| CRCAH project no: CD217 |
|
Administering Organisation: Menzies School
of Health Research
Project Leader: Ross Bailie
Contact Details: Ross.Bailie@menzies.edu.au
Nikki.Clelland@menzies.edu.au
Team Members: Nikki Clelland
Komla Tsey
Beverly Sibthorpe
Paula Convery
Michelle Dowden
Lynette O’Donoghue
James Smith
Christine Connors
Program Manager: Arwen Pratt
Chronic
Conditions Program
Partners Involved:
- Northern Territory Department of Health and Community Services
(NTDHCS)
- Menzies School of Health Research (MSHR)
- CRC for Aboriginal Health (CRCAH)
- James Cook University (JCU)
|
Project Summary
Health promotion strategies
have the potential to significantly improve health and reduce
health inequities within and between population groups. However,
Indigenous health promotion and primary care programs have had
varying success. Research suggests that implementation failure is
largely attributed to system factors including planning processes,
resources, infrastructure and capacity.
Increasingly, systematic, quality improvement methods are being
acknowledged and accepted as the primary approach for improving
system performance, processes and outcomes of health care. Locally,
the continuous quality improvement (CQI) concept appears to be well
suited to the Indigenous Australian setting. Experience in using
CQI cycles for improving clinical services for the prevention and
management of chronic conditions in 12 remote communities in the
Top End of the Northern Territory (the ABCD Project),
has been of enthusiastic ongoing engagement by health centre staff
and health service management and of meaningful measurement of
service performance and organisational systems. There is evidence
of improvement in health centre systems and in processes and
outcomes of care and the process has achieved engagement of
Aboriginal Health Workers in the quality improvement cycle and
action research process.
The wider health system pressure to monitor and improve
performance has led to increasing attention to provide valid and
reliable methods for assuring quality and improving health
promotion effectiveness. However, the use and effectiveness of
quality improvement tools and processes in health promotion has yet
to be determined and the team is yet to identify
any studies investigating this approach in Indigenous
settings.
This research explores the
feasibility of quality improvement methods for health promotion by
investigating the impact of a continuous quality improvement
intervention, similar to the model used in the ABCD
(Audit and Best Practice for Chronic Disease) Project. While the
ABCD Project has a clinical focus, this research will develop and test a number of tools and a range of
strategies relevant to quality improvement for health
promotion.
Summary of Projected Outcomes
By building on
the success of the recently established process for improving
systems of clinical care (the ABCD project), this research has the
potential to improve the effectiveness of health promotion in
Indigenous communities. This project will also make important
contributions to the health promotion field where there is little
documented evidence on the use and effectiveness of modern quality
approaches. Furthermore, it addresses an area of research which has
not been investigated extensively in Australia, and particularly in
Indigenous settings.
Related Documents:
The following documents can be
accessed at www.abcdproject.org.au
Bailie, R. S., Si, D., Dowden, M.,
& Lonergan, K. 2007a, Audit and Best Practice for Chronic
Disease - Project Final Report , Menzies School of Health
Research.
Bailie, R. S., Si, D., O'Donoghue,
L., & Dowden, M. 2007b, "Indigenous health: effective and
sustainable health services through continuous quality
improvement", Medical Journal of Australia, vol. 186, no.
10, pp. 525-527
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[Page last updated on 30.6.2008]