OOH quality indicators

 

Quality indicators for Primary Care Out-of-Hours Services

Quality indicators for primary care out-of-hours services

These indicators apply to a number of providers of primary care out-of-hours services. Namely:

  • All territorial NHS boards in Scotland
  • NHS 24, where its service interfaces with primary care out-of-hours services, and
  • All primary care out-of-hours services whether directly provided by an NHS board or secured on behalf of the NHS board.

And importantly, they apply to you, the patient, who use primary care out-of-hours services throughout Scotland.

The focus of the indicators is given to:

  • Response times
  • Accuracy of triage for home visits
  • Effective information exchange
  • Implementation of national clinical standards and guidelines
  • Antimicrobial prescribing, and
  • Patient experience.

Indicators are tools for quality improvement and in themselves do not provide definitive answers; rather these out-of-hours indicators are designed to identify areas of good practice or potential problems that might need addressing, usually demonstrated by statistical outliers or variations within data results. They should be used to assess, compare and determine the potential to improve care. Using these indicators, NHS boards can trend the data over time and benchmark with peers. These out-of-hours indicators accompany and augment the existing Standards for The Provision of Safe and Effective Primary Medical Services Out-of-Hours.

To aid this drive for improvement, a driver diagram, which identifies key components of out-of-hours care, is provided in the indicators document. Both this, and suggested change concepts and ideas, can be applied by providers of primary care out-of-hours services for the purpose of specific improvement effort on areas of priority within their local service.

Next steps

The next phase of the project will be to establish implementation support across NHSScotland. This will lead to further testing of supporting data and the identification of change packages. The output of this phase will be an established measurement plan, capturing reliable data across all the NHS boards. This will, ultimately, lead to data being made available across Scotland to support improvement, performance management and governance.

In collaboration with Scottish Government and primary care out-of-hours services, Healthcare Improvement Scotland will also undertake further work to specifically identify quality indicators relating to the management of patients with end-of-life or palliative care needs.

Supporting the NHSScotland Quality Ambition

"The most appropriate treatments, interventions, support and services will be provided at the right time to everyone who will benefit, and wasteful or harmful variation will be eradicated."

Supporting the Healthcare Improvement Scotland Strategic Objective

"Support innovation and improvement in the delivery of high quality healthcare planned and designed with the patients, their families and the public at the centre of everything we do."

Published Date: 4 July 2012