The Extent of Quality Improvement Activities in Nursing Homes
- 1 November 2004
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in American Journal of Medical Quality
- Vol. 19 (6) , 255-265
- https://doi.org/10.1177/106286060401900605
Abstract
The quality of nursing home care has long been a cause for concern. The federal government has recently launched the Nursing Home Quality Initiative, in which Quality Improvement Organizations assist nursing homes in quality improvement (QI) activities. In addressing how well nursing homes are prepared for QI, this article examines the sort of QI activities that nursing homes are currently undertaking and the preparation of Administrators and Directors of Nursing to lead QI efforts. Drawing on data from surveys of 2 random samples of Kansas nursing homes, the article concludes that questions about QI activities in nursing homes tend to elicit socially acceptable answers unless the questions are carefully structured; that few nursing homes appear to have functioning QI programs; and that high leadership turnover and limited leadership training make it difficult for nursing homes to sustain effective QI programs.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nursing Homes With Persistent Deficiency Citations for Physical Restraint UseMedical Care, 2002
- Administrator Turnover and Quality of Care in Nursing HomesThe Gerontologist, 2001
- Randomized Clinical Trial of a Quality Improvement Intervention in Nursing HomesThe Gerontologist, 2001
- Are We Improving the Quality of Nursing Home Care: The Case of Pressure UlcersJournal of the American Geriatrics Society, 2000
- The Regulation and Enforcement of Federal Nursing Home Standards, 1991-1997Medical Care Research and Review, 1999
- Physical Restraints in Nursing Homes: A Review of the Literature Since the Nursing Home Reform Act of 1987Medical Care Research and Review, 1998
- A Randomized Trial of a Consultation Service to Reduce Falls in Nursing HomesJAMA, 1997
- Quality Improvement in Nursing Care Facilities: Extent, Impetus, and ImpactAmerican Journal of Medical Quality, 1997
- The Use of a Computer-Based Model to Implement an Incontinence Management ProgramThe Gerontologist, 1995
- Maintaining Continence in Nursing Home Residents Through the Application of Industrial Quality ControlThe Gerontologist, 1993