Moorfields Quality Plan: a commitment to quality and safety for all patients
The Quality Team have developed a new plan for better quality and safety for Moorfields’ patients, based on what patients tell us is important. The plan covers all our sites and all the care and treatment that patients may receive, and is structured around a patient visit (also known as the patient journey) to hospital. There are therefore three parts to the plan: preparing for a visit to hospital; having care or treatment at Moorfields; and what happens after a visit. The structure of the plan uses three simple and internationally accepted categories of quality of care: the patient experience, patient safety and clinical effectiveness.
We hope that this plan covers all the important areas of quality and safety at Moorfields andwill really help patients and staff alike to understand and focus on what matters most. It will be used to decide where we will concentrate our efforts to try to make things better and what sort of things we will measure and include in our performance reports.
We have consulted a wide range of stakeholders (including patients, governors, our staff and our commissioners) to get their views to ensure we have included the correct things, what isconsidered important, and what will really help us care for our patients better.
Patient experience and patient safety
All new patients will receive a ‘Welcome to Moorfields’ information booklet and from this and the new website will be able to access all the important information they require such as:
All patients will receive a letter regarding their attendance which will clearly provide the following information:
Patient experience
During consultations, explanations from staff should be clear and include, where appropriate, the patient’s diagnosis, prognosis (outlook), what is their treatment plan and when they should be seen again or if they are discharged.
Staff should spend enough time with their patients.
There should be enough privacy for discussions and there should be a private room for particularly sensitive or upsetting communications.
Patient experience