PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Steenbruggen, Rudi A AU - van Oorsouw, Roel AU - Maas, Marjo AU - Hoogeboom, Thomas J AU - Brand, Paul AU - Wees, Philip van der TI - Development of quality indicators for departments of hospital-based physiotherapy: a modified Delphi study AID - 10.1136/bmjoq-2019-000812 DP - 2020 Jun 01 TA - BMJ Open Quality PG - e000812 VI - 9 IP - 2 4099 - http://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/9/2/e000812.short 4100 - http://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/9/2/e000812.full SO - BMJ Open Qual2020 Jun 01; 9 AB - Background International hospital accreditation instruments, such as Joint Commission International (JCI) and Qmentum, focus mainly on hospital policy and procedures and do not specifically cover a profession such as hospital-based physiotherapy. This justifies the need for a quality system to which hospital-based physiotherapy can better identify, based on a common framework of quality indicators for effective quality management.Objective This study aimed to identify the most important quality indicators of a hospital-based physiotherapy department in the eyes of hospital-based physiotherapists and their managers.Methods Based on input from three focus groups and a structured literature review, a first set of quality indicators for hospital physiotherapy was assembled. After checking this set for duplicates and for overlap with JCI and Qmentum, it formed the starting point of a modified Delphi procedure. In two rounds, 17 hospital-based physiotherapy experts rated the quality indicators on relevance through online surveys. In a final consensus meeting, quality indicators were established, classified in quality themes and operationalised by describing for each theme the rationale, specifications, domain and type of indicator.Results Three focus groups provided 120 potential indicators, which were complemented with 18 potential indicators based on literature. After duplicate and overlap check and the Delphi procedure, these 138 potential indicators were reduced to a set of 56 quality indicators for hospital-based physiotherapy. Finally, these 56 indicators were condensed into 7 composite indicators, each representing a quality theme based on definitions of the European Foundation for Quality Management.Conclusion A set of 56 quality indicators, condensed into 7 composite indicators each representing a quality theme, was developed to assess the quality of a hospital-based physiotherapy department.