Title: PROGRAMME
1PROGRAMME
- Audits for the PGA in Professional Skills
- Thursday 26 August, CSB UHCW
- 2.30 3.15pm PGA and Audit
- Dr Paul OHare
- 3.15 3.30 pm Break
- 3.30 4.30pm Workshops to review previous audits
and - reflective diaries
- Dr Paul OHare
- Dr David Bennett-
- Jones
- 4.30 5.00pm Discussion of audit
- Questions and ideas Dr Paul OHare
- Dr David Bennett-
- Jones
2POSTGRADUATE AWARD IN PROFESSIONAL SKILLS
- A stand alone qualification or 1 module (20 CATS)
towards - Masters (MSc) in Health Sciences
- Can use MRCP, FRCS, etc., as 2 modules (40) for
Masters in Health Sciences
3- Designed around curriculum for generic and acute
skills of Foundation Year 2. - Course attendance and involvement recorded in
reflective diary/personal development plan (1,000
words)
4- Assessment PGA Professional Skills
- Communication Skills (40) (exam)
- Audit written assignment (40) (2,000 3,000
words) - Reflective Diary/PDP (20) (1,000 words)
5Deadlines for assessments
- Audit Wednesday, 25 May 2011
- Reflective diary Wednesday, 27 July 2011
6Audit -
- F2 curriculum . Has been actively involved
in undertaking a clinical audit, and recognises
how it relates to the improvement of clinical
standards and addresses the clinical governance
agenda.
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8Assessment of Audit
- 1. Plan and carry out. Keep simple in area
interested - Manageable
- 2. Write up 2,000 3,000 words
- Structured
- 3. Follow criteria in writing up audit assignment
- 4. Meet deadline May 26 2010
- Present as soon as complete
- Need written agreement before if late
9Assessment of Audit (1)
- 1. Justify relevance and rationale of audit,
clearly stating the reasons with reference to
current clinical practice and literature - 2. Clearly state objectives
- 3. Show evidence of teamwork in preparation,
planning and carrying out audit and in discussion
and presentation of findings - 4. Justify your standards by clearly linking them
to references in the scientific literature or to
agreed written policies. Use clear, explicit,
measurable quality criteria.
10Assessment of Audit (2)
- 5. Use clear methods, data collection and correct
sampling strategies - 6. Explain clearly and fully what you have learnt
in completing the audit - 7. Conclusions include thoughtful logical
conclusions that demonstrate reflections on what
you have learnt from the audit - 8. References all material should be properly
referenced using Vancouver system (BMJ)
(preferred) or Harvard formats
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13Reflection on experience(NHS Foundation Learning
Portfolio)
- 1. Describe interesting, difficult or
uncomfortable experiences. Try to record both
positive and not so positive elements. What made
the experience memorable? - 2. How did it affect you?
- 3. How did it affect the patient?
- 4. How did it affect the team?
- 5. What did you learn from this experience and
what (if anything) would you do differently next
time?
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15- What do you understand by clinical audit?
16Defining clinical audit (post Bristol)
- A quality improvement process that seeks to
improve patient care and outcomes through
systematic review of care against explicit
criteria and the implementation of
changeaspects of the structure, process and
outcome of care are selected and systematically
evaluated against explicit criteria. Where
indicated changes are implemented at an
individual team, or service level and further
monitoring is used to confirm improvement in
healthcare delivery
17- What do you understand by the audit cycle?
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19- In audit what do you understand as
- Aims
- Objectives
- Standards?
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22What is the aim of the audit?
- Aims are broad statements of intent
- - e.g., to improve local practice in the
management of leg ulcers - - e.g. to improve the referral process top
smoking cessation services - - e.g. to improve the reporting process of
laboratory results - - e.g., to improve the management of observations
23After topic comes your aim and objectiveAlways
know your aim and objective!
- a project without clear objectives cannot
achieve anything a clear sense of purpose must
be established before appropriate methods for
audit can be considered - ..once the topic for audit a clinical audit
project has selected the purpose of the project
musty be clearly defined so that your method
chosen is the most suitable for your project - Objective of audit quality of care
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25Common question
- But isnt audit the same as research?
- whats the difference?
26Why does audit get confused with research?
- Both involve collecting/accessing information to
achieve an objective - Both involve observing practice to achieve an
objective - Both have a data analysis component
- Both produce written reports/findings/summaries
27Audit versus research (1)
- Calling something audit does not make it an
audit its the objective of the project that
counts - Objective is the most useful factor for
distinguishing between the two activities - For example, research answers the questions what
should we do? the objective of research is to
create new knowledge, e.g., test a hypothesis
28Audit versus research (2)Audit answers the
question are we doing what we should be doing in
the way we should be doing it e.g., Objective is
to measure the quality of care provided against
agreed ways of working/evidence based
medicine/guidelines/standardsAudit is not
poor or weak research it is a totally
different activityAudit is not a quick fix for
research to avoid ethical implicationsAudit is
not an easy way to conduct research
29Audit versus research (3)
- In general, the objective of audit is to evaluate
the quality of local practice by sharing
findings locally one can improve local practices - Local audit would not necessarily benefit the
wider health economy as it relates to a Trust and
the practices of that Trust - In general, the objective of research is to
create new knowledge that can be shared with
others - Sharing this information (research) may benefit
the wider health economy
30Summary what makes an audit a good audit?
- Involve all concerned e.g., other departments,
professional groups - Clear rationale/purpose
- Explicit aims and objectives
- Measurement against which to compare evidence
base/standards - Sound methodology best approach, sampling
techniques, proforma design - Data analysis that reflects the aims objectives
- Reported and presented to reflect aims
objectives - Reported presented to reflect
measures/standards utilised - Birmingham Clinical Audit Assessment Framework
- More likely to change practice if
methodologically rigorous - Spurgeon P, Walshe K (1997). Birmingham Clinical
Audit Assessment framework. HSMC University of
Birmingham - Walshe, K (1999). BRI Inquiry on medical and
clinical audit in the NHS. HMSO London
31What makes audit change practice?
- Perception, attitude, motivation
- Organisation and environmental factors
- Choice of audit topic, adequacy of audit method
and understanding the reasons for deficiencies
identified - Extent to which audit is systematically
integrated into routine management of care - Involve/Inform the Change Makers
- Walshe, K (1999). BRI Inquiry on medical and
clinical audit in the NHS. HMSOI London
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