The Trust Hospital Company
Limited has launched its Quality Healthcare Agenda to champion efficient and
quality healthcare delivery as it joins the world to commemorate Quality
Healthcare Day.
The
hospital’s Quality Focal Person, Benjamin Wadie Peprah underscored the
importance of the agenda saying the hospital wants a desirable outcome for
patients hence working towards attaining quality in every aspect of service
delivery.
He
added that quality care is what will keep the health sector in business and
that sector players must strive for it. He said to fuel the agenda, the
hospital has also made available a complaint management system to receive
feedback from patients and has conducted staff satisfaction surveys and
encouraged continual learning or education among staff in the quest to attain
excellence.
“We
want to increase accessibility to patients and make decisions based on data. We
want to make quality our competitive advantage. Recently, we had about 30 units
presenting on quality improvement projects and that is how we are carrying the
staff along,” he said.
Chief
Executive Officer of Trust Hospital Company Limited, Dr. Juliana Ameh reassured
of the facility’s commitment to providing quality client-focused healthcare
services. She reiterated that systems have been put in place and measures are
underway to ensure that the hospital does not only meet standards but set a
benchmark in the healthcare industry as they work to deliver quality,
cost-effective and client-centered services in a safe and serene environment.
“We
have put in place a system as an organisation where all units have quality
improvement, focal persons. It is a bottom-up approach to drive improvement in
services, staff attitude, and outputs and we have indicators to measure what we
do.
“The
ongoing journey's core principles are leadership, teamwork, client focus,
data-driven decisions, and the cultivation of a culture of continuous
improvement. These principles are not merely theoretical; they are our new way
of life,” she said also noting that her outfit is making progress with its
Agenda 2027, a strategic plan expected to give all staff a sense of direction
over the next five years.
“We
have made commendable strides, but acknowledging our ambition to be counted
amongst the best in our industry calls for a shift beyond where we are
presently. Therefore, we needed to elevate our game, raising the standards
required a deliberate, strategic approach in the quality healthcare improvement
agenda, eventually aiming for international accreditation,” she said.
Vice
president for Global Delivery at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, Dr.
Sodzi Sodzi-Tettey commended The Trust Hospital for putting quality at its
forefront and changing the status quo, noting that elsewhere, data shows that
poor healthcare is responsible for about 50 percent of deaths.
He
urged the hospital to include more patient input in its interventions. “Also,
link board-level initiatives to what is happening at the front line. The board
needs to have greater visibility into what is happening so that they can
provide additional support,” he added.
For
her part, Director of Nursing and Midwifery Services, Lilian Annan said the
hospital is working to achieve the maximum possible reduction in avoidable harm
due to unsafe health care and hence will improve adherence to the World Health
Organisation’s (WHO) patient safety goals.
The
goals included correct patient identification; improving effective
communication; medication safety practices; ensuring surgical safety for all
surgical procedures; control of healthcare-associated infections; and reducing
the risk of patient harm due to falls.