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Measuring what matters in hospitals

Hallway health care – gurneys with sick patients lining hospital corridors – is one of the most graphic representations of the pressures on Ontario’s health system today. We know that the equivalent of more than 10 large, 400-bed hospitals are filled to capacity each day by patients who don’t need the level of services hospitals are designed to provide. They are waiting for more appropriate placement in long-term care, rehabilitation, home care and assisted living.

Tackling these and other system challenges requires an accurate assessment of their scope and scale. Every health care system needs to measure how it is doing so it can improve and so Ontarians know whether the system is moving in the right direction and if they are getting good value for their money.

To properly support the priorities for the system, it is important that what we measure helps us identify and focus our efforts on the most pressing concerns. It is also important not to overwhelm health care professionals with a burdensome requirement to measure too much. As health quality guru Dr. Don Berwick wrote in 2016, excessive and mandatory measurement “is as unwise and irresponsible as is intemperate health care”. Measurement should provide meaningful information on performance, so providers can begin the quality improvement process, if required.

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