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Quality Indicator Modules The AHRQ QIs include four modules: Prevention Quality Indicators (PQIs), Inpatient Quality Indicators (IQIs), Patient Safety Indicators (PSIs), and Pediatric Quality Indicators (PDIs).
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Read More »AHRQ Quality Indicators (AHRQ QIs) are standardized, evidence-based measures of healthcare quality that can be used to measure and track clinical performance and outcomes. AHRQ Quality Indicators (AHRQ QIs) are standardized, evidence-based measures of healthcare quality that can be used with readily available hospital inpatient administrative data to measure and track clinical performance and outcomes. AHRQ QIs provide healthcare decision makers, such as program managers, researchers, and others at the Federal, State, and local levels, with tools to assess their data, highlight potential quality concerns, identify areas for further study and investigation, and track changes over time. AHRQ QIs are available via free software distributed by AHRQ. The QIs are reported at two levels: Hospital and Area. At the hospital level, the QIs are used to support internal quality improvement, monitoring, and assessment of adverse events related to patient safety. These indicators reflect quality of care inside hospitals, such as potentially avoidable complications and iatrogenic events; inpatient mortality for certain procedures and medical conditions; and procedures that may involve overuse, underuse, or misuse. At the area level, the QIs are used to identify access to outpatient care, which includes appropriate postdischarge followup care. Although these indicators are based on hospital inpatient data, they provide insight into the health of the community and the community-based healthcare system. These indicators identify hospital admissions that evidence suggests might have been avoided through access to high-quality outpatient or preventive care. Area-level QIs can be used as a "screening tool" to help flag potential healthcare access problems or concerns about population health. They can also help public health agencies, State data organizations, healthcare systems, and others interested in improving healthcare quality in their communities to identify and investigate communities that may need interventions. These various tools support development of trend and benchmark information for comparing a given hospital’s current performance on the QI rates with its previous years (trending) and with national benchmarks.
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Prostatitis is inflammation (swelling) of the prostate gland. It can be very painful and distressing, but will often get better eventually.
Read More »The PQIs use administrative data found in a typical hospital discharge abstract to flag potential healthcare quality problem areas that need further investigation. In addition, they provide a quick check on primary care access or outpatient services in a community and help organizations identify unmet needs in their communities. Inpatient Quality Indicators (IQIs) help hospitals assess quality of care inside the hospital and identify areas that might need further study. The IQIs provide a perspective on quality of care inside hospitals, including inpatient mortality for surgical procedures and medical conditions and utilization of procedures for which there are questions of overuse, underuse, and misuse. Patient Safety Indicators (PSIs) help hospitals assess the incidence of adverse events and in-hospital complications and identify issues that might need further study. PSIs provide information on potentially avoidable safety events that represent opportunities for improvement in care delivery. More specifically, they focus on potential in-hospital complications and adverse events following surgeries, procedures, and childbirth. Pediatric Quality Indicators (PDIs) help detect issues in pediatric hospital care that may need further study. They can also be used to evaluate preventive care for children in outpatient settings by identifying potential quality and patient safety issues specific to the pediatric inpatient population. PDIs focus on potentially preventable complications and iatrogenic events for pediatric patients treated in hospitals and on preventable hospitalizations among pediatric patients, taking into account the special characteristics of the pediatric population.
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Ask Mayo Clinic online is available 24/7 via any computer or mobile device connected to the internet. Sep 15, 2017
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Conclusion. This study indicates that Zn supplementation with a restricted calorie diet has favorable effects in reducing anthropometric...
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