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Clin Perform Qual Health Care ; 6(4): 193-200, 1998.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10351288

ABSTRACT

Public hospitals and clinics in the United States provide health care for the needs of large numbers of people who are medically indigent, homeless, chronically mentally ill, and suffer medical and social disorders associated with poverty. These "safety-net" healthcare providers traditionally struggle with barriers to providing high-quality, patient-sensitive care, including decaying physical facilities, burdensome bureaucracies, underfunded capital equipment and construction programs, and complex, politically driven budgets and governance. However, these same institutions now must compete for their own Medicaid and Medicare clientele because the private sector is marketing to those patients. They also must continue to provide increasing services to growing numbers of uninsured patients. To accomplish this, these institutions must reinvent themselves as patient-focused, high-quality, cost-effective healthcare providers. The Denver Health system is the public safety-net provider for the city and county of Denver. This large public institution has instituted a multifaceted performance-improvement program. The program includes training employees for patient-focused service, implementing continuous quality-improvement practices, instituting clinical pathways, revising the preexisting ambulatory quality-management program, reengineering key aspects of ambulatory clinic services, and redesigning the hospital-based patient-care services. Major successes have been achieved in some initiatives, but not in all. Many key "lessons learned" may guide others.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care, Integrated/standards , Hospitals, Municipal/standards , Medical Indigency , Total Quality Management/organization & administration , Ambulatory Care/standards , Colorado , Critical Pathways , Delivery of Health Care, Integrated/organization & administration , Economic Competition , Efficiency, Organizational , Hospitals, Municipal/economics , Hospitals, Municipal/organization & administration , Inservice Training , Organizational Innovation , Patient Care Planning , Patient Satisfaction , Patient-Centered Care , Poverty
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