community physicians and hospital clinicians accountable for integrating the core measures into daily practice. Such efforts have often led to suboptimal results because of the belief that the "organization" (macrosystem) is the appropriate level at which to work to improve quality. Stanford Hospital and Clinics (Stanford, California) has instead held leaders of clinical microsystems--the clinical units where care is provided--accountable to improve performance on the core measures. The strategic approaches taken for this initiative include engagement of the hospital's board of directors; clear assignment of accountability among interdisciplinary care teams to drive the change; implementation of a unit-based medical director program; transparency of core measure performance at the microsystem, mesosystem, and macrosystem levels; and concurrent monitoring with rapid feedback of results.

    PubMedID: 20873671

Stanford Medicine Resources:

Footer Links: