Press information issued on behalf of:
Amnis Ltd., 3000 Hillswood Drive, Hillswood Business Park, CHERTSEY,
Surrey, KT16 0RS
Web: www.amnis.uk.com
23rd December 2009
Amnis offers help to those criticised by The Foster Report
The quality, innovation and productivity organisation, Amnis, has
sounded a note of caution in the debate over the recently published Dr
Foster Hospital Guide. It has also set out a process to help those
organisations which have been criticised in the Guide to improve
performance by developing their internal capabilities.
Amnis' Mark Eaton commented: "Hospitals are complex organisations
employing thousands of people and with budgets measuring in the
hundreds of millions of pounds. Any one assessment is liable to be
different from another and, in the busy world of the NHS, performance
can vary from hour to hour - so it's not surprising that different
organisations report different results from different assessments.
"Unless the UK public are prepared to employ an army of assessors to
work every day with each organisation overseeing what they do at every
step, it's unlikely that we'll escape a world that needs at least some
self-assessment and one in which there will continue to be
discontinuities between different assessments," he continued.
"I don't believe that any hospital management team has deliberately
tried to mislead their assessors. Of course, that doesn't mean that
they don't try to portray their organisation in a good light.
"The problem is that you need to clarify self-assessment performance
and get some quality assurance on its accuracy before you use it in
PR."
At the end of November, Dr Foster - an independent organisation founded
on a belief in the need for greater transparency about variations in
healthcare performance and dedicated to helping patients make informed
decisions about their health - published its latest annual hospital
directory which compares the performance of NHS trusts and evaluates
the levels of NHS quality throughout the UK.
The Dr Foster Hospital Guide stated that 12 NHS hospital trusts in
England are 'significantly underperforming', despite nine hospitals
recently having been rated as good or excellent by regulators. The
Guide's findings are based on a range of indicators including death
rates, infection rates and staffing levels.
However, the Care Quality Commission (CQC), which had recently given
nine of those trusts 'good' or 'excellent' ratings for their overall
performance, said it saw no need to intervene. In addition, at least
three of Dr Foster's 12 worst-performing trusts have elite 'foundation'
status.
Amnis' Eaton said: "Hospitals adapt to meet the needs of their local
population and will change the amount of funding put into specific
services based on the need of the population they serve. In other
words, it's difficult to create a 'like for like' measure that can be
applied to all hospitals uniformly.
"I believe the problems of assessing such large and complex
organisations should not be underestimated and so I don't think the Dr
Foster report has undermined the CQC - or vice versa.
"Importantly, I doubt that any assessment regime for the NHS could ever
be perfect but, over the last few years, its assessment regime has
developed improved accuracy, better ways of comparing performance
across hospitals and an increasing understanding of the difficulties of
comparing different populations being served by hospitals," he
remarked.
Davinder Virdi, director of strategy at Amnis, added: "Amnis can - and
does - help organisations to align their service improvement programmes
so that they deliver the strategic objectives for the organisation. For
example, if the organisation identifies a high cost, then we can work
with them - in a special process called 'Transformation Mapping' - to
identify the specific actions that would help them reduce these costs
and improve performance by developing their internal capabilities."
End
About Amnis Limited
Working with both public and private sector organisations, Amnis is a
consultancy which specialises in quality, innovation and productivity
improvement, helping clients plan and deploy strategies for successful
transformation. Its goal is to help clients not only deliver
sustainable change but also to develop their capability to tackle their
next challenges.
Providing both consultancy and training services, Amnis' team includes
specialists in Lean/Six Sigma, organisational development, strategic
planning, change management and systems thinking.
Further information from:
Mark Eaton, Amnis, 00 44 (0) 870 446 1002;
markeaton@amnis.uk.com
Bob
Little, Bob Little Press & PR, 00 44 (0)1727 860405;
bob.little@boblittlepr.com