Let’s not steal equity from our patients in the name of quality
Chelsea D. Hicks, Heather Barnett, Jennifer Shi, Julia Velonjara, Zaher Kmail, Monica S. Vavilala, Edwin G. Lindo

TL;DR
The paper argues that healthcare quality metrics should include equity to ensure fair treatment for all patients.
Contribution
The paper highlights the need to integrate health equity into quality improvement frameworks.
Findings
Equity is often excluded from quality improvement metrics in healthcare.
Health equity should be a central component of high-quality care.
Aligning equity and quality metrics can lead to more just healthcare delivery.
Abstract
Healthcare can be, we believe, the vanguard to lead us to a more just society but has much work to do. Quality improvement (QI) processes drive care delivery based on metrics and reporting requirements, but equity is not a commonly used QI measure, and the extent of inequitable care affecting patients is unclear at best. While quality metrics can provide benchmarks for healthcare based on published evidence, quality metric standards that do not consider healthcare equity will not lead to the provision of equitable, patient-centered care. In fact, equity is separated from quality in most existing quality metric frameworks when, instead, achieving equity should be a central component of high-quality care. This is true even for leading health conditions, such as injury and violence. Yet, achieving equitable care is every patient’s right and achieving healthcare equity should be a societal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMedical Malpractice and Liability Issues · Healthcare Quality and Management · Healthcare cost, quality, practices
