ABSTRACT

This work adopts a modern approach to quality assurance and quality improvement in general practice. It provides an introduction to the subject, enabling readers to see how best to proceed in their own practices. It revises and updates previous books by Donald and Sally Irvine on clinical audit by placing audit within the wider quality context. It is designed to provide an easily accessible approach to the basic tenets as well as speculating on the future developments in this area, and should be of interest to all members of the practice team. The themes of the book are illustrated by reference to the five major case studies provided, which describe in some detail the various ways of starting, implementing and maintaining quality assurance in general practice today. Practical examples of Total Quality Management, the use of British Standard 5750, Kings Fund organizational audit, Investors in People, and Fellowship of the Royal College of General Practitioners by assessment, are also provided. These studies are written by the practitioners, medical and non-medical, who have themselves been through the experience of turning theory into practice.

part |2 pages

Quality Practice - Being Aware of the Context

chapter 1|10 pages

General practice in a changing world

chapter 2|16 pages

A different kind of practice

part |2 pages

Quality and Standards

chapter 3|13 pages

Quality - the theory

chapter 4|16 pages

Quality - the practice

chapter 5|9 pages

Clinical guidelines

part |2 pages

Managing Quality

chapter 6|7 pages

Managing practice

chapter 7|9 pages

Power as a tool of quality

chapter 8|9 pages

Leadership

chapter 9|11 pages

Not being taken by surprise

chapter 10|12 pages

Teamworking

chapter 11|8 pages

The partnership team

chapter 12|10 pages

Partners and staff - is this a team?

chapter 13|10 pages

Learning for quality

part |2 pages

The Role of External Review in Quality

chapter 14|10 pages

The regulatory framework

chapter 15|41 pages

External review in action

chapter 16|3 pages

And in conclusion