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THE
WHITE HOUSE
Office
of the Press Secretary
For
Immediate Release ;
March 13, 1998
MEMORANDUM
FOR THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE
THE SECRETARY OF LABOR
THE SECRETARY OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
THE SECRETARY OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
THE DIRECTOR OF THE OFFICE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT
SUBJECT: Establishment
of the Quality Interagency Coordination Task Force
Last November,
I endorsed the "Patient Bill of Rights" recommended by the Advisory
Commission on Consumer Protection and Quality in the Health Care
Industry (the "Quality Commission"). On February 20, 1998, after
receiving your encouraging reports from the Vice President about
the degree to which your agencies are in compliance with these rights,
I directed you to take all administrative actions under your authority
to come into compliance.
As a result
of my February 20 memorandum and your commitment to implement the
Patient Bill of Rights, the Federal Government will be taking the
lead in ensuring patient protections. By holding the Federal Government
accountable, we are strengthening our call on the Congress to pass
patient rights legislation that extends these protections to all
Americans.
Yesterday,
in their report to me through the Vice President, the Quality Commission
took the next logical step. Building on the Patient Bill of Rights,
which is explicitly designed to ensure quality, the Commission's
final report includes recommendations that I am confident will actually
improve quality care. Specifically, the Commission called for the
development of national health care quality improvement goals and
the use of measurement standards that will empower consumers and
businesses to make informed purchasing decisions based on health
plans' quality performance records.
The Quality
Commission recommends establishing "two complementary entities,
one public and one private, to provide ongoing national leadership
in health care quality improvement." The Commission recommends the
creation of a broadly represented, publicly administered "Advisory
Council for Health Care Quality" and a privately administered "Forum
for Health Care Quality Measurement and Reporting." The Commission's
approach represents a creative balance to achieve constructive involvement
from all the parties that have important expertise and experience
in this area.
It is my strong
belief that we must ensure that all relevant agencies within the
Federal Government build on their leadership role in health care
quality. As the Quality Commission report makes clear, the lack
of coordination and uniform quality standards in both the public
and private sectors has created conditions that fall "short of fully
meeting users' needs, and often are duplicative and unduly burdensome
on health care providers, plans, and others." To that end, the Federal
Government must use improved standards and goals to better inform
and empower health care consumers and purchasers under Federal jurisdiction.
Moreover, we must do a better job of collaborating within and across
the Federal Government to most efficiently and effectively ensure
we achieve the national goal of improving quality and health outcomes.
Therefore,
I am directing the Secretary of Health and Human Services to immediately
establish a "Quality Interagency Coordination" (QuIC) task force
to ensure better coordination among the executive agencies with
jurisdiction over health programs. I hereby direct you to take the
following actions consistent with your authority and the mission
of your agency to meet or exceed the recommendations of the Quality
Commission.
First, I direct
that all participating agencies shall have equal standing on the
QuIC task force.
Second, I
direct the task force to, wherever feasible, collaborate on goals,
models, and timetables that are consistent with the Quality Commission's
six "National Aims for Improvement": reducing the underlying causes
of illness, injury, and disability; reducing health care errors;
ensuring the appropriate use of health care services; expanding
research on effectiveness of treatments; addressing oversupply and
undersupply of health care resources; and increasing patient participation
in their care.
Third, I direct
the Secretary of Health and Human Services to serve as the convener
of the QuIC task force and to schedule the first task force meeting
to order by no later than March 27, 1998.
Fourth, I
direct the task force to improve cooperation by the participating
agencies on the development and utilization of quality measurement
mechanisms for public sector programs; these efforts should be flexible
enough to respond to changing needs, technology, and information,
while being sufficiently standardized to be comparably measured.
Fifth, I direct
the task force to work to increase the development and dissemination
of evidence-based health care information to help guide practitioners'
actions in ways that will improve quality and potentially constrain
costs.
Sixth, I direct
the task force to consult with health care workers and their representatives,
as well as other affected parties, in developing models for quality
improvement.
Seventh, I
direct the task force to enhance efforts to develop user-friendly
information for both consumer and business purchasers that facilitates
meaningful comparisons of quality performances of plans, facilities,
and practitioners.
Eighth, I
direct all participating agencies, where feasible and appropriate,
to seek to avoid inefficient duplication of ongoing quality improvement
efforts and resources.
Finally, I
direct the task force, to every extent possible, to endeavor to
coordinate the Federal programs' quality reporting and compliance
requirements to reduce administrative burdens on private entities
who administer, oversee, or participate in the Nation's Federal
health programs.
WILIAM J.
CLINTON
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