Guidelines
Identify the purpose and audiences of the web-based report
Studies suggest consumers who do not use public reports on quality in healthcare are not doing so because they believe the information is too complex and irrelevant. This guideline aims to help the report developer consider information about the consumer such as age, culture and healthcare literacy so information can be presented in a more relevant way.
Use a transparent process that involves stakeholders
This point guides report developers to involve stakeholders such as consumers, healthcare providers and policymakers in defining the scope, format, and goals of the report as well as providing feedback on the language and messages. Stakeholder input at the outset of the project helps ensure the report is relevant and useful.
Set the stage by communicating information about quality
For a public report to be helpful to consumer decision-making, consumers must understand what quality in healthcare means and how to use the report to make information decisions about care. This guideline helps report developers convey the meaning of quality care in context of the report and in ways that are beneficial to the consumer.
Use measures that are transparent and meet widely accepted, rigorous criteria
For a public report to be credible and useful, the data within the report must be reliable and trustworthy. This guideline aims to make sure the measures selected to describe and publicly report performance are widely accepted and go through a rigorous, standardized and transparent evaluation process such as the NQF's formal consensus development process.
Present and explain the data
A public report should help consumers comprehend healthcare quality
information and connect with it in a way that enables them to select the
best option for themselves. This guideline aims to help developers of
public
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| SOURCE National Quality Forum Copyright©2008 PR Newswire. All rights reserved |