Inspectorates involved in the assessment and regulation of health care, education and other public services should be themselves assessed to instill public confidence, leading health researchers suggest.
In a new opinion article published in the BMJProfessor Richard Lilford from the University of Birmingham and Professor Timothy Hofer from University of Michigan Medical School highlight how health care regulation in many countries around the world has not been properly evaluated.
Following a commitment from the UK Government to reform the Care Quality Commission, Lilford and Hofer suggest that measuring the reliability of inspections of organizations like hospitals and schools would be a meaningful step towards appropriate scrutiny of regulators. Furthermore, their opinion piece highlights how only two randomized controlled trials of health facility regulation “have been published that coupled the inspection with provision of managerial support.”
Professor Richard Lilford CBE from the University of Birmingham said, “The public want to know that the provision of health care is good quality, and regulating this through inspections is undoubtedly a significant and important task that should instill public confidence. We have however identified that there is a major gap in the evaluation of this work.
“As policy makers ask questions about how to reform the way health care providers are inspected, it is only right that properly evidence-based assessments are made about the reliability of inspections. We have identified how this scrutiny of the scrutinizers could be effectively carried out , and we suggest that any judgments made about the future reform will best serve the public when they are based on high quality evaluations.”
Lilford and Hofer’s article also identifies that there are a range of downstream benefits from inspection including providing internal incentives for organizations to ensure they are organized, and that inspections instill some level of confidence that health care providers are being held to account.
More information:
Richard J Lilford et al, Regulation of health facilities: often criticized but rarely evaluated, BMJ (2024). DOI: 10.1136/bmj.q2388
Citation: ‘Inspect the inspector,’ say public health academics (2024, November 4) retrieved 5 November 2024 from
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