To read this content please select one of the options below:

Health boards' governance of quality and risk: quality improvement agenda for the board

Mark J. Avery (School of Medicine, Griffith University, Gold Coast, Australia)
Allan W. Cripps (School of Medicine, Griffith University, Gold Coast, Australia)
Gary D. Rogers (School of Medicine, Deakin University, Geelong, Australia)

International Journal of Health Governance

ISSN: 2059-4631

Article publication date: 12 July 2021

Issue publication date: 12 October 2021

1206

Abstract

Purpose

This study explores key governance, leadership and management activities that have impact on quality, risk and safety within Australian healthcare organisations.

Design/methodology/approach

Current non-executive directors (n = 12) of public and private health boards were interviewed about contemporary approaches to fiduciary and corporate responsibilities for quality assurance and improvement outcomes in the context of risk and safety management for patient care. Verbatim transcripts were subjected to thematic analysis triangulated with Leximancer-based text mining.

Findings

Boards operate in a strong legislative, healthcare standards and normative environment of quality and risk management. Support and influence that create a positive quality and risk management culture within the organisation, actions that disseminate quality and risk broadly and at depth for all levels, and implementation and sustained development of quality and risk systems that report on and contain risk were critical tasks for boards and their directors.

Practical implications

Findings from this study may provide health directors with key quality and risk management agenda points to expand or deepen the impact of governance around health facilities' quality and risk management.

Originality/value

This study has identified key governance activities and responsibilities where boards demonstrate that they add value in terms of potential improvement to hospital and health service quality care outcomes. The demonstrable influence identified makes an important contribution to our understanding of healthcare governance.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Funding: The corresponding author was support by higher degree research candidate funding by Griffith University.

Citation

Avery, M.J., Cripps, A.W. and Rogers, G.D. (2021), "Health boards' governance of quality and risk: quality improvement agenda for the board", International Journal of Health Governance, Vol. 26 No. 3, pp. 292-306. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJHG-01-2021-0006

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles