Clinical audit plays an important part in the drive to improve quality of patient care and thus forms a cornerstone of clinical governance. We evaluated the standard of clinical audits conducted by all departments in a teaching hospital between 1996 and 1997. Of a total of 213 audits carried out, 102 (48%) were 'partial' and only 29 (14%) were 'full'. Recommendations for improvement emerged from 134 (63%) of the audits performed. In only 51 audits (24%) was the cycle completed by re-auditing, during the subsequent 3 years. Most departments undertake clinical audits but failure to close the loop undermines their effectiveness and wastes resources.
CITATION STYLE
Gnanalingham, J., Gnanalingham, M. G., & Gnanalingham, K. K. (2001). An audit of audits: Are we completing the cycle? Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, 94(6), 288–289. https://doi.org/10.1177/014107680109400609
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