TY - JOUR
T1 - Shaping the future of surgery
T2 - The role of private regulation in determining quality standards
AU - Callcut, Rachael A.
AU - Breslin, Tara M.
N1 - Copyright:
Copyright 2008 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2006/3
Y1 - 2006/3
N2 - Objective: To educate surgeons about the growth of the private regulatory movement and its potential implications for the practice of surgery. Methods: An in-depth analysis and literature review of one of the largest private regulatory groups, the Leapfrog Group, provides a model for understanding the impact of these groups on the practice of surgery. A detailed discussion of the history, mission, structure, and quality initiatives of Leapfrog is included. Results: Private regulatory groups are using quality standards as a method for controlling the rising cost of health care. Traditionally, little financial support, manpower, or incentives have existed for individual surgeons and hospitals to report and maintain their own outcomes data. However, as surgical outcomes have increasingly become the target of quality improvement initiatives, the need to measure performance is gaining importance. Surgical quality has been both a direct target of private regulation, as illustrated by the evidence-based hospital referral guidelines of Leapfrog, and an indirect target with initiatives like computerized physician order entry and ICU staffing guidelines. Conclusions: Private regulation is rapidly reshaping the way we practice and teach surgery. It is almost a certainty that their power, popularity, financial support, and missions will all continue to expand. As surgeons, we must decide soon if we wish to be an active participant in shaping the movement or, rather, if we are going to let it shape us by remaining largely uninvolved.
AB - Objective: To educate surgeons about the growth of the private regulatory movement and its potential implications for the practice of surgery. Methods: An in-depth analysis and literature review of one of the largest private regulatory groups, the Leapfrog Group, provides a model for understanding the impact of these groups on the practice of surgery. A detailed discussion of the history, mission, structure, and quality initiatives of Leapfrog is included. Results: Private regulatory groups are using quality standards as a method for controlling the rising cost of health care. Traditionally, little financial support, manpower, or incentives have existed for individual surgeons and hospitals to report and maintain their own outcomes data. However, as surgical outcomes have increasingly become the target of quality improvement initiatives, the need to measure performance is gaining importance. Surgical quality has been both a direct target of private regulation, as illustrated by the evidence-based hospital referral guidelines of Leapfrog, and an indirect target with initiatives like computerized physician order entry and ICU staffing guidelines. Conclusions: Private regulation is rapidly reshaping the way we practice and teach surgery. It is almost a certainty that their power, popularity, financial support, and missions will all continue to expand. As surgeons, we must decide soon if we wish to be an active participant in shaping the movement or, rather, if we are going to let it shape us by remaining largely uninvolved.
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U2 - 10.1097/01.sla.0000200854.34298.e3
DO - 10.1097/01.sla.0000200854.34298.e3
M3 - Review article
C2 - 16495692
AN - SCOPUS:33644656090
SN - 0003-4932
VL - 243
SP - 304
EP - 312
JO - Annals of surgery
JF - Annals of surgery
IS - 3
ER -