Abstract
Clinical governance is seen as a relatively new
concept; but a long history of health care quality
improvement sits behind it. Over the last 20 years,
a number of approaches have been tried and
discarded, with some inadequately implemented
and others poorly adapted from other industries.
Quality programs have evolved slowly, hampered
by a conservative and complex health care culture
and a lack of focus, data and resources. Despite
the advent of clinical governance, driven by a
patient safety crisis, many of these issues remain
unresolved, and are impacting current clinical
governance implementation. Reflecting on the
quality journey clearly demonstrates that the
potential of clinical governance cannot be realised
without the leadership, commitment and support
of governing bodies and executives.
Cited by
14 articles.
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