This is a hard-working committee for the volunteer leadership, meeting monthly and dealing with difficult and challenging issues. We have great appreciation for those people, who devote hours well beyond the committee meetings in staying informed and thinking about the most important topics on the Board's agenda.
BIDMC Committee Charter
Patient Care Assessment and Quality Committee (PCAC)
Reports To: BIDMC Board of Directors
Mission:
The mission of the Patient Care Assessment and Quality Committee (PCAC) is to support the aspirations for clinical quality and safety for BIDMC as set forth by the Board of Directors, and make appropriate recommendations for improvement. The PCAC shall also serve the role of Medical Peer Review Committee as defined under the statutes of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
Charge and Scope:
Monitor the occurrence of harm to BIDMC patients, with a focus on response and corrective action when harm occurs.
Select and monitor priority metrics that evaluate clinical quality and safety processes and outcomes achieved within BIDMC.
Recommend to the Board of Directors, at least annually, priority initiatives for improving quality and safety of care at BIDMC, and monitor the extent to which approved priority initiatives are satisfactorily executed.
Ensure that BIDMC remains alert to current best practices for quality and safety, at BIDMC and other entities (in health care as well as other settings), and recommends appropriate adoption. This shall include ensuring that best practices within BIDMC itself are spread and implemented throughout the organization.
Approve annually the Qualified Patient Care Assessment Program.
Ensure that all regulatory reporting mandates for clinical performance, including the filing of major incident reports to the Commonwealth, are met.
Ensure that members of the Committee have the appropriate knowledge and training necessary to carry out the mission of the committee.
Committee Chair:
Member of BIDMC Governance, Appointed by Chair of Board of Directors
Members:
Chair (Member of Medical Center Governance)
Vice Chair (Member of Medical Center Governance)
Chair, Board of Directors, ex officio
CEO, ex officio
President, faculty practice, ex officio
Chair, Medical Executive Committee, ex officio
Chair, Deptartment of Surgery, ex officio
Chair, Department of Medicine, ex officio
Chair, Academic Department (Rotating 1 year appointment, appointed by the Chair of the Medical Executive Committee)
Vice President, Education, ex officio
11-24 Members (Members of Medical Center Governance)
Staff:
Chief Operating Officer
Senior Vice President, Clinical Operations
Senior Vice President, Health Care Quality
Patient Care Assessment Coordinator
Meeting Schedule:
Monthly (except no August meeting)
6 comments:
I am just astounded at the apparently superhuman range of activities handled by some people. Like, although I feel like my life is already full, so it's frustrating I also feel called to participate in supporting these activities; yet the lives of the people on this committee must surely have more and broader accountabilities than mine. Like your guy Halamka - "Chief Information Officer of the CareGroup Health System, Chief Information Officer and Dean for Technology at Harvard Medical School, Chairman of the New England Health Electronic Data Interchange Network (NEHEN), CEO of MA-SHARE (the Regional Health Information Organization), Chair of the US Healthcare Information Technology Standards Panel (HITSP)," AND, in his spare time, a practicing Emergency Physician.
I've always heard "If you want something to get done, ask a busy person," apparently because they have some knack. Whatever it is, I'd like to learn it.
Paul, this is very interesting; it resembles the "Performance Improvement Council" we had at our hospitals except for the addition of a large # of laymen and a somewhat broader charter. I have a couple questions:
a. There appears to be no representative from nursing on the committee,or am I missing that hidden within the titles of the listed executives?
b. What's the difference between BIDMC Governance and Medical Center Governance? Are these both separate committees, or what?
c. I am quite curious about the medical peer review function. Perhaps this is mandated by your state. Does this mean recredentialing, or does the committee deal with actual disciplinary actions of physicians on your staff? Or perhaps it would be easier if you would just define "peer review' as used at BIDMC.
Thanks for an illuminating post. I can see adding laymen (I assume members of the community/patients) would prevent the "group think" that often prevails inside hospital walls.
BIDMC Governance = Medical Center Governance. These are lay board members.
Medical Executive Committee = formal body of MDs on the faculty who promulgate the rules and rgeulations of service in the hospital, including medical peer review, credentialing, disciplinary actions, and the like. THE MEC reports on its activities to the BIDMC Board of Directors and also to the PCAC.
Nursing does not have a position on PCAC, but the SVP for Clinical Operations, who oversers nursing, staffs the committee.
Hope this clarifies. Thanks for the questions.
It does clarify; thanks. I hope the PCAC exercises its oversight over the MEC on those disciplinary actions. As a onetime MEC member, I felt that many times the majority gave erring docs a pass on things they should have called them on. Maybe it's never that specific by the time it gets to PCAC. And there are always confidentiality issues.
But in summary, I like the lay Board members serving on your quality assurance body. Good idea!
I would have thought that an important role of the committee would be to make sure that the CEO is exercising his responsibility for quality and safety.
I don't see any reference to that.
Richard Wittrup
Hi Richard,
Formal evaluation of the CEO is carried out by the entire Board. The various Board committees, including PCAC, Finance, and so on report to the Board on the CEO's performance in their araes of jurisdiction.
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