Clinical Audit Guide
Clinical Audit Guide
A GUIDE TO
CLINICAL
AUDIT
Clinical Governance and
Quality Improvement Unit,
ADAMA HOSPITAL
MEDICAL COLLEGE
January 2020
Table of Contents
1. Introduction ................................................................................................................................................. 2
2. Objective ...................................................................................................................................................... 3
3. Principles of Effective Clinical Audit .......................................................................................................... 4
4. Role and Responsibilities of departments .................................................................................................. 4
5. Frequency of Clinical Audit ........................................................................................................................ 5
6. Process of Clinical Audit ............................................................................................................................. 5
Stage-1: Planning for Audit ............................................................................................................................. 5
Stage-2: Standard and Criteria Selection ........................................................................................................ 8
Stage-3: Measuring Performances .................................................................................................................... 9
Stage-4: Linking Clinical Audit Findings with the Quality Improvement................................................... 10
Stage-5: Sustaining Improvement .................................................................................................................. 11
References .......................................................................................................................................................... 12
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1. Introduction
Clinical audit is a quality improvement process that seeks to improve patient care and outcomes
through systematic review of care against explicit criteria and the review of change. (1, 2)
Clinical audit should be an integral part of clinical practice and preferably a multi-professional
activity. It informs health care providers whether they are providing care that will, (i) yield
improved outcomes for patients, (ii) bring about efficiency gains, and (iii) raise patient satisfaction
to higher levels.
The Ministry of Health has been focusing on improving the quality of health care through
designing and developing different policies and guidelines. The HSTP (health sector
transformation plan) has set out quality improvements as one of its pillars of excellence which are
believed to help the sector to accomplish its mission and vision. In line with this HSTQ (Health
Sector Transformation in Quality) guidelines developed a different approach to operationalizing
the national quality strategy with superior emphasis on clinical audit.
Providing acceptable quality of health service in health facilities is a big challenge. Clinical Audit
implementation guides uniquely designed by the ministry to link clinical audit findings with
existing platforms like morning sessions, seminars, grand round meetings, beside teachings plus
quality improvement system then to make clinical audit fundamental component of clinical
practice at the facility level.
Adama hospital medical college is a teaching institution were audits are done by students in the
learning process but not coordinated with quality improvement activities of the hospital so
recommendations might not be supported by the hospital or even may not be informed. Therefore
having these opportunities as teaching institution we better also focus on standard patient care
continuously followed for improvement in quality.
The aim of this audit guide is for provision of simple tool for guiding implementation or initiation
of the audit activity to be done continuously by the unit or departments.
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2. Objective
General
To create a culture of systematic integration of patient care with clinical audits as part of their
patient safety and quality assurance measures of the routine clinical and academic activities.
Specific
To guide clinical audit implementation at the level of departments, units or case teams of the
AHMC
To assist in starting the clinical audit practice as their routine clinical activities at each departments
of AHMC for quality service delivery.
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3. Principles of Effective Clinical Audit
If health facilities and clinical departments aspire to conduct effective and successful clinical audit,
the following guiding principles should be considered:
The Quality Unity or Directorate will have the following roles and responsibilities:
Department/units/case teams
The team is preferably led by a senior physician, and depending on the needs, members of the
team can be recruited from residents, interns, general practitioners, clinical pharmacists,
nurses…etc. the team is expected to conduct clinical audits regularly. The team will be responsible
for:
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Lead the development of a plan or program of clinical audits
Conduct analysis, interpret, develop and implement QI interventions based on audit findings
Facilitate presentation of audit finding in the selected platforms
Report audit findings to the quality unit with an improvement plan
Take clinical audit activities as a measure of performance of clinical staffs
Recognize and celebrate success stories
Support and facilitate publication of audit findings in journals, quality bulletin
(N.B SOLUTIONS FOR IMPROVEMENT COULD BE CREATIVE PROCESSES THAT
SHOULD OTHERS LEARN FROM IT, AND HENCE SHARING THE EXPERIENCE IS ONE
OBJECTIVE)
Hospitals should follow quality improvement activities which are designed from the evidences
collected through regular clinical audits on patient care. The recommended frequency is
Each department of the hospital is expected to report its performances of clinical audit to
quality units in weekly base, but until we get familiar, one audit monthly should be
reported
The hospital should compile and report performances of clinical audits to the respective
bodies in monthly base.
Each clinical department in the hospital is expected to dedicate one day in a week to
discuss findings of clinical audits
1. Involving stakeholders
2. Determining/selecting audit topic
3. Planning the delivery of audit fieldwork
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i. Involving Stakeholders (staffs, patients)
Ownership relates to involving the right stakeholders in the audit from the phase of planning up
to follow up of implementation of change interventions, monitoring improvements and sustaining
such improvements. Anyone involved in providing or receiving care can be considered a
stakeholder in clinical audit.
1. Department heads or Quality Focal Persons (seniors) from all respective departments. Their
involvement could either be direct participation during the audit or overseeing :
o Leadership role in the audit team
o Review of cases that do not achieve the expected level of performance
o Provide explanations as to how a care process happens currently
o Monitor the implementation of agreed actions
2. Chief Resident / Resident focal assigned for clinical audit/ General practitioner -
Collection of data, analysis, interpretation and dissemination/presentation of findings
Actively engaged in evidence generation and publication on audit findings
Design quality improvement projects based on audit findings
Provide explanations as to how a care process happens currently
3. Clinical Nurse- all level of health facilities, and their role will be:
Collection of data
Contribute to the analysis of audit findings, including analysis of problems,
interpretation and identification of potential interventions
Assist in identification of actions to address areas requiring improvement
4. Clinical Pharmacist -
Collection of data
Contribute to the analysis of audit findings, including analysis of problems,
interpretation and identification of potential interventions
Assist in identification of actions to address areas requiring improvement
5. Intern representative/ Intern focal assigned for clinical audit-
Collection of data
Contribute to the analysis of audit findings, including analysis of problems,
interpretation and identification of potential interventions
Design implementation plan
6. Case team managers and Coordinators-
Contribute to the analysis of audit findings, including analysis of problems
identified
Secure resources required to support change
Provide support to the clinical audit team
7. Clients: Act as a source for data, and their role will be:
Direct- interview, client forum/focus group (if patients are involved in assessment)
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Indirect- Complaint box, analysis of feedback/comments made at service user
forums
ii. Determining the Audit Topic
Audit topics are based on department /unit / case team priorities, concerns and procedure. Audit
topic prioritization matrix can be used. Maternal and child health, non-communicable diseases /
HTN, DM/ are Ethiopian national priority areas. As a result, these audits can have a priority over
the other topics
Selection of the audit topic needs careful thought and planning, as clinical staff and service
providers have limited resources with which to deliver clinical audits. Mandatory audits will take
resource priority and this can be justified using prioritization matrix
Score 3- High level, Score 2- Medium level, Score 1- Low level, Score 0- No importance
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• Journal presentation
• Case team forums
• Performance monitoring team meeting
These criteria are explicit statements that define what is being measured and represent elements of
care that can be measured objectively.
The standards define the aspect of care to be measured, and should always be based on the best
available evidence.
1. Structure (what you need) Examples of criteria relating to structure include the numbers of
staff and skill mix, the provision of equipment and physical space.
2. Process (what you do) Process criteria refer to actions and decisions taken by practitioners
and users. Examples include assessment, education, documentation, prescribing, surgical
and other therapeutic interventions.
3. Outcome (what you expect) Outcome criteria are typically measures of the physical or
behavioral response to an intervention, reported health status and level of knowledge and
satisfaction. Sometimes surrogate or intermediate outcome indicators are used instead.
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N.B. The use of an objective criterion with an agreed standard of performance is a hallmark of
clinical audit. Sample of Criteria Vs Standard
Data collection can be carried out using a checklist either individually or as group using a
standardized checklist derived from the standards set.
The sample should be small enough to allow for speedy data collection but large enough to be
representative. Example reviewing 10 patient charts using checklists
Data Analysis
This may involve transferring the data collected from the data collection tool onto summary sheets
(manual data collection) or onto a spreadsheet or database (ms excel,) for interpretation. The main
aim of data analysis is to answer the questions posed by the audit objectives; highlighting areas of
good practice and areas that require particular attention or improvement. The type of data analysis
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depends on the type of information collected. This can range from simple averages and
percentages to sophisticated statistical techniques.
Drawing Conclusion
Cases of unacceptable care should then be reviewed in order for the team to:
Clearly identify and agree on areas for improvement identified by the clinical audit.
Analyze the areas for improvement to identify what underlying, contributory or deep-
rooted factors are involved. Tools like process mapping, fishbone diagrams, and 5 whys
can be used to explore root causes.
Report Writing and Presenting Results
The following points can be used as a guide while writing a clinical audit report for documentation
Data graphics are a good way of communicating this information to others. The most commonly
used form of data graphics in clinical audit are tables, graphs and charts.
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Implement the change ideas
Scale up the experience
The change idea generated and be tested might be interesting finding so that it could be published
or shared for other institution and will be graduated.
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References
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