The Paediatric Admission Quality of Care (PAQC) score: designing a tool to measure the quality of early inpatient paediatric care in a low-income setting

Citation: 
Charles Opondo, Elizabeth Allen, Jim Todd and Mike English
Publication year: 
2016

Background

Evaluating clinician compliance with recommended steps in clinical guidelines provides one measure of quality of process of care but can result in a multiplicity of indicators across illnesses, making it problematic to produce any summative picture of process quality, information that may be most useful to policy-makers and managers.

Objective

We set out to develop a clinically logical summative measure of the quality of care provided to children admitted to hospital in Kenya spanning the three diagnoses present in 60% or more of admissions that would provide a patient level measure of quality of care in the face of co-morbidity.

Methods

We developed a conceptual model of care based on three domains: assessment, diagnosis and treatment of illnesses. Individual items within domains correspond to recommended processes of care within national clinical practice guidelines. Summative scores were created to reduce redundancy and enable aggregation across illnesses while maintaining a clear link to clinical domains and our conceptual model. The potential application of the score was explored using data from more than 12,000 children from 8 hospitals included in a prior intervention study in Kenya.

Results

Summative scores obtained from items representing discrete clinical decision points reduced redundancy, aided balance of score contribution across domains, and enabled direct comparison of disease-specific scores and the calculation of scores for children with comorbidity.

Conclusion

This work describes the development of a summative Paediatric Admission Quality of Care (PAQC) score measured at the patient level that spans 3 common diseases. The score may be an efficient tool for assessing quality with an ability to adjust for case-mix or other patient level factors if needed. The score principles may have applicability to multiple illnesses and settings. Future analysis will be needed to validate the score.