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Frontiers:
Quality: Shaping Culture, Taking Action
Lead articles by Sr. Mary Jean Ryan, FSM; Glen A. Barton
Softbound,
44 pp, Spring 2004, ISSN 0748-8157
Order code: WWW1-J478,
Price: $29.00
The
quality factor in healthcare has been in the spotlight throughout recent
years. With tragic medical errors making national headlines, hospitals
everywhere are pushing quality control. Despite sincere efforts to improve
quality, will hospitals ever go beyond simply meeting accreditation
requirements? If quality is going to be central to the mission of each
and every healthcare organization, there must be a clear and unequivocal
effort to make quality a sustainable strategic focus in the same way
that growth, financial objectives, and human resources are handled.
What would healthcare delivery look like if quality were part of the
strategic fabric of every organization?
To
help answer this critical question, Frontiers has asked two well-respected
persons from very different worlds to share their perspective with us.
The first article, entitled "Achieving and Sustaining Quality in
Healthcare," is written by Sister Mary Jean Ryan, president and
CEO of SSM Healthcare in St. Louis, Missouri. SSM Healthcare became
the first healthcare recipient of the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality
Award and has been cited by both Baldrige and the Joint Commission on
Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations as having a culture of continuous
quality improvement (CQI).
The
second article is written by Glen A. Barton, former CEO of Caterpillar
Inc. in Peoria, Illinois, and former chair of the Business Roundtable
Retirement Task Force. In his introduction, Barton states that in 2003,
Caterpillar spent in excess of $500 billion in healthcare costs for
employees, their dependents, and retirees. Tapping many of the techniques
that Caterpillar has used in manufacturing, it recommends to healthcare
organizations a number of tools and methods for enhancing quality.
The
examples provided by SSM Health Care and Caterpillar, as well as the
commentaries written by Margaret E. O'Kane, Vinod K. Sahney, Ph.D.,
and Sandra Potthoff, Ph.D. focus the quality discussion on how to create
the cultural changes necessary to make quality part of our core business
functions.
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