Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/1074
Title: A review of historical developments of quality assessment in industry and healthcare
Authors: Komashie, A
Mousavi, A
Gore, J
Keywords: Quality improvement;quality methods;industry;healthcare
Issue Date: 2007
Publisher: Quality Management and Organisational Developement Conference
Citation: Komashie, A., Mousavi A., and Gore, J., (2007) A review of historical developments of quality assessment in industry and in healthcare, Proceedings of the 10th QMOD conference, 2007, Sweden
Abstract: Purpose: This study reviewed the literature on the historical development of quality assessment methods in industry and in healthcare. A comparative analysis of quality methods in industry and healthcare was conducted to examine the gap between methods in the two sectors. An attempt was then made to examine the latest approaches to quality assessment in healthcare and finally a proposal has been offered for a more effective approach to tackling the problem of quality in healthcare. Design/methodology/approach: Firstly, a review of the evolution of quality assessment in industry and healthcare was conducted. This was based on books written by prominent experts in the field of quality. secondly, a study of the current approaches in healthcare was undertaken. Publications from varied sources were selected and reviewed. The literature consulted includes worldwide operations research and healthcare sources including dissertations, the internet and reference lists of relevant articles. The journal papers and conference proceedings were selected according to the following criteria: Objective: the study must be aimed at measuring or improving quality both. It could also be aimed at developing new ways of measuring the quality of health care; Method: observational studies, experimental trials or systematic reviews; Setting: study should be in a hospital setting and not narrowed to quality of clinical cares. Findings: This study showed that the concept of quality management and its control in healthcare is not as advanced as it is in industry. Moreover, it seemed that most researchers, who set out to assess quality of care in one way or the other, have had differing views of quality and the factors that contribute to its assessment. It was also deduced that the way forward in healthcare quality is the development of systems that give staff ownership and pride in a way that is akin to the era of the craftsmen.
URI: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/1074
Appears in Collections:Electronic and Computer Engineering
Dept of Electronic and Electrical Engineering Research Papers

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