Clinical Governance and Auditing
Throughout this paper, an attempt has been made to demonstrate an understanding of the procedure of Clinical Audit (CA). The focus of this CA is the high risk area of patient safety, and with regard to how this is linked to patient safety, hand hygiene has been selected. The findings and the recommendations that follow combined with the CA tool and the selection criteria will be outlined in form of a Clinical Audit. For the purposes of improving clinical practice, CAs forms an integral aspect of clinical governance. It is indeed notable that CAs encapsulates practice which through analysis can result to quality enhancement, particularly for the patients. Various definitions of the term which are invariably the same and which tend towards verbosity exist, but a terse and precise definition is given by Coffey (2009) who puts forth that a CA is a systematic evaluation of clinical processes through careful interpretation and fact finding. A methodological process commonly known as a CA cycle or stages should be adhered to when implementing or considering a CA (Ashmore & Ruthven, 2008)
The five major aspects that should be considered include: selection, preparations, gathering data, analysis, subsequent recommendations and continued changes for improvement. For clinical relevance and decision on the matter under consideration preparation is necessary. This is followed by selecting the standards and criteria through which measurable results are categorized by the criteria. By employing relevant tools, gathering of data is accomplished and interpretation of the data is achieved through analysis by comparing the chosen standard or criteria. And based on these findings, recommendations are developed (Ashmore & Ruthven, 2008).
Instead of a prospective audit, a retroactive audit is preferred because this eliminates the likelihood of the subjects changing their conduct or practice in the process of the audit (Ashmore & Ruthven, 2008). Lack of time is an accepted impediment to auditing despite its accepted advantages. However, it is noteworthy that the importance of CA in enabling best practice cannot be measured. The mainstay or strength of conducting CAs is based on consistent debates of the issues that have been identified and the implementation of strategies that can lead to improvement. It is imperative not to forget that the CA might adduce evidence that standards are complied with and therefore the staff or participants should get commendation.
Background
Presently, nursing and practice based on evidence strongly emphasize agenda for clinical governance geared towards improvement of quality (Iggulden, Macdonald & Staniland, 2009). In order to ensure NHS organizations are not only held responsible for improving clinical practice and adhering to standards but also are charged with implementing safety systems as a safeguard for practice, clinical governance should be deployed as a system. The prevalence of infections associated with health care can be reduced through proper decontamination of hand hygiene or (HCALs) but despite this, HCALs incidences are on the rise and this build barriers for health care workers against reducing such infections. Earlier research indicated that compliance with the standards of hand hygiene by health care workers or (HCWs) is widely sub-standard and any improvement in compliance cannot be easily sustained (Bennett et al., 2012).
Objectives, Aim & Standards
Looking at hygiene practice/hand washing from a behavioral perspective in a report of the study of healthcare workers is what this paper attempts. To achieve this objective an opposite tool of audit was used. The hand hygiene policy was compared to the relevant documentation (Pontivivo et al., 2012), as a procedure need for the practice of clinics. There are no exceptions but for a 100% rate chosen for the criteria. The paper also defines clinical governance and maps its emergence as a means of discussing present best practice and to evaluate what this implies for the executives and boards of director who intend to implement clinical governance for the health services they offer (Braithwaite & Travaglia, 2008).The research also examines whether proper hand hygiene can prevent or stop infections linked with health care. However, existing results indicates that auditing that is advertised is linked to the growth of general hand hygiene rate of adherence including within the subgroups after or before contact with patients and that apparently this is admissible to health care workers (Hui et al., 2014).
Methodology
At a pediatric ward with 30 beds, this retroactive audit examined the completion rate of audit forms in 50 instances. The audit was carried out by Luis at Canterbury hospital in a time span of 90 minutes. The tool of audit looked...
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