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Citation

Turner, Mallory Wolfe; Carr, Tara; John, Randall; & Ramaswamy, Rohit (2022). A Scoping Review of the Use of Quality Improvement Methods by Community Organizations in the United States, Australia, New Zealand, and Canada to Improve Health and Well-Being in Community Settings. IJQHC Communications, 2(1), lyab019. PMCID: PMC9450045

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Health-care facilities have used quality improvement (QI) methods extensively to improve quality of care. However, addressing complex public health issues such as coronavirus disease 2019 and their underlying structural determinants requires community-level innovations beyond health care. Building community organizations’ capacity to use QI methods is a promising approach to improving community health and well-being.
OBJECTIVES: We explore how community health improvement has been defined in the literature, the extent to which community organizations have knowledge and skill in QI and how communities have used QI to drive community-level improvements.
METHODS: Per a published study protocol, we searched Scopus, Web of Science, and Proquest Health management for articles between 2000 and 2019 from USA, Australia, New Zealand, and Canada. We included articles describing any QI intervention in a community setting to improve community well-being. We screened, extracted, and synthesized data. We performed a quantitative tabulation and a thematic analysis to summarize results.
RESULTS: Thirty-two articles met inclusion criteria, with 31 set in the USA. QI approaches at the community level were the same as those used in clinical settings, and many involved multifaceted interventions targeting chronic disease management or health promotion, especially among minority and low-income communities. There was little discussion on how well these methods worked in community settings or whether they required adaptations for use by community organizations. Moreover, decision-making authority over project design and implementation was typically vested in organizations outside the community and did not contribute to strengthening the capability of community organizations to undertake QI independently.
CONCLUSION: Most QI initiatives undertaken in communities are extensions of projects in health-care settings and are not led by community residents. There is urgent need for additional research on whether community organizations can use these methods independently to tackle complex public health problems that extend beyond health-care quality.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ijcoms/lyab019

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2022

Journal Title

IJQHC Communications

Author(s)

Turner, Mallory Wolfe
Carr, Tara
John, Randall
Ramaswamy, Rohit

Article Type

Regular

PMCID

PMC9450045

Continent/Country

United States of America
Australia
New Zealand
Canada

ORCiD

Turner, M - 0000-0002-6807-7894