Implementation of continuous quality improvement in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander primary health care in Australia: a scoping systematic review
Date
Authors
Gardner, Karen
Sibthorpe, Beverly
Chan, Mier
Sargent, Ginny
Dowden, Michelle
McAullay, Dan
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BioMed Central
Abstract
Background: Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) programs have been taken up widely by Indigenous primary
health care (PHC) services in Australia and there has been national policy commitment to support this. However,
international evidence shows that implementing CQI is challenging, impacts are variable and little is known about
the factors that impede or enhance effectiveness. A scoping review was undertaken to explore uptake and
implementation in Indigenous PHC, including barriers and enablers to embedding CQI in routine practice. We
provide guidance on how research and evaluation might be intensified to support implementation.
Methods: Searches were conducted in MEDLINE, CINAHL and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. Key
websites and publications were handsearched. Studies conducted in Indigenous PHC which demonstrated some
combination of CQI characteristics and assessed some aspect of implementation were included. A two stage
analysis was undertaken. Stage 1 identified the breadth and focus of literature.
Stage 2 investigated barriers and enablers. The Framework for Performance Assessment in PHC (2008) was used to
frame the analysis. Data were extracted on the study type, approach, timeframes, CQI strategies, barriers and enablers.
Results: Sixty articles were included in Stage 1 and 21 in Stage 2. Barriers to implementing CQI processes relate
primarily to professional and organisational processes and operate at multiple levels (individual, team, service, health
system) whereas barriers to improved care relate more directly to knowledge of best practice and team processes that
facilitate appropriate care. Few studies described implementation timeframes, number of CQI cycles or improvement
strategies implemented and only two applied a change theory.
Conclusion: Investigating barriers and enablers that modify implementation and impacts of CQI poses conceptual and
methodological challenges. More complete description of CQI processes, implementation strategies, and barriers and enablers
could enhance capacity for comparisons across settings and contribute to better understanding of key success factors.
Keywords: Continuous quality improvement, CQI, Primary health care, Indigenous health, Quality, Barriers and enablers
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BMC Health Services Research
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
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