Physiciansʼ Professional Responsibility to Improve the Quality of Care
- 1 October 2002
- journal article
- special theme
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Academic Medicine
- Vol. 77 (10) , 973-980
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00001888-200210000-00008
Abstract
Physicians have long recognized a professional responsibility to improve the quality of care. However, that responsibility should be evolving in light of developments in both the science of quality improvement and the ethical base of professionalism. Over the last 30 years, quality science has moved from static/structural measures to a much more sophisticated set of outcome and process issues. It has also self-consciously integrated notions of continuous improvement. The ethical base of professionalism is also more dynamic, today emphasizing the policy activist attributes of so-called civic professionalism. The combination of modern quality measurement/improvement and activist professionalism is a virtual call to arms for the profession to advocate care that is systematically better. Recent developments in the domain of quality dealing with medical errors can be used to illustrate this synergy, and provide a set of mandates for the new professional commitment to quality.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Improving the Quality of Health Care in the United Kingdom and the United States: A Framework for ChangeThe Milbank Quarterly, 2001
- Keeping Quality On The Policy AgendaHealth Affairs, 2001
- What Is Left of Professionalism after Managed Care?Hastings Center Report, 1999
- Predicting the Appropriate Use of Carotid Endarterectomy, Upper Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, and Coronary AngiographyNew England Journal of Medicine, 1990
- Quality Assurance in Eight Adult Medicine Group PracticesMedical Care, 1984
- Does the Nonprofit Form Fit the Hospital Industry?Harvard Law Review, 1980
- Dimensions of Patient Attitudes Regarding Doctors and Medical Care ServicesMedical Care, 1975
- Evaluating Quality of Patient CareJAMA, 1971
- Case-fatality in Teaching and Non-teaching Hospitals 1956–59Medical Care, 1963
- The Ecology of Medical CareNew England Journal of Medicine, 1961