Patient Care Improvement
Interprets quality assessments and prioritizes patient care improvement needs.
INTRODUCTION
In this task, you will use a tracer methodology to track a patient’s care in order to evaluate the healthcare organization’s systems of providing care and services for a readiness audit. This methodology also makes it possible to assess the healthcare organization’s compliance with Joint Commission standards. This is part of the organization’s compliance with delivering safe, quality healthcare.You will examine data for a patient that is found in the attached “Accreditation Audit Case Study – Task 3 Artifacts” and find any trends, patterns, and problems. Once these have been identified, you can remediate the concerns.
REQUIREMENTS
Your submission must be your original work. No more than a combined total of 30% of the submission and no more than a 10% match to any one individual source can be directly quoted or closely paraphrased from sources, even if cited correctly. The originality report that is provided when you submit your task can be used as a guide.
You must use the rubric to direct the creation of your submission because it provides detailed criteria that will be used to evaluate your work. Each requirement below may be evaluated by more than one rubric aspect. The rubric aspect titles may contain hyperlinks to relevant portions of the course.
A. Review the tracer patient information from the attached Accreditation Audit Case Study – Task 3 Artifacts and do the following:
1. Discuss an outstanding patient care issue for the organization made evident by the tracer patient.
2. Develop a corrective action plan to address the patient care improvement needs for the organization using a keyword search in the Joint Commission electronic manual.
B. Acknowledge sources, using in-text citations and references, for content that is quoted, paraphrased, or summarized.
C. Demonstrate professional communication in the content and presentation of your submission.
Tracer Patient Summary
Our tracer patient is a 67-year-old female who had a laparoscopic hysterectomy that was converted to an open procedure due to excessive bleeding approximately five weeks prior to hospitalization. She developed fever and drainage and was readmitted for possible postoperative infection seven days ago.
Five days ago she had surgery to treat the abscess that had formed from her previous surgery and for insertion of a central line for long-term antibiotics.
She is scheduled to go home with home health providing oversight of antibiotic therapy.
Tracer Patient Summary
Our tracer patient is a 67-year-old female who had a laparoscopic hysterectomy that was converted to an open procedure due to excessive bleeding approximately five weeks prior to hospitalization. She developed fever and drainage and was readmitted for possible postoperative infection seven days ago.
Five days ago she had surgery to treat the abscess that had formed from her previous surgery and for insertion of a central line for long-term antibiotics.
She is scheduled to go home with home health providing oversight of antibiotic therapy.