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Supporting and activating clinical governance development in Ireland: sharing our learning

Maureen A. Flynn (Quality and Patient Safety Division, Health Service Executive, Dublin, Ireland)
Thora Burgess (Quality and Patient Safety Division, Health Service Executive, Dublin, Ireland)
Philip Crowley (Quality and Patient Safety Division, Health Service Executive, Dublin, Ireland)

Journal of Health Organization and Management

ISSN: 1477-7266

Article publication date: 15 June 2015

2555

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to present a description of the Irish national clinical governance development initiative and an evaluation of the initiative with the purpose of sharing the learning and proposing actions to activate structures and processes for quality and safety. The Quality and Patient Safety Division of the Health Service Executive established the initiative to counterbalance a possible focus on finances during the economic crisis in Ireland and bring attention to the quality of clinical care.

Design/methodology/approach

A clinical governance framework for quality in healthcare in Ireland was developed to clearly articulate the fundamentals of clinical governance. The project plan involved three overlapping phases. The first was designing resources for practice; the second testing the implementation of the national resources in practice; and the third phase focused on gathering feedback and learning.

Findings

Staff responded positively to the clinical governance framework. At a time when there are a lot of demands (measurement and scrutiny) the health services leads and responds well to focused support as they improve the quality and safety of services. Promoting the use of the term “governance for quality and safety” assisted in gaining an understanding of the more traditional term “clinical governance”. The experience and outcome of the initiative informed the identification of 12 key learning points and a series of recommendations

Research limitations/implications

The initial evaluation was conducted at 24 months so at this stage it is not possible to assess the broader impact of the clinical governance framework beyond the action project hospitals.

Practical implications

The single most important obligation for any health system is patient safety and improving the quality of care. The easily accessible, practical resources assisted project teams to lead changes in structures and processes within their services. This paper describes the fundamentals of the clinical governance framework which might serve as a guide for more integrative research endeavours on governance for quality and safety.

Originality/value

Experience was gained in both the development of national guidance and their practical use in targeted action projects activating structures and processes that are a prerequisite to delivering safe quality services.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Dr Sarah Condell for assistance with the qualitative analysis and Dr Mary Browne for assistance in identifying the learning and recommendations from the initiative. They would also like to give special thanks to the working group, steering group, international reference panel, the five hospital project teams and many staff that contributed by sharing their experience and learning in strengthening quality and safety structures and process.

Citation

Flynn, M.A., Burgess, T. and Crowley, P. (2015), "Supporting and activating clinical governance development in Ireland: sharing our learning", Journal of Health Organization and Management, Vol. 29 No. 4, pp. 455-481. https://doi.org/10.1108/JHOM-03-2014-0046

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2015, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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