Indicators - Psychotropic Medicines in Cognitive Disability or Impairment Clinical Care Standard
Indicators have been developed to support monitoring of the care recommended in the standard. Clinicians and healthcare services can use the indicators to support local quality improvement activities.
Indicator specifications
Measurement is a key component of quality improvement processes. The Commission has developed a set of indicators to support clinicians and healthcare services to monitor how well they are implementing the care recommended in this clinical care standard. The indicators are intended to support local quality improvement activities. No benchmarks are set for these indicators by the Commission.
The definitions required to collect and calculate indicator data are specified in the Metadata Online Registry (METEOR): https://meteor.aihw.gov.au/content/791005
METEOR is an Australian web-based repository of nationally endorsed data and indicator definitions, hosted by the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW).
Indicators for local monitoring
Each indicator is described below and links to individual specifications are provided.
Measuring and monitoring patient experiences
Systematic, routine monitoring of patients’ experiences of, and outcomes from, health care is an important way to ensure that the patient’s perspective drives service improvements and person‑centred care. This is the case in all healthcare services.
Patient experience measures
While this clinical care standard does not include indicators specific to measuring patient experiences, the Commission strongly encourages healthcare services to use the Australian Hospital Patient Experience Question Set (AHPEQS). AHPEQS is a 12‑question generic patient experience survey that has been validated in both day‑only and admitted hospital patients across many clinical settings. The AHPEQS is available for download to both private and public sector health services.
Patient-reported outcome measures
In Australia, patient‑reported outcome measures (PROMs) are an emerging method of assessing the quality of health care. The Commission is leading a national work program to support the consistent and routine use of PROMs to drive quality improvement.
PROMs are standardised, validated questionnaires that patients complete, without any input from healthcare providers. They are often administered at least twice to an individual patient – at baseline and again after an intervention, or at regular intervals during a chronic illness. The information contributed by patients filling out PROMs questionnaires can be used to support and monitor the movement of health systems towards person‑centred, value‑based health care.
PROMs are being used to evaluate healthcare effectiveness at different levels of the health system, from the individual level to service and system levels. There is growing interest across Australia and internationally in the routine interrogation of patient‑reported outcome information for evaluation and decision‑making activities at levels of the health system beyond the clinical consultation
Patient experience measures
While this clinical care standard does not include indicators specific to measuring patient experiences, the Commission strongly encourages healthcare services to use the Australian Hospital Patient Experience Question Set (AHPEQS). AHPEQS is a 12‑question generic patient experience survey that has been validated in both day‑only and admitted hospital patients across many clinical settings. The AHPEQS is available for download to both private and public sector health services.
Patient-reported outcome measures
In Australia, patient‑reported outcome measures (PROMs) are an emerging method of assessing the quality of health care. The Commission is leading a national work program to support the consistent and routine use of PROMs to drive quality improvement.
PROMs are standardised, validated questionnaires that patients complete, without any input from healthcare providers. They are often administered at least twice to an individual patient – at baseline and again after an intervention, or at regular intervals during a chronic illness. The information contributed by patients filling out PROMs questionnaires can be used to support and monitor the movement of health systems towards person‑centred, value‑based health care.
PROMs are being used to evaluate healthcare effectiveness at different levels of the health system, from the individual level to service and system levels. There is growing interest across Australia and internationally in the routine interrogation of patient‑reported outcome information for evaluation and decision‑making activities at levels of the health system beyond the clinical consultation