Login

Login
Welcome:
Guest

Search for:


Browse:

Bannner: Aslib individual membership.
 
Journal search
Journal cover: British Journal of Clinical Governance

British Journal of Clinical Governance

ISSN: 1466-4100
Currently published as: Clinical Governance: An International Journal
Incorporates: Clinical Performance and Quality Healthcare

Online from: 1996

Subject Area: Health Care Management/Healthcare

Content: Latest Issue | icon: RSS Latest Issue RSS | Previous Issues

Options: To add Favourites and Table of Contents Alerts please take a Emerald profile

Previous article.Icon: Print.Table of Contents.Next article.Icon: .

Clinical audit in NHS acute and community trusts: a comparative analysis


Document Information:
Title:Clinical audit in NHS acute and community trusts: a comparative analysis
Author(s):Robin Dowie, (Robin Dowie is a Senior Research Fellow), Andrew Kennedy, (Andrew Kennedy is a Research Fellow, both in the Health Economics Research Group, Brunel University, Uxbridge, UK.)
Citation:Robin Dowie, Andrew Kennedy, (2001) "Clinical audit in NHS acute and community trusts: a comparative analysis", British Journal of Clinical Governance, Vol. 6 Iss: 2, pp.94 - 101
Keywords:Audit, Governance, Managers, Projects, Trusts
Article type:Research paper
DOI:10.1108/14664100110397205 (Permanent URL)
Publisher:MCB UP Ltd
Abstract:Clinical audit may undergo organisational change as the new primary care trusts assume responsibility for community health services. Very little has been published, however, about community-based audit. A survey of audit activities involving clinical audit staff was carried out in seven acute hospital trusts and seven community trusts in south east England in 1997. Audit staff completed survey forms for 65 acute projects and 75 community projects on defined topics. Managers in community trusts were much more likely to initiate audit projects or act as lead investigators than managers in the acute trusts, and they more frequently received copies of project reports. Clinical audit staff in community trusts participated more fully in the various phases of the audit process than staff in the acute trusts. If the best of the conventions for community audit practice are transferred to primary care trusts, the foundations of their clinical governance programmes should be strengthened.



Fulltext Options:

Login

Login

Existing customers: login
to access this document

Login


- Forgot password?

- Athens/Institutional login

Purchase

Purchase

Downloadable; Printable; Owned
HTML, PDF (688kb)Purchase

To purchase this item please login or register.

Login


- Forgot password?

Recommend to your librarian

Complete and print this form to request this document from your librarian


Marked list

Bookmark & share

Reprints & permissions

© Emerald Group Publishing Limited  |  Copyright information  |  Site policies  |  Cookie information
.