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Quality Improvement Review Process Project Submission Form Introduction UHN’s Quality Improvement (QI) review process is intended to confirm that projects: 1. are appropriately classified as QI projects and do not need to be submitted through CAPCR to the Research Ethics Board (REB) for review*; 2. include procedures for obtaining consent from participants (as appropriate); 3. meet ethical and legal responsibilities, particularly with respect to the use of personal health information (PHI); and 4. minimize or eliminate risks to the project team, participants, and UHN. Please see the last page of this document for links to relevant UHN policies, standards and forms. Key Application Steps for the QI Review Process The figure below illustrates the key application steps for the QI Review Committee (QIRC) process at UHN. To request a review, a completed QI project submission form and project documents must be submitted to QI@uhn.ca. During project reviews, applicants may receive email correspondence from QI@uhn.ca containing clarifying questions and risk mitigation recommendations. The QI office may also recommend consultations with other UHN departments such as the UHN Privacy Office, UHN Legal Affairs, and UHN Digital Security for additional ethical and legal requirements. Decision notifications are generally administered within four weeks of submission (COVID-19 related projects are prioritized). Additional time may be needed for more complex projects. Communication with QIRC (QI@uhn.ca) is required as soon as possible should there be any changes in project activity or scope that may (a) alter the classification of a project as QI, or (b) introduce new elements that require additional review. Questions & Contact Information For questions about the QI Review process, the QI Form, project changes, or consultation, please contact QI@uhn.ca. *Note: Determination by QIRC that a project fall outside the scope of research requiring REB review is based on the Tri‐Council Policy Statement: Ethical Conduct for Research Involving Humans (TCPS) V.2 (2018) (Articles 2.5, 2.6, and 2.9). Form version updated February 25, 2021 Table A: Differentiating Research and Quality Improvement The following table outlines key considerations when determining if your project should be classified as Quality Improvement or Research. Research Quality Improvement To develop or contribute to generalizable knowledge or To implement knowledge, assess a process or program Purpose seek to explore or understand a phenomenon. as judged by established or accepted standards. Knowledge-seeking independent of routine care and To provide information for decisions to improve some Rationale intended to answer a question or test a hypothesis. aspect of care or service delivery in a particular location. Follows a fixed protocol that generally will remain Project outline is an adaptive, iterative design; flexible and unchanged throughout the study. Uses precise and responsive to change throughout project lifecycle. Design defensible techniques for sampling, data collection and Includes an aim statement or evaluation questions and analysis. measures. Might or might not benefit current participants. Intended Directly benefits a process, system or program. Might or Benefits to benefit future participants. might not benefit patients. Interventions, services and programs are presumed effective, not experimental. Participation must be voluntary because those Participants continue to engage in routine care, program participating will be involved in activities which are in provision, or role performance. There may be an Participant addition to routine care, program provision, or role innovation to service or delivery, but it typically applies to Obligation performance. everyone. There may be additional data gathering. Participant consent may be required. Answer a research question and contributes to Improve a program, process or system. Endpoint generalizable or transferable knowledge. Primarily scholars, practitioners, or organizations well Primarily, the organization, institution, or system that is Primary Audience beyond the ones comprising the immediate affiliation of being assessed. Others may have interest in the results for Results the researcher and/ or participant. or process, but are not the primary target audience. Form version updated February 25, 2021 Table B: Common Quality Assurance (QA) Activities While there may be an overlap between QI and QA projects, the following table provides some examples of activities that may have a higher likelihood of being QA in nature. Such activities may require only local oversight (e.g., division/department Chief, program medical director, unit manager), as opposed to institutional oversight provided by the QI Review Committee. However, if you plan to disseminate your project outside of UHN (e.g., peer-reviewed publication) or require a formal review of your project, please contact QI@uhn.ca. Activity Example Ongoing data collection for routine monitoring or tracking of quality Length of stay information, hospital-acquired infection rates, indicators at the local, program or hospital level employee sick time Quality assurance or compliance monitoring activities associated Policy audits, clinical practice guidelines, and SCAMPS with established hospital-wide quality management processes (standardized clinical assessment and management plans) Staff or student performance review processes including those that Unleashing Peak Performance solicit input from colleagues and peers Information gathering related to an internal investigation Serious patient safety incident reviews, apparent cause analysis, privacy audits, outbreaks and patient complaints Routine substitutions, replacements or upgrades of hospital Update to the Alaris pump data set products, supplies and equipment Straightforward process changes that do not involve surveys or the Reorganizing supplies or equipment, changing way finding signage, collection/extraction of personal, personal health, or clinical observations in public areas information External reviews and accreditation processes Accreditation Canada, Ontario Lab Accreditation Evaluation data (also known as Kirkpatrick evaluation) collected as a Routine program evaluation with staff routine expectation of training and education design or delivery, unless the training or education is the intervention of the project Adapted with acknowledgement from the Hospital for Sick Children Form version updated February 25, 2021 Section A – QI Project Reflective Checklist (highlight appropriate response) Question QIRC REB Is the aim of the project to improve care for the next patient, local Yes No operations or efficiency? Is there a precedent for identifying a quality gap or considering a Purpose practice change? o literature Yes No o consensus statements, or o consensus among clinician team Are the proposed methods incorporating rapid evaluation, feedback Yes No and incremental changes (e.g., Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles)? Do the methods include any of the following? Design o control group or randomization into different intervention groups o fixed protocol or testing a specific hypothesis No Yes o testing treatments that are experimental or outside of current standard of care o answering a specific quantitative or qualitative question Is the risk related to the project minimal and no more than usual care? In other words, participants would not be exposed to risks Yes No beyond what a reasonable person might expect in day-to-day Risk interactions or routine care? Does the project involve the evaluation of a device, drug or natural health product that is not currently used as standard of care (i.e. for No Yes a use different from the original approval by Health Canada)? Will this project only involve participants (patients, caregivers, employees, trainees or physicians) who are already seen, cared Yes No Participants for, or work in the project setting? Will this project require participants to be involved outside of a No Yes hospital visit or work hours? Is the project funded externally (outside of UHN) by any of the following? Funding o a TRI-council or national funding agency (e.g. CIHR) No Yes o a manufacturer with an interest in the outcome of the project relevant to its products o a non-profit foundation or for-profit corporation If a number of the responses are in the white boxes, a CAPCR submission for REB review may be required. If all responses are in the grey boxes, a QIRC submission for QI review is likely appropriate. If you have questions about project classification, please contact QI@uhn.ca. Form version updated February 25, 2021
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