NACEL Celebrated in National Awards!
The National Audit for Care at the End of Life (NACEL) is in the spotlight this week, as part of a national campaign to underline the importance of clinical audit in improving patient care. The audit has been announced as a joint winner in the Communicating for Impact category of the Clinical Audit Heroes awards, an integral part of Clinical Audit Awareness Week.
We are delighted to be awarded this Clinical Audit Heroes commendation, which recognises the range of innovative communication methods used to demonstrate the audit’s impact. By taking an evidence-informed approach to improvement, clinical audits help to target change where it will have the greatest impact. We recognise the hard work of staff in the Trusts and Health Boards who contribute to NACEL to make it such a valuable source of data to inform improvement work. To read more about the impact that NACEL has at a local level, take a look at our Impact Compendium
Clinical Audit Awareness Week is hosted by the Healthcare Quality Improvement Partnership (HQIP) in collaboration with the quality improvement network N-QI-CAN, and has run this year from 2nd-6th June. It is designed to celebrate the role of clinical audit and quality improvement in improving healthcare services.
More specifically, clinical audits review and measure healthcare, often in relation to local and national standards and targets. They are an effective way to determine if services are performing as they should and, if not, identify where changes are needed. They also help healthcare providers and patients alike to understand how their service is performing, and where improvements would have the greatest impact. As such, the work of clinical audit teams is essential, both as drivers of improvement in their own organisations and in supporting scrutiny of our health system at a national level.
“Without clinical audit, we would lack the necessary insights to understand what is working well and, crucially, what is not. By measuring our healthcare services and tracking the differences that improvement activities make, clinical audits support us to maximise resources, and so contribute to saving and improving patients’ lives.”
For more information on the national clinical audits that are commissioned by HQIP on behalf of the NHS, go to www.hqip.org.uk/national-programmes.To see the findings from this work, view the reports published on a wide range of clinical disciplines, ranging from asthma and diabetes to cancer and cardiovascular disease.
Find out more about Clinical Audit Awareness Week and the Clinical Audit Heroes awards on the HQIP website. You can also join in the celebrations on social media using #CAAW25.