I appreciate the comments of Strasser and colleagues in response to the articles on
pediatric rehabilitation quality indicators,
1
,
2
and my commentary
3
on them. As they note, we are in agreement on many points, but they suggest a need
to focus more intensively on rehabilitation team functioning as another quality indicator.
As noted in my commentary, I view structural and process measures as indicators of
the types of environments and procedures that are likely to promote delivery of optimally
therapeutic experiences. I agree, that among these structure and process measures,
team composition and team functioning are likely very important. Having expertise
represented on the team will not affect patient care unless team members are comfortable
sharing their expertise, unless the sharing of views is well organized and leads to
implementable plans, among others. Nevertheless, unless that superior team functioning
results in actual differences in treatment decisions for patients or caregivers, I
would argue that it cannot affect the quality of outcomes, and thus remains an indirect
indicator. That said, we are currently at a very primitive stage of defining the active
ingredients of the specific treatments we deliver to patients, which are the ultimate
determinants of quality outcomes. Thus, for the foreseeable future, indirect measures
of structure and process—including team functioning—may well be the most useful quality
indicators we can lay our hands on.- Whyte J.
Invited commentary on quality of care indicators for the rehabilitation of children
with traumatic brain injury, and quality of care indicators for the structure and
organization of inpatient rehabilitation care of children with traumatic brain injury.
Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2012; 93: 394-395
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References
- Quality of care indicators for the rehabilitation of children with traumatic brain injury.Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2012; 93: 381-385
- Quality of care indicators for the structure and organization of inpatient rehabilitation care of children with traumatic brain injury.Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2012; 93: 386-393
- Invited commentary on quality of care indicators for the rehabilitation of children with traumatic brain injury, and quality of care indicators for the structure and organization of inpatient rehabilitation care of children with traumatic brain injury.Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2012; 93: 394-395
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© 2012 American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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- Can Quality of Care Indicators Measure Quality of Care?Archives of Physical Medicine and RehabilitationVol. 93Issue 11
- PreviewWe found the recent articles1,2 and commentary3 on quality of care measures in pediatric traumatic brain injury (TBI) to be informative, thought-provoking, and yet somewhat disheartening. The work of the National Expert Panel for the Development of Pediatric Quality of Care Indicators strives to advance quality in pediatric TBI with designation of quality indicators and the demonstration of meaningful variations of adherence in a subset of indicators across rehabilitation units. The work offers a foundation to study quality in this population, and from such a platform, design and implement worthwhile quality improvement (QI) initiatives.
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