May 10, 2023
This national, multiyear campaign is aimed at improving care for all surgical patients by increasing awareness about the importance of quality and bringing ACS Quality Programs into every hospital in America.
âWe are driving a national conversation about quality and the key role that programs like ours can play in improving care for patients everywhere. This means engaging with hospitals, policymakers, payers, and patients to ensure the entire healthcare ecosystem understands the Power of Quality,â said Patricia L. Turner, MD, MBA, FACS, ACS Executive Director and CEO. âThis means having meaningful conversations about how we can all work collaboratively to improve quality.â
The College was built on a foundation of quality in 1913âand surgeons have long known that quality care is not only good for patients but also is good for healthcare processes and financial efficiencies.
âQuality has become so much more complex and sophisticated,â said Clifford Y. Ko, MD, MS, MSHS, FACS, FASCRS, a colorectal surgeon at the University of California, Los Angeles and Director of the ACS Division of Research and Optimal Patient Care. âWe now have so many different domains of quality and metrics that healthcare teams donât know how to improve those metrics. The College can help âimprove the improvementâ because we have standards that describe the things we need to do and explain what the infrastructure and resources are needed to do them.â
The ACS has 18 Quality Programs that provide roadmaps for specialties such as trauma, cancer, geriatrics, bariatrics, and childrenâs surgery, including a program that addresses processes for a hospitalâs entire surgical system.
At the Inova Health System in Virginia, where urological surgeon J. Stephen Jones, MD, FACS, is the president and CEO, quality is not looked at in a silo by department or hospital but systemwide.
âWe look at clinical excellence. Quality is a part of that, safety is a part of that, patient experience and financial stewardship are a part of that,â he said. âWe need the mindset that we will continually improve to be the best and never accept that we canât be better. And, by the way, we think this is the right business decision too. Itâs not a tradeoff.â
Another goal of The Power of Quality Campaign is to help policymakers and payers understand the relationship between quality and cost.
âIf we decrease our costs, we donât necessarily get better quality. Sometimes we get worse quality,â explained Dr. Ko. âHowever, if we prioritize quality and quality gets better, then there are fewer complications, fewer readmissions, and patients donât have to go through the emergency department or have extra radiology exams. That saves money.â
He also articulated the importance of incorporating patient-centered goals into reimbursement models. Having recently operated on a 32-year-old and a 101-year-old in the same week, he pointed out the obviousâthat each patient had a different postoperative goal.
âWe need to focus on individualized quality, whatâs best for each patient, and how we can do it in an efficient, effective, and timely way,â he said. âThese measures need to be aligned so that whatâs in the patientâs best interest is also what surgeons are incentivized to do.â
The next steps include launching a public-facing campaign in test markets around the US, developing patient information materials, and working more closely with surgeons in those test-market areas to champion The Power of the Quality messages.
Additional information about the campaign is available at facs.org/quality-programs/the-power-of-quality.Ìę