Phoenix Hospital Group awarded by the National Joint Registry for commitment to patient safety

19th November 2024 By Phoenix Hospital Group

Weymouth Street Hospital (London) One Hatfield Hospital (Hertfordshire) and One Ashford Hospital (Kent), is celebrating after being named as a National Joint Registry (NJR) Quality Data Provider after successfully completing a national data quality audit programme for their hospital.

The NJR monitors the performance of hip, knee, ankle, elbow and shoulder joint replacement procedures to support work to improve the clinical outcomes for the benefit of patients, but also to provide feedback on surgical performance to orthopaedic clinicians and joint replacement implant manufacturers.  The registry collects high quality orthopaedic data in order to support patient safety, standards in quality of care, and overall value in joint replacement surgery. The ‘NJR Quality Data Provider’ certificate scheme was introduced to offer hospitals a blueprint for reaching high quality standards relating to patient safety and to reward those who have met the registry’s high targets in the achievement of the quality of the data collected.

The NJR Data Quality Audit compares the number of joint replacement procedures submitted to the registry to the number carried out and recorded in the local hospital Patient Administration System. The audit ensures that the NJR is collecting and reporting upon the most complete, accurate data possible across all hospitals performing joint replacement operations, including Weymouth Street Hospital, One Hatfield Hospital and One Ashford Hospital.

Commenting, Andrew Barker, Chief Executive Officer at Phoneix Hospital Group said:

“Improving patient safety is of the utmost importance and something all staff across Phoenix Hospital Group take very seriously.  We fully support the National Joint Registry’s work in facilitating improvement in clinical outcomes for the benefit of joint replacement patients and we’re delighted to be awarded as an ‘NJR Quality Data Provider’.”

 

Medical Director of the National Joint Registry, Mr Tim Wilton, said:

“Congratulations to colleagues at Phoenix Hospital Group.

As well as being a fundamental driver to inform improved quality of care for patients, registry data provides an important source of evidence for regulators, such as the Care Quality Commission, to inform their judgements about the quality of health services.”

The Quality Data Provider Award received by the team demonstrates the high standards being met towards ensuring compliance with the NJR and is a reflection of strong departmental efforts to achieve such status.

 

Full details about the NJR’s Quality Data Provider certificate scheme can be found online at:  https://www.njrcentre.org.uk.

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NOTES TO EDITORS:

About the NJR’s Quality Data Provider Award

The scheme has been devised to offer hospitals a blueprint for reaching high patient safety standards through NJR compliance and serves as a reward those who have met their targets. To gain Quality Data Provider (QPD) status for 2023, hospitals were required to meet very ambitious targets. The scheme benefits hospitals and ultimately future patients by recognising and rewarding best practice; increasing engagement and awareness of the importance in quality data collection and helps embed the ethos that better data informs and enables the NJR to develop improved patient outcomes.

About the National Joint Registry (NJR)

The NJR, which covers England, Wales, Northern Ireland, the Isle of Man, and Guernsey, collects information on hip, knee, ankle, elbow and shoulder joint replacement surgery, across both the NHS and independent sector. Data collection began in April 2003 and data submission for NHS organisations was made mandatory from April 2011. Now with over 4 million procedure records, the NJR is the largest orthopaedic registry in the world with an international reputation.

 

Recognised as a ‘global exemplar’ of an implantable medical devices registry, the NJR monitors the performance and effectiveness of joint replacement implants in different types of joint replacement surgery, in order to provide an early warning of issues relating to patient safety and improve clinical standards; thus benefiting patients, clinicians and the orthopaedic sector as a whole.

 

For more information about the NJR see: https://www.njrcentre.org.uk

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