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Quality of care - World Health Organization (WHO) Quality of care is the degree to which health services for individuals and populations increase the likelihood of desired health outcomes It is based on evidence-based professional knowledge and is critical for achieving universal health coverage
Fact sheet: Quality health services Quality of care is the degree to which health services for individuals and populations increase the likelihood of desired health outcomes and are consistent with evidence-based professional knowledge
Quality of care for maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health Increasing evidence shows that ensuring the quality care prevents death and disability in maternal and child mortality High quality health systems could prevent an estimated half of all maternal and newborn deaths alone according to the Lancet Commission on High Quality Health Systems (2018)
Health service quality must be a priority, not an afterthought: New . . . Countries need to ensure continuous attention to the quality of their healthcare services, including during emergencies, contends a new Collection of articles launched today in the British Medical Journal (BMJ) The authors call for greater investment and political attention to quality issues – not just access - as a cornerstone of universal health coverage
Greece launches its new National Strategy for Quality of Care and . . . The Greek Ministry of Health and WHO Europe, through its Office on Quality of Care and Patient Safety in Athens, in collaboration with the Agency for Quality Assurance in Health (ODIPY) and the European Union’s (EU) Directorate-General for Structural Reform Support, worked together in the last 18 months to create a new National Strategy for Quality of Care and Patient Safety 2025–2030 that
WHO launches new guide to help boost quality in health services WHO today launched a new guide on Measuring and monitoring quality of care for maternal, newborn, child, and adolescent health services The guide and its accompanying tool are designed to support programme managers, policymakers and health workers in strengthening efforts to measure, monitor and improve the quality of health services, especially for maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health
Quality of Care - World Health Organization (WHO) Section 1, Background and assumptions: context and rationale for developing this process Section 2, Basic concepts in quality: simple working definitions of what is meant by quality in the context of health and health care, and describes various roles and responsibilities which apply to quality improvement in any health system
Quality of Care for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (QoC Network) The Network for Improving Quality of Care for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (Quality of Care Network) is a broad-based partnership of committed governments, implementation partners and funding agencies working to deliver the vision that ‘every pregnant woman and newborn receives good quality care throughout pregnancy, childbirth and the postnatal period’
Quality Assurance, Norms and Standards The work of developing quality norms and standards is a continuous cycle of priority setting, product planning and development and publication, uptake and implementation, evaluation of impact, and monitoring of health outcomes, which then feeds back into the next set of priorities