PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Elwyn, Glyn AU - Bekkers, Marie-Jet AU - Tapp, Laura AU - Edwards, Adrian AU - Newcombe, Robert AU - Eriksson, Tina AU - Braspenning, Jozé AU - Kuch, Christine AU - Adzic, Zlata Ozvacic AU - Ayankogbe, Olayinka AU - Cvetko, Tatjana AU - , AU - Karotsis, Antonis AU - Kersnik, Janko AU - Lefebvre, Luc AU - Mecini, Ilir AU - Petricek, Goranka AU - Pisco, Luis AU - Thesen, Janecke AU - Turón, José María AU - van Rossen, Edward AU - Grol, Richard TI - Facilitating organisational development using a group-based formative assessment and benchmarking method: design and implementation of the International Family Practice Maturity Matrix AID - 10.1136/qshc.2009.037580 DP - 2010 Dec 01 TA - Quality and Safety in Health Care PG - e48--e48 VI - 19 IP - 6 4099 - http://qualitysafety.bmj.com/content/19/6/e48.short 4100 - http://qualitysafety.bmj.com/content/19/6/e48.full SO - Qual Saf Health Care2010 Dec 01; 19 AB - Introduction Well-organised practices deliver higher-quality care. Yet there has been very little effort so far to help primary care organisations achieve higher levels of team performance and to help them identify and prioritise areas where quality improvement efforts should be concentrated. No attempt at all has been made to achieve a method which would be capable of providing comparisons—and the stimulus for further improvement—at an international level.Methods The development of the International Family Practice Maturity Matrix took place in three phases: (1) selection and refinement of organisational dimensions; (2) development of incremental scales based on a recognised theoretical framework; and (3) testing the feasibility of the approach on an international basis, including generation of an automated web-based benchmarking system.Results This work has demonstrated the feasibility of developing an organisational assessment tool for primary care organisations that is sufficiently generic to cross international borders and is applicable across a diverse range of health settings, from state-organised systems to insurer-based health economies. It proved possible to introduce this assessment method in 11 countries in Europe and one in Africa, and to generate comparison benchmarks based on the data collected. The evaluation of the assessment process was uniformly positive with the view that the approach efficiently enables the identification of priorities for organisational development and quality improvement at the same time as motivating change by virtue of the group dynamics.Conclusions We are not aware of any other organisational assessment method for primary care which has been ‘born international,’ and that has involved attention to theory, dimension selection and item refinement. The principal aims were to achieve an organisational assessment which gains added value by using interaction, engagement comparative benchmarks: aims which have been achieved. The next step is to achieve wider implementation and to ensure that those who undertake the assessment method ensure linkages are made to planned investment in organisational development and quality improvement. Knowing the problems is only half the story.