1.
Stud Health Technol Inform
; 16: 97-104, 1995.
Article
in English
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-10163724
ABSTRACT
Guidelines in primary health care have been developed to reduce assumed and undesired variation in certain aspects of care delivery by professionals. If systematically applied guidelines no doubt effect the quality of care. It is argued however that taking an organizational point of view on quality management yields new requirements with respect to development and application of guidelines. It is considered to be essential for managerial control purposes that guidelines have simple and valid indicators to monitor the actual application and to measure the preferred outcome. It is essential that the choice of guidelines to be implemented in an organization is determined in the context of an explicit plan for quality management.