Title: The Office of Standards Compliance
1The Office of Standards Compliance National
Department of Health Dr Carol Marshall Chief
Director Office of Standards Compliance Durban,
15 July 2008
2National Health Act (2004)
- National Health Act Chapter 10 designated Health
Officers are to inspect all health establishments
and agencies every 3 years - Office of Standards Compliance (national)
certification / recommendations / closure
(violations) - Inspectorates of Health Establishments
(provincial)- monitoring / inspections /
recommendations - In addition the OSC must
- Advise the Minister on prescribed standards, both
general service provision and specifically for
quality - Provide leadership and advice on strategies and
mechanisms to improve quality across the system - Report to the Minister on system performance
against standards
3Definitions of Quality / QA
- Many definitions, many perspectives
- doing the right thing, right, right away
- .. A core set of activities that contribute to
designing, assessing, monitoring and improving
the quality of healthcare - Focus on
- health outcomes
- Patients / customers
- staff
4Define
- Goals and objectives, targets
- Standards, criteria
- Guidelines, protocols
- Systems, procedures
- Regulations
- Benchmarks
- Evidence-based, results-focused, appropriate
5Measure
- What
- Patient information (utilisation, outcomes,
adverse events) - Customer satisfaction (patients and public
staff) - System performance
- Through
- Independent inspection and certification
- Routine DHIS, surveillance, surveys, EPR
- Management/ resource information
6Improve
- Close the gap identified when measured against
defined standards - Outcome result-driven
- Action-focused / rapid results
- Multiple role-players
- Staff development and continuous learning
- Enabling and facilitatory
- Recognition and rewards as primary driver -
sanctions only when these fail
7System-level Approaches to Quality Assurance
- Literature review looking for models that
include - the range of basic certification / licensing
(focussed on safety) as well as
quality-improvement programmes / accreditation - strengthening government oversight
- federal or semi-federal systems where the
respective roles of national and sub-national
levels are spelt out - using quality / performance in provider
contracting - developing countries
- costs and resources
8Countries and aspects reviewed
- Columbia
- Dominican Republic
- Honduras
- Malaysia
- Mexico
- Turkey
- Australia
- England
- Italy
- Philippines
- Singapore
- Trinidad Tobago
- Type of system
- Authorities responsible
- Length of time in place
- Description/nature of the programme, targets and
resources - Reporting, consequences and impact/effectiveness
- Strengths and weaknesses, changes over time
9Some findings of interest
- Responsible authorities
- Basic licensing and certification programmes
common in many countries OR currently being
developed as basis for national quality assurance
- Should have national oversight to ensure
consistent standard of safety across the country
although quality improvement initiatives (e.g.
accreditation) may be decentralised . - Ensure private sector involvement and support in
design as well as monitoring - Nature and duration of the programme targets
- Should benchmark hospitals against each other and
national standards - Safety initiatives should target business
processes and quality of care, not just
compliance with physical standards, staffing and
equipment - Safety initiatives should target public and
private providers - Ensure desired performance or competence is
sustained over time
10Findings (cont)
- Reporting of results
- Compliance of public and private institutions
with minimum safety standards are usually
reported in the public domain, accreditation
results are usually reported privately unless the
programme is compulsory - Consequences
- To provide a level playing field, many licensing
programmes impose similar sanctions on
non-conforming public and private providers - Voluntary initiatives require incentives such as
public recognition, the ability to seek
contracts, enhanced fees or the right to offer
internships. - Impact/effectiveness
- Quality improvement initiatives should be
supported by stakeholders such as the community
the institution serves perceptions are an
important factor in their effectiveness
11Definition of terms
12Overall conclusions
- The numerous health reform programmes being
undertaken globally recognise that basic
licensing/ certification and accreditation
programmes have different goals - accreditation
does not take the place of basic licensing and
certification - In spite of an increasing interest in
accreditation initiatives, basic licensing
programmes remain a cornerstone of national
regulatory approaches and stewardship initiatives
to ensure consistency of safety for patients and
personnel across providers - National accreditation programmes are often a
prerequisite to the introduction of national
health insurance systems
13Current work on national standards (Define)
- National Core Standards for Health Facilities in
South Africa - 7 domains
- 40 Action areas
- 77 Standards
- Launched by the Minister
- 24 April 2008
14Rationale for core standards in the public sector
- The situation
- Many initiatives to improve quality and delivery
- Many successes, many challenges
- Multiple vertical programmes and processes
- Poor synergies
- One size fits all responses
- No standardised tool to measure performance
- Perceptions and reality
- Differences emphasised
- Weak incentives
- Our response
- Measuring performance comparable over time and
across facilities and provinces - Focus on the basics - patient safety and
dignity, essential management - A horizontal systems perspective that integrates
different initiatives and different health
programmes - Clarifying responsibility
- Benchmarking best practice
15Appraisal against these standards (Measure)
- To establish a baseline of performance against
core national standards, criteria and indicators,
in an initial set of 28 hospitals and 4 Community
Health Centres over a period of 3 months - Progress to date
- Self appraisal tool and questionnaire developed
with red and green flags - Overview teams of best managers have been
trained to appraise other provinces - 12 hospitals and 1 CHC concluded
- Reports to the Minister end July
- 24 hospitals and 3 CHCs by 1 August
- TB hospitals early August
- To review the process and methodology prior to
institutionalisation and scale-up to other
facilities - Provincial workshops planned leading up to
National workshop in September - Needs wide consultation and inputs into approach
and content (definition of core, weighting,
criteria for certification)
16Quality improvement in the public sector
(Improve)
- To use the results of the appraisal to recognize
best practice and to guide the development,
support and monitoring of facility-specific
Improvement Plans over 6 months - Process already underway
- Many other public sector initiatives
- Provincial initiatives adverse event reporting,
complaints systems / patient satisfaction with
specific projects, IPC - NGOs especially COHSASA Management consulting
companies PPPs and PPIs - Many Strategic programmes and target groups esp.
MDGs also focus on NCDs - Clinical guidelines and clinical audit MM
reviews and National Committees - MPH in Hospital Management, support for District
management training - Clinic supervision, multiple other audit tools
- Hospital Revitalisation
- Some newer initiatives
- National Patient safety and Customer care
initiatives - Electronic patient record
- National Health Insurance
17The future setting up the OSC and the
Inspectorates
- National Health Act requires 3-yearly inspections
- Provincial Inspectorates to assess compliance
against core standards in 1/3 of facilities each
year will use / transform the current Licensing
sections - Office of Standards Compliance to certify
compliance based on review of provincial reports
and verification in a sample of facilities - May issue recommendations for improvement as
pre-condition for certification - Private sector
- First steps will be with private hospitals
- Will use more than R158 / 187 will need to be
annual? - Need also to consider other providers as phase 2
GPs, other facilities, etc. - Clear differentiation between core and
developmental standards - Consultation around core standards inspection /
appraisal methodology and criteria regulations
18Core and developmental standards
- Focus of core standards is on ensuring basic
safety and integrity - essential role of government to protect the
public - especially the more vulnerable / disadvantaged
- Public and private sectors
- Non-compliance after due warning, advice and
follow-up will incur consequences - Developmental standards - progressive and
aspirational - evidence-based and outcome-focused
- clinical care, value-for-money, access and
equity
19Long term results
- Making the public sector a preferred provider,
especially within the paradigm of more affordable
health care - Identifying preferred providers in the private
sector - Pushing the whole system towards better results
and better use of financial and human resources
20Role and inputs from the private sector
- Consultation
- Public private collaboration in relevant
groupings to work on new paradigms - Sharing best practices and lessons
- Improving standards and guidelines
- Improving measurement especially of outcomes
- Culture change both sides