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Healthcare is important to everyone, yet large variations in its
quality have been well documented both between and within many
countries. With demand and expenditure rising, it's more crucial
than ever to know how well the healthcare system and all its
components - from staff member to regional network - are
performing. This requires data, which inevitably differ in form and
quality. It also requires statistical methods, the output of which
needs to be presented so that it can be understood by whoever needs
it to make decisions. Statistical Methods for Healthcare
Performance Monitoring covers measuring quality, types of data,
risk adjustment, defining good and bad performance, statistical
monitoring, presenting the results to different audiences and
evaluating the monitoring system itself. Using examples from around
the world, it brings all the issues and perspectives together in a
largely non-technical way for clinicians, managers and
methodologists. Statistical Methods for Healthcare Performance
Monitoring is aimed at statisticians and researchers who need to
know how to measure and compare performance, health service
regulators, health service managers with responsibilities for
monitoring performance, and quality improvement scientists,
including those involved in clinical audits.
Healthcare is important to everyone, yet large variations in its
quality have been well documented both between and within many
countries. With demand and expenditure rising, it's more crucial
than ever to know how well the healthcare system and all its
components - from staff member to regional network - are
performing. This requires data, which inevitably differ in form and
quality. It also requires statistical methods, the output of which
needs to be presented so that it can be understood by whoever needs
it to make decisions. Statistical Methods for Healthcare
Performance Monitoring covers measuring quality, types of data,
risk adjustment, defining good and bad performance, statistical
monitoring, presenting the results to different audiences and
evaluating the monitoring system itself. Using examples from around
the world, it brings all the issues and perspectives together in a
largely non-technical way for clinicians, managers and
methodologists. Statistical Methods for Healthcare Performance
Monitoring is aimed at statisticians and researchers who need to
know how to measure and compare performance, health service
regulators, health service managers with responsibilities for
monitoring performance, and quality improvement scientists,
including those involved in clinical audits.
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