Quality assurance through reflective change (QuARC): involving family medicine community-based preceptors in a continuous quality improvement programme

  • Swanson, J Graham MD FCFP
  • Edey, Lori
  • Kaczorowski, Janusz MA PhD
Quality in Primary Care 14(3):p 155-160, 2006.

Introduction

Quality assurance through medical chart audit is often not done in family practices because the workload involved is large, time commitment long and feedback delayed. A faculty development project was undertaken to encourage practice audits by community-based family medicine preceptors addressing these barriers.

Objective

To stimulate involvement in and enthusiasm for practice audit through a shared learning experience.

Programme

Four 15-minute sessions in an academic year served as the platform for group interaction. The faculty development co-ordinator and a group member with expertise in research, serving as facilitator and mentor, formulated the project. The faculty decided on the topic and collected four data items on a convenience sample of patients over a 38-week period. Data were collated and feedback was sent weekly. Participation among preceptors was 61% (16/26); data on 739 patients were collected through weekly convenience sampling and data on 1004 patients were collected from full, electronic medical records (EMR)-aided, audits. Group response was enthusiastic with reflection on the process, quality of charting and rates of mammography.

Conclusion

An enthusiastic mentor and a collaborating group of physicians can perform a practice audit using simple methodology on a convenience sample of patients.

Copyright © 2006 Radcliffe Publishing Ltd.
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