|
The scope of the new quality programme which is emerging in the
NHS is bold and broad-based. underpinning this has been the concept
of clinical governance a unifying concept for quality which
provides organisations with a systematic means for ensuring that
they comply with their statutory duty. It aims to effect a change
of culture in NHS organisations to one where:
openness and participation are encouraged, where education and
research are properly valued, where people learn from failures and
blame is the exception rather than the rule, and where good
practice and new approaches are freely shared and willingly
received.
Sir Liam Donaldson, Chief Medical
Officer Note 1
|
|
In my view, if properly developed and well resourced, clinical
governance could provide the most effective means of achieving two
important aims. First, it could enable PCTs to detect poorly
performing or dysfunctional GPs on their lists. It could also help
practices to discover any problems or weaknesses among their own
number. Second, it could have the beneficial effect of helping
doctors who are performing satisfactorily to do even better.
Dame Janet Smith, fifth Shipman report
Note 2
|
|
The NHS has one of the strongest and most transparent systems
for quality in the world: clear national standards, strong local
clinical governance arrangements (to assure and improve quality
locally), robust inspections and rigorous patient safety
arrangements.
We will continue to give a high priority to clinical governance and
patient safety. The programme of patient safety launched by the
Chief Medical Officers report An organisation with a memory is
becoming integral to local services.
Department of Health Note 3
|
|
Clinical governance is deeply embedded in some services but is
largely lacking in others few Chief Executive Officers match the
depth of their fear of missing budgetary and productivity targets
with the strength of their passion to improve quality and safety of
services for their consumers.
Sir Liam Donaldson, Chief Medical
Officer Note 4
|
|
For many, clinical governance is seen as the organisational
conscience, and, at its most idealistic, the beating heart of care.
It encapsulates an organisations statutory responsibility for the
delivery of safe, high quality patient care and it is the vehicle
through which accountable performance is made explicit and
visible.
Professor Aidan Halligan, former
Director of Clinical Governance for the NHS Note 5
|
NOTES
- National Standards, Local
Action: Health and Social Care Standards and Planning Framework
2005-062007-08, Department of Health, 2004.
- Safeguarding Patients: Lessons
from the Past Proposals for the Future, Shipman Inquiry, 2004.
- Our health, our care, our say: a
new direction for community services. Department of Health, January
2006.
- Good doctors, safer patients:
Proposals to strengthen the system to assure and improve the
performance of doctors and to protect the safety of patients, A
report by the Chief Medical Officer,
Department of Health, July 2006.
- Clinical governance: assuring
the sacred duty of trust to patients, Professor Aidan Halligan,
2005.
|