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Sunday 12 February 2012

Accreditation, Hallmark of Health Care Quality in India: Dr. Narottam PurI

Certification on products and services has become imperative to ensure safety and reliability. A similar standard for health care services is also vital since people trust hospital services and clinics with their lives. Dr. Narottam Puri, MBBS, MS (ENT), FICS, FIAMS, ADHA and Chairman, National Accreditation Board for Hospitals and Healthcare (NABH), India delivered an oration on 'Accreditation-Improving Healthcare Quality in India' commemorating the sixth 'Prof.T.K. Partha Sarathy Endowment Oration' at Sri Ramachandra University,Chennai on 9th February 2012.
Accreditation Credits Credibility
Dr. Puri explained the accreditation process of NABH as a publicly recognised national body on, "the achievement of a set of standards by a healthcare organization, demonstrated through an independent external assessment of that organisation's level of performance in relation to the standard". As part of licensing and certification, hospital and healthcare services must also include accreditation to suffice health facilities of premier quality. Interestingly the suggestion for accreditation of healthcare services came from the Ministry of Tourism and WTO (World Tourism Organisation). When medical tourists enquired if a hospital was accredited, there was no answer; hence a set of standards was needed to be in place and to accomplish the task professionals from medical field and ancillary sectors were trained for the purpose.
Accreditation is Beneficial
Currently most part of health care facility in India is in the hands of the private sector and a marginal portion belongs to the government. According to Dr. Puri, private hospitals offer services that are partly treated like hotels and partly handled as medical fragment, the latter of course taken for granted and not questioned. So an assessor (NABH authorised supervising personnel) does not merely check if a hospital meets the guidelines. NABH also monitors if the hospital meets the standards set by the self in the previous year, what is termed as the Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI), which like in any other management helps maintain or even improve the quality of healthcare services. As for benefitting the staff, accreditation provides good working environment and promotes ownership of clinical processes. For example instead of penalising a nurse over an error, Dr. Puri suggested explaining to the nurse the need to bear responsibility for his/her actions, so as to avoid them in the future. Finally addressing the advantage of accreditation to others, such as members availing (Central Government Health Scheme) CGHS and civilians it assures “accessibility to reliable and certified information on facilities, infrastructure and level of care.”
Asserting Reliability of NABH
The three ‘A’s emphasised by Dr. Puri concerning hospital and healthcare services are Accessibility, Affordability and Assurance. NABH is striving to establish the third A – Assurance in the healthcare services. The NABH which emerged as a national body is uniquely tailored for Indian healthcare system and was an initiative by India to provide good quality services. Dr. Puri did not deny non-availability and non-affordability of healthcare services, but reinstated the achievement of excellence in healthcare industry via NABH. Observing the lack of surprise checks by NABH to uphold standards, last week Dr. Puri proposed the plan to the body. Furthermore governments have mandated and even requested NABH to frame standards on occasions such as the Kerala government requesting to set minimum standards for the average lab. So a lab accredited at level 3 can improve to reach a level 5. Similarly, to frame the Clinical Establishment Act, the central government has asked the NABH to develop standards to judge or assess a nursing home.
The vital need for accreditation is in the interest of “the benefit a patient gets, the very people that healthcare providers serve. A patient must know what is important for his safety, whether it is in practise or not, whether his rights are protected and whether the services are provided by a qualified and credential practitioner,” stressed Dr. Narottam Puri.
Source-Medindia

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