Bradford VTS Online Resources:
Patient Safety & Quality of Care
Clinical Governance
path: For LEADERSHIP – see main ONLINE RESOURCES > THE GP IN THE WIDER PROF. ENVIRONMENT/teaching-learning/learning-needs/learning-needs-tools/from-real-surgeries
- debrief template.doc
- debriefs – learning needs log.docx
- debriefs template for recording learning.doc
- getting your head around debriefing.pdf
- learning needs log from baby clinic.docx
- learning needs log from general daily practice.docx
- learning needs log from interesting patients.docx
- learning needs log from random case analyses.docx
- learning needs log from sit n swap surgeries cot style.docx
- learning needs log from sit n swap surgeries csa style.docx
- learning needs log from sit n swap surgeries.docx
- learning needs log from video analysis – cot crib.docx
- learning needs log from video analysis.docx
Clinical governance is “a system through which NHS organisations are accountable for continuously improving the quality of their services and safeguarding high standards of care by creating an environment in which excellence in clinical care will flourish.” (Scally and Donaldson 1998, p.61). Clinical governance is an umbrella term. It covers activities that help sustain and improve high standards of patient care. Doctors may already be familiar with some of these activities, quality and safety improvement, for example. What is different is the effort to bind these activities together and make them more effective. Health care organisations now have a duty to the communities they serve for maintaining the quality and safety of care. Whatever structures, systems and processes an organisation puts in place, it must be able to show evidence that standards are upheld. The Bradford VTS website aims to promote a better understanding of clinical governance with this web resource. It wants to help GP trainees (and trainers) to become more involved with local and national quality improvement projects.
There are 5 key themes of clinical governance.
1. Patient Focus 2. Quality Improvement 3. Staff Focus 4. Leadership 5. Information Focus