All of this made me think some more about the differences in quality improvement and healthcare epidemiology. The table below is modified from a plenary talk I gave at SHEA a few years ago. These differences really become sources of friction when QI and hospital epi folks are pulled into common projects like SCIP and HOP.
Characteristic | Healthcare Epidemiology | Quality Improvement |
Philosophic orientation | Modern | Post-modern |
Primary influences | Science & medicine | Business |
Analytic orientation | Population based | Often case based |
Focus | Exploration & analysis | Modification |
Primary audience | Internal stakeholders | External stakeholders |
Primary task | Define problems, elucidate risk factors | Design & implement interventions |
Content expertise | Almost always | Usually not |
Strength | Rigorous methodology & validity | Process design |
Approach | Structured, relatively uniform | Innovative |
Delivery style | Instructive | Collaborative |
Solutions | Targeted | Empiric |
Tactics | Data oriented, relatively dull | Flashy campaigns, catchy slogans |
Perspective | Long term | Short term, evolving |
Tempo | Relatively slow | Relatively fast |
I don't have any solutions for how to make the groups work together more effectively. But perhaps starting with a recognition that our approaches to problems are different is a start.
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