Quality Measures

Quality measures are “tools that help us measure or quantify health care processes, outcomes, patient perceptions, and organizational structure and/or systems . ” 1 They may also be called performance measures. The American Academy of Family Physicians’ (AAFP) policy states the primary purpose of performance measurement should be to identify opportunities to improve patient care. View our full list of criteria of a performance measure.

Quality Measures: Why Use Them?

Measures inform us about how the health care system is performing. Measures help identify weaknesses, prioritize opportunities, and can be used to identify what works and doesn’t work to drive improvement. Measures can also prevent the overuse, underuse, and misuse of health care services and can identify disparities in care delivery and outcomes. Measures are used for quality improvement, benchmarking, and accountability. Measures are becoming increasingly important relative to payment as the U.S. health care system shifts away from traditional fee-for-service toward payment focused on the value of care.

Types of Quality Measures

The table below defines and provides examples of some common measure types.

Choosing Quality Measures: How to Determine What to Measure

Choose measures that:

Core Quality Measures Collaborative

The Collaborative is a public and private, multi-stakeholder effort working to define core measure sets for various specialties. With significant input from the AAFP, the Collaborative developed an Accountable Care Organizations and Patient Centered Medical Home/Primary Care Core Measure Set for primary care.

This effort exists to:

Components of a Quality Measure

A measure has several parts, including: