June: QI Activity
Health Topic: Men's Health
June marks Men’s Health Month — an important opportunity to focus on the health and wellbeing of men and boys in our communities. Men are at greater risk of dying prematurely from preventable causes, yet health check uptake among men remains low. 50 men die every day in Australia from preventable causes and Australian men die, on average, 5.4 years younger than women. Timely health checks can significantly reduce the risk of early death.
Step 1: Identify your QI Measures
Start by considering which of the relevant QI measures you will work towards in support of this topic. Measures you could choose from include:
Proportion of patients with a weight classification
Proportion of patients with an alcohol consumption status
Proportion of patients with diabetes with a blood pressure result.
Accreditation Requirements
The RACGP Standards for general practices 5th edition outlines specific criteria related to the capture of patient information, including CVD. These criteria are relevant to the accreditation of general practices, as they form part of the broader focus on preventive health and chronic disease management.
- Comprehensive Patient Records (Criterion C6.1):
- General practices are required to maintain comprehensive and accurate patient health records. This includes regularly updating key health indicators such as smoking status, BMI, and alcohol consumption (ideally, every 12 months).
- These indicators are critical for preventive health care, allowing practitioners to identify risk factors and provide appropriate interventions. - Health Assessments and Chronic Disease Management:
- The Standards emphasise the importance of preventive health activities, including regular health assessments where smoking status, BMI, and alcohol consumption are recorded and reviewed.
- These assessments are essential for managing chronic diseases, providing a basis for patient education and care planning - Patient Health Summaries:
- Practices are expected to maintain up-to-date patient health summaries that include smoking status, BMI, and alcohol consumption as part of the essential patient information.
- The presence of these details in patient summaries is crucial for the practice's accreditation, demonstrating a commitment to comprehensive care. - Quality Improvement and Preventive Health:
- The Standards also stress continuous quality improvement (CQI) in preventive health measures. Regularly capturing and reviewing smoking status, BMI, and alcohol consumption is part of this ongoing improvement process.
- Accreditation bodies may review how practices use this data to engage in CQI activities, such as targeted health campaigns or interventions.
Step 2: Undertake your QI activity
We've prepared a simple worksheet that can help you work through activity you will need undertake to meet the Improvement Measure you have selected.
1. Identify your plan, using the Model for Improvement:
- What are you trying to accomplish? e.g. increase the proportion of active eligible male patients aged 45–49 who have completed a 45–49 Health Assessment, by the end of the PIP quarter.
- How will we know that change is an improvement? Use PenCS CAT4 to identify eligible male patients aged 45–49 without a recorded Health Assessment. Implement recalls and offer opportunistic assessments during appointments.
- What changes can you make that will result in improvement? Come up with your own ideas or consider ours below.
2. Some possible ideas you could choose to do:
- Team Engagement: Brief/refresh clinical staff on eligibility criteria and documentation requirements.
- CAT4 Searches: Run a CAT4 report to identify eligible male patients aged 45–49 with 45–49 Health Assessment never claimed.
3. Document your actions
- Use our PDSA Worksheet to document your activity. It also walks you through how to complete a CAT4 search and use PHN Exchange to track trends in GPMP claims.
4. Resources to help you
- Consider creating a specific CAT Prompt Topbar notification to flag this patient cohort during consultations.
Further resources
Resources for GPs and practice nurses
Need PHN support?
Our Primary Care Liaison team is available to provide one-on-one support.