Consensus Statement on Quality in the
Public Health System
U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services
Office of Public Health and Science
Office of
the Assistant Secretary for Health
Public Health Quality Forum
August 2008
Foreword
This consensus statement frames quality in the public
health system. It is intended to serve as principles to
enhance and guide goals of existing and future programs that
promote quality. The consensus statement was developed by the
Public Health Quality Forum (PHQF). Organized under my
direction as the Assistant Secretary for Health (ASH), U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), the PHQF is
stimulating a national movement for coordinated quality
improvement efforts across all levels in the public health
system. The motivating factor for convening the PHQF was to
establish a venue where characteristics of and a system for
quality in public health could be framed at a macro-level.
This is consistent with the role of the ASH for providing
leadership to the Nation on public health and science. I
embrace this function and demonstrate that responsibility
through this initiative.
Providing a national framework for quality will facilitate
consistent implementation of quality improvement processes in
every day public health practices. The tools provided are
designed to support current and future quality improvement
efforts by providing system-level leadership in defining
characteristics of quality in the system. The characteristics
promote strategic decision-making and resource allocations to
focus attention on the development of concentrated efforts to
improve quality and ultimately improve population health
outcomes.
Quality must be a value-adding function. The preferred
application is to embed these concepts into daily value-adding
practices to ensure the emergence of a culture of quality
throughout the public health system. Flowing from this should
be greater emphasis on research-based evidence to identify
quality public health practices. Policymakers must also
embrace quality concepts in the initiation of new policies and
the modification and evaluation of existing ones. Ideally, a
public health system containing such a coordinated quality
movement at all levels will facilitate measuring improvements
and result in adding value for the Nation.
Garth Graham, MD, MPH, Deputy Assistant Secretary for
Minority Health, serves as the Executive Director of the PHQF.
The initial meeting of the PHQF was held in May 2008 and work
is intended to be an ongoing process in the Office of the ASH.
Members of the PHQF and the Federal agencies that they
represent are provided in Appendix A. System partners that
participated in this process through presentations and reviews
are also noted in Appendix A. The HHS Public Health Systems
Working Group, chaired by Peggy Honoré, DHA, participated in
the process by providing input into the design of this system
for public health quality improvement.
/Joxel Garcia/
Joxel Garcia, MD, MBA
Assistant
Secretary for Health
Background
In a 1998 report, the President’s Commission on Consumer
Protection and Quality in the Health Care Industry recommended
that all segments of the health industry should embrace
quality improvement and support this commitment with clearly
established aims for improvement.1
The Commission asserted that all sectors of the health
industry needed to be accountable for improving quality. They
cited the lack of a systematic approach as hindering the
industry’s ability to sustain quality and stated that quality
improvement should be demonstrated by providing information on
performance using standardized quality measures. Along with
this was a recommendation to ensure the wide availability of
valid, comprehensive, and comparative data that it could be
used to evaluate effectiveness for improving health.1
Expanding on this was the 2001 Institute of Medicine (IOM)
publication Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health
System for the 21st Century where six aims for
improvement in quality-of-care were documented.2
Advancements in public health quality improvement are
progressing, but the goals and tools are less defined than in
some sectors of the health care industry. Aims for improvement
in the quality of public health services have not been
universally identified and indicators of public health quality
are not commonplace. Tools comparable to ones used to assess
the quality of patient care such as health plan report cards
and the Health Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS)
are not available for most parallel functions of the public
health system. The recent identification of processes to
facilitate quality improvement in public health such as
accreditation, certification, performance measurement, and
quality standards for public health preparedness are positive
signs that a culture to increase and mainstream quality
improvement concepts is strengthening. However, research
findings indicate that public health quality improvement
practices are most prevalent when they are driven by strong
national leadership.3
Local public health agency quality improvement initiatives are
most common in clinical programs and are least likely to occur
in prevention programs.3
Some challenges to implementing quality improvement in public
health practice include identification of meaningful goals,
data collection limitations, and lack of training for the
workforce.3
Another obstacle is the lack of knowledge on best practices
and evidence from research as recommended by the IOM.4
These barriers to creating a culture for quality improvement
must be addressed, with particular attention given to
establishing structures for routine dialogue and communication
on quality improvement concepts and initiatives at all levels
of the system.
Defining Quality in Public Health
The Nation’s public health system is the first line of
defense to protect the health of the entire population. This
covenant with the Nation for safeguarding population health
can be best achieved if concepts of quality and quality
improvement are understood and embraced in all segments of the
public health system. To promote uniformity across the system,
the following definition of quality is provided:
Quality in public health is the degree to
which policies, programs, services, and research for the
population increase desired health outcomes and conditions
in which the population can be
healthy.
Articulating a clear vision for quality in public health
and supporting the implementation of a national framework for
quality improvement are commitments that are shared and
promoted by partners and stakeholders in the public health
system. An overarching goal, at all levels and sectors of the
system, is to have continuous evaluation of public health
practices, programs and policies that produce and promote
desired results while giving significant additional attention
to those that need to be improved. An ultimate goal of quality
improvement in public health should be to optimize population
health, across all populations. The role of research to
provide meaningful knowledge and academia for educating the
workforce are critical components to advancing quality and
fulfilling this goal. Partners agree that quality improvement
should be a robust system where practices of quality
measurement are shared responsibilities and are supported by
routine examinations to document positive health outcomes for
all Americans.
The Office of Public Health and Science (OPHS) is the
primary office within the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services for advising the Nation on matters related to public
health science. The Assistant Secretary for Health (ASH)
provides strategic direction over OPHS with the
implementation, management, and development of initiatives
related to public health and science and communicates on these
issues to the country. The ASH is dedicated to creating a
culture of quality in the system and, as a result, OPHS is
taking a leadership role in articulating a comprehensive
national commitment to quality in public health. Public health
system partners stand synergistically with this commitment and
are dedicated to ensuring that a framework for quality
improvement is developed and mainstreamed into the governance,
management, and practice of public health. Federal, State,
territorial, tribal, local and non-governmental partners
commit to providing leadership and steering a course of action
where quality improvement initiatives are routine, woven into
all components of the system (e.g., financing, programming,
management, governance, research, education) and are
implemented through an adequately staffed and properly trained
public health workforce. Under the direction of the ASH, this
commitment to quality will be supported with the
identification of:
- A set of aims for improvement of quality in public
health
- A framework to guide and standardize quality improvement
efforts
- Priority areas for quality improvement in the public
health system
- A core set of quality indicators in each of the priority
areas
Completing all components of this quality initiative will
be a multi-step process with input from across the system. The
process will extend over a continuous period with emphasis on
collaboration and inclusion of existing quality promoting
programs. Ideally, these concepts should be woven into daily
public health practices as well as into policymaking,
governance, management, and relevant functions of system
partners. This can be best accomplished through a trained
workforce and informed leaders who value quality improvement.
Weaving quality practices into daily activities was also
recommended in a previous report as a means of reducing the
potential of staff burnout from additional programming
requirements.5
Mainstreaming this into daily practices at all levels (e.g.,
practitioners, board members, policymakers, researchers,
educators) also promotes a culture for quality in the system.
The concepts should also be applied in continuity with
existing and future quality advancing programs already
familiar to the public health community (e.g., Healthy People
2010/2020, Guide to Community Preventive Services, Guide to
Clinical Preventive Services, agency accreditation).
Characteristics of Quality in Public
Health
Many professions use characteristics to describe quality
specific to their industries (e.g., education, software
engineering, communications). Healthcare followed this model
by adopting the six aims established by the IOM that
characterize quality in the delivery of patient care.2
The use of characteristics provides a focal point to frame and
promote consistency with implementing quality improvement
initiatives.
Through a consensus building process with public health
system partners led by the ASH, aims that characterize public
health quality improvement have been identified as an initial
step to fulfilling a commitment to quality. While ensuring
quality for increasing positive population health outcomes,
characteristics to guide public health practices across the
entire system should be:
- Population-centered –
protecting and promoting healthy conditions and the health
for the entire population
- Equitable – working to achieve
health equity
- Proactive – formulating
policies and sustainable practices in a timely manner, while
mobilizing rapidly to address new and emerging threats and
vulnerabilities
- Health promoting – ensuring
policies and strategies that advance safe practices by
providers and the population and increase the probability of
positive health behaviors and outcomes
- Risk-reducing – diminishing
adverse environmental and social events by implementing
policies and strategies to reduce the probability of
preventable injuries and illness or other negative
outcomes
- Vigilant – intensifying
practices and enacting policies to support enhancements to
surveillance activities (e.g., technology, standardization,
systems thinking/modeling)
- Transparent – ensuring
openness in the delivery of services and practices with
particular emphasis on valid, reliable, accessible, timely,
and meaningful data that is readily available to
stakeholders, including the public
- Effective – justifying
investments by utilizing evidence, science, and best
practices to achieve optimal results in areas of greatest
need
- Efficient – understanding
costs and benefits of public health interventions and to
facilitate the optimal utilization of resources to achieve
desired outcomes
Public health system partners recognize that the
intersection between public health and the health care
delivery system needs to be strengthened. In fact, some public
health agencies are still direct providers of health care
services. In recognition of this fact, three of the aims for
quality improvement in public health are identical to those
identified by the IOM as aims for improvement in quality of
health care (equitable, effective and efficient).
Additionally, the description of another IOM aim, safe, is
embedded in the public health aim of health promoting. The
aims are intended to clearly articulate a consistent set of
characteristics that should be present in public health in
order to achieve improved performance at all levels. In
addition to practice organizations, the characteristics must
be present in the activities of the various governmental and
private sector contributors to the Nation’s public health
system.
Since public health services are multidimensional when
testing for quality, all of the aims may apply to a single
service or function when testing for quality. For other public
health functions, only a subset of the aims may be applicable.
Routinely examining public health activities for these
characteristics advances uniformity in public health practice
because it represents a consistent approach to framing quality
improvement efforts.
Impacts
The impact of this national public health quality movement
will be multifaceted. It will promote quality along all
dimensions of the system with a special focus on fostering
health equity and eliminating health disparities. Applying a
common set of quality characteristics will facilitate
cross-jurisdictional comparisons and tracking of progress.
This should be a stimulus and incentive for knowledge sharing
on best practices.
Quality is described in some sectors as value to users of
goods and services. An early driver of the quality improvement
movement in private industry was to increase value through
reducing costs while providing better goods and services. The
availability of timely and reliable data (e.g., health status,
financial, outcomes, etc) will diminish barriers to
determining the value of public health services.
Other impacts accruing from the application of this
framework should be a system-wide culture where quality
improvement is a sustained concept in public health along with
a solid commitment to and recognition of the value of
workforce education to ensure implementation and
organizational change. Of particular significance already is
the synergy that has been created by addressing quality with
the engagement and consensus of partners throughout the public
health system.
The work of the PHQF to define and frame quality
improvement characteristics across public health will continue
through the work of various partners throughout the system.
The PHQF framework presented provides a broad vision for
emphasizing and improving quality in public health. As the
efforts move forward it is recognized that we will need
flexible and tailored strategies to meet the need of local
communities. We look forward to engaging all communities
across the county in an inclusive cooperative vision for
improving the health of all communities in the United
States.
References
-
President’s Advisory Commission on
Consumer Protection and Quality in the Health Care Industry.
Quality First: Better health care for all Americans. (March
12, 1998). Accessed on May 24, 2008. Available at: http://www.hcqualitycommission.gov/.
-
Institute of Medicine, Committee on
Quality of Health Care in America. Crossing the Quality
Chasm: A new health system for the 21st century.
Washington DC: National Academy Press, 2001.
-
Leep CJ. Quality Improvement at
Local Health Departments: Strategies for the adoption of
quality improvement for public health impact. National
Association of County and City Health Officials. January 18,
2008.
-
Institute of Medicine. The Future of
the Public’s Health in the 21st Century.
Washington DC: National Academy Press, 2002.
-
Leonard BA. The Leonard Group.
Adapting Quality Improvement to Public Health. Highlights
and Conclusions. Conference sponsored by the Robert Wood
Johnson Foundation. Cincinnati, Ohio. February 7,
2007.