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This is a More Involved QI – includes free access to Medicoach
You know your practice and patients best and may wish to choose your own QI topic.
Quality improvement comes in all shapes and sizes, so we have divided our QI into ‘less involved’ and ‘more involved’. This page gives you a guide to conducting a green level activity. This is QI that is more involved, where the changes might be deeper or multi-layered and involve more people in the team.
Great things can come of green level activities! See some examples on our PCI topics page by filtering “More involved QI” in the right-hand navigation. Green level topics we have already scoped for you include a range of team-based or more complex activities.
Use a SMART goal (specific, measurable, achievable, realistic and time limited) to set up your QI activity.
Having a detailed goal about what you want to achieve and by when, will assist you to stay on track and see it through.
Consider how you will measure your improvement.
You can collect data a range of ways, for example, through your clinical information system, PenCAT, patient experience of clinician satisfaction surveys or similar.
QI guidance
Clinical guidance
Bring the team together
Share your experience so others can learn from you
Healthy North Coast has contracted Kim Poyner of MediCoach to provide you with short term assistance on this improvement. Consultations with Kim are specific and unique to your practice and come with practical tools and advice. To access Kim please contact your Primary Health Coordinator or use this form.
The Healthy North Coast Health Literacy Team are available to help with health literacy training or improvement projects. Contact the HNC Health Literacy Officer for support or free training at your practice or online, at a time that suits you.
We acknowledge the traditional custodians of the land we live and work, the Bundjalung, Arakwal, Yaegl, Gumbaynggirr, Githabul, Dunghutti and Birpai Nations, and their continuing connection to land, sea and community. We pay our respects to elders past, present and future.
Primary Health Coordinators