Assessment of Quality of Care at the Accident Centre, Korle Bu Teaching Hospital
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University of Ghana
Abstract
Health care settings both in developed and developing countries are bedevilled with
quality problems, which may be defined, as gap between what is and what is
expected.
Quality is how good or bad something is. The thing may be a product or a service.
People will only patronise health care services that meet expectations.
Quality of care Assessment is the measurement of the quality of healthcare services. It
measures the difference between expected and actual performance to identify
opportunities for improvement and where standards have been established, a quality
assessment measures the level of compliance with standards.
The study was retrospective as well as a cross-sectional descriptive, using both
qualitative and quantitative designs.
It described the causes and possible solutions to the problem of poor quality of care at
the Accident Centre of the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital.
Despite the call for health care institutions to deliver quality services to clients, it
appeared that quality of care was being compromised in the Accident Centre of the
Korle Bu Teaching Hospital.
This is because in the 2005, 2006 and 2007 Performance Reviews and Annual Reports
of the hospital, it appeared consecutively that quality of care was poor at the Accident
Centre due to factors such as: Lack of or inadequate basic but essential equipment,
congestion and long waiting time, acute shortage of staff of all grades, inadequate
consumables, heavy work load among others. This prompted the researcher to
undertake the study.
Secondary data was mostly employed to describe the quality of health care at the
Accident Centre looking at some inputs/structure, process/care provider performance
and outcome variables. Availability of equipment, staff strength in relation to
requirements and work load and medicine and non medicine consumables were
measured as inputs/structural variables while waiting time and interpersonal
relationships of care providers towards clients was measured as process or provider
performance variable. Case Fatality Rate (CFR) was used as outcome measure.
Findings were that the A/C lacked basic but essential equipment, essential staff such
as traumatologist and anaesthetists.
The resuscitation room and the ICU did not have medicine and non medicine
consumables such as, antibiotics, pethidine, diagnostic sets and splints.
The average waiting time was also found to be long.
The interpersonal relationships of some care providers toward clients were not good
enough.
Finally, the study made some recommendations, which could be used to solve the problems
found and a conclusion was drawn.
It was recommended that the KBTH management increases the equipment supply, engages
more staff of all grades, opens a pharmacy unit at the A/C, shortens waiting time for the
clients, organises regular trainings and workshops for its care providers on effective
communication and human relation skills.
Description
Thesis (MPh) - University of Ghana, 2010