Assessing NHS trusts' compliance with child health policy standards
Assessing NHS trusts' compliance with child health policy standards
An audit tool to undertake a baseline assessment of NHS trust compliance with contemporary healthcare polices was designed collaboratively by senior children’s nurses across one English strategic health authority (SHA). Children’s units in hospitals across the SHA were benchmarked against the audit tool standards throughout 2009. The aim was to identify good and less optimum compliance with best practice policy-driven benchmarks of care, using a 1–5 scale. Each NHS trust within the SHA was contacted to make arrangements with members of the interprofessional team to complete the baseline benchmarking exercise. The audit was conducted over 1 or 2 days. The majority of the evidence sourced comprised documented evidence and verbal affirmation of the individual perceptions of key informants with regard to how the range of clinical areas scored against the best practice benchmarks. Scores of policy compliance in some trusts audited ranged from 1 (non-compliant) to 5 (full compliance). The results demonstrate that many trusts are making good efforts to ensure full compliance to policy guidelines and mandates. However, there are some aspects of policy standards that trusts have yet to fully embrace. This initial benchmarking exercise on behalf of an English SHA has revealed many areas of outstanding and good practice which have the potential to be shared.
Key Words: Paediatric care ; Health policy standards ; Best practice ; Compliance at improving professionals’ understanding.
1218-1225
Glasper, Edward
381a920c-2ec2-40d4-a205-13869ff7c920
28 October 2010
Glasper, Edward
381a920c-2ec2-40d4-a205-13869ff7c920
Glasper, Edward
(2010)
Assessing NHS trusts' compliance with child health policy standards.
British Journal of Nursing, 19 (19), .
Abstract
An audit tool to undertake a baseline assessment of NHS trust compliance with contemporary healthcare polices was designed collaboratively by senior children’s nurses across one English strategic health authority (SHA). Children’s units in hospitals across the SHA were benchmarked against the audit tool standards throughout 2009. The aim was to identify good and less optimum compliance with best practice policy-driven benchmarks of care, using a 1–5 scale. Each NHS trust within the SHA was contacted to make arrangements with members of the interprofessional team to complete the baseline benchmarking exercise. The audit was conducted over 1 or 2 days. The majority of the evidence sourced comprised documented evidence and verbal affirmation of the individual perceptions of key informants with regard to how the range of clinical areas scored against the best practice benchmarks. Scores of policy compliance in some trusts audited ranged from 1 (non-compliant) to 5 (full compliance). The results demonstrate that many trusts are making good efforts to ensure full compliance to policy guidelines and mandates. However, there are some aspects of policy standards that trusts have yet to fully embrace. This initial benchmarking exercise on behalf of an English SHA has revealed many areas of outstanding and good practice which have the potential to be shared.
Key Words: Paediatric care ; Health policy standards ; Best practice ; Compliance at improving professionals’ understanding.
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
Published date: 28 October 2010
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 167819
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/167819
ISSN: 0966-0461
PURE UUID: 4f74b3c3-8de8-4700-82a1-0c3d2d14db5c
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 18 Nov 2010 12:26
Last modified: 22 Jul 2022 17:32
Export record
Contributors
Author:
Edward Glasper
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics