Medical quality Health and sports / Medical quality

Health practitioners
Managers of health institutions
Quality experts and those responsible for quality assurance
Legislative and oversight bodies
Clinical quality areas include:
Patient Safety: It aims to reduce the incidence of medical errors and unwanted complications and improve patient safety while receiving healthcare.
Therapeutic efficacy: It relates to providing the most effective treatment to patients, in accordance with modern medical practices and national and international standards.
Accreditation and Certifications: Medical institutions and hospitals can be accredited by international quality assessment and certification bodies, ensuring that they adhere to high quality standards.
Patient satisfaction: It includes measuring patients' satisfaction with health services, communicating with them, meeting their needs, and providing comprehensive and gentle care.
Institutional sustainability: includes improving the planning and management of health resources and operations to achieve institutional efficiency and sustainability.
Achieving clinical quality requires the cooperation of all those involved in healthcare, including physicians, nurses, medical institutions, and patients. Health care quality is based on scientifically proven clinical data, standards and practices.
Focusing on medical quality is vital to improving quality of life, achieving better patient outcomes, and preventing unwanted medical problems. Medical quality contributes to enhancing the level of trust between patients and health institutions and improving the medical experience in general
Introduction to healthcare quality
Quality management systems
Medical laws and regulations
Medical risk management
Clinical quality improvement
Patient satisfaction assessment