Trata-se da revisão da literatura sobre a padronização da Qualidade e o processo de avaliação pela Acreditação Hospitalar. Foi realizado um apanhado histórico sobre o início da avaliação da qualidade nos serviços de saúde, com o Programa de Padronização Hospitalar elaborado pelo Colégio Americano de Cirurgiões, em meados de 1924, até a criação da Organização Nacional de Acreditação - ONA, que tem como objetivos a implantação e implementação de um processo permanente de melhoria da assistência à saúde estimulando os serviços a atingirem padrões mais elevados de qualidade. Após reflexão, considerou-se que nas avaliações dos serviços faz-se necessário buscar a valorização dos resultados assistenciais bem como a elaboração de padrões quali - quantitativamente mais equânimes nos aspectos estrutura, processos e resultados da qualidade assistencial.
Catastrophic mass casualty events, such as pandemic flu outbreaks or large-scale terrorism-related events, could yield thousands of victims whose needs would overwhelm local and regional healthcare systems, personnel, and resources. Such conditions will require deploying scarce resources in a manner that is different from the more common single-event disaster. This article introduces the topic of palliative care during a mass casualty event and reviews the major findings for a federally funded planning guide that examined palliative care issues associated with providing medical care under circumstances where resources are scarce. We focus on the role of palliative care in the support of individuals not expected to survive and offer recommendations of specific actions for a coordinated disaster response plan. Semistructured telephone discussions with disaster management experts and a group meeting of experts identified issues, roles, responsibilities, procedures, and resources that offer the benefits of integrating palliative care into disaster planning and response. The investigations identified 5 domains of concern, along with guidance: (1) the role of palliative care in a mass casualty event with resulting scarce resources; (2) the triage and ensuing treatment decisions for those "likely to die"; (3) the critical palliative care services to provide, along with the personnel and settings; (4) the pragmatic plans needed for ensuring training, supplies, and organizational or jurisdictional arrangements; and (5) unusual issues affecting palliative care under mass casualty event scenarios. Palliative care minimizes the suffering of those who die, ensures comfort, addresses their needs, and may also free up resources to optimize survival of others. Planning to provide palliative care during mass casualty events should be part of the current state and local disaster planning/training guidelines, protocols, and activities.
Background: New population health community-based models of palliative care can result in more compassionate, affordable, and sustainable high-quality care.Objectives: We evaluated utilization and cost outcomes of a standardized, population health community-based palliative care program provided by nurses and social workers.Design: We conducted a retrospective propensity-adjusted study to quantify cost savings and resource utilization associated with a community-based palliative care program. We analyzed claims data from a Medicare Advantage (MA) plan and used a proprietary predictive model to identify 804 members at high risk for overmedicalized end-of-life care. We enrolled 204 members in the palliative care program and compared them with 600 who received standard, telephonic, health plan case management. We excluded members with fewer than two months of enrolled experience or those with insufficient data for analysis, leaving 176 members in the study group and 570 in the control group for evaluation. We compared differences in utilization and costs (medical and pharmacy), hospital admissions, bed days (acute and intensive care unit [ICU]), and emergency department visits.Setting/Subjects: A 30,000-member MA plan and a health system in Central Ohio between October 2015 and June 2016.Results: Members who received community-based palliative care showed a statistically significant 20% reduction in total medical costs ($619 per enrolled member per month), 38% reduction in ICU admissions, 33% reduction in hospital admissions, and 12% reduction in hospital days.Conclusion: A structured nurse and social work model of community-based palliative care using a predictive model to identify MA candidates for intervention can reduce utilization and medical costs.
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