The October 2009 program is now full. If you would like to be placed on an interest list for future offerings, please contact Sara Reardon at (617) 301-4801 or by email at sreardon@ihi.org.
Listen to a recording of the January 21, 2009, informational call about this seminar with faculty member, James L. Reinertsen, MD.
Download the program brochure.
The responsibilities of senior executives in health care are changing.
For example, hospital CEOs once could argue that their role was to get the finances, facilities, and capital investments right, and that it was the job of the doctors and nurses to deliver quality care.
Reports such as To Err Is Human, along with public report cards such as those from HealthGrades, have created powerful public pressure for quality improvement in health care.
This pressure, when combined with early versions of "pay-for-performance" initiatives such as Bridges to Excellence and the Hospital Quality Incentive Demonstration Project, led by Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services/Premier, Inc., has made clinical quality performance a strategic imperative — and no longer just a regulatory requirement, or the "right thing to do." In other words, clinical quality performance is no longer delegable to "the quality people."
Responsibility for measured performance in clinical quality and safety rests squarely on the shoulders of each member of the senior executive team, regardless of whether or not they have a clinical background.
So the question is not whether CEOs and other senior executives must take responsibility for measured system-level quality performance.
The question is how to do this new job while still doing all the components of the old job.
That is the core question that the Executive Quality Academy answers.