Abstract
This article reports on a quality movement in Sweden that has gone largely unnoticed, namely the national quality control registers. These registers represent a potentially important primary data source for comparative studies and can play an important role in a national strategy for control and improvement of health care quality. First, we review the recent health care quality initiatives in Sweden and the background of national quality control registers. Secondly, we discuss our findings from a study on the purpose, content, value and problems associated with the registers. Our findings are based on (a) interviews with physician managers of the registers, (b) questionnaires to selected hospital departments participating in the registers and (c) questionnaires to elected officials and administrators representing the local health care providers. Finally, we discuss several crucial issues related to the registers. Although some have existed for several years, the registers are still defining their roles. Traditionally, this activity has been managed by the medical profession. However, interest in register information is increasing among health care policy makers and administrators at all levels in the system. Two key issues concern register ownership and finance, but the most sensitive issue concerns the right of policy makers and the public to access register information. The registers and the information they contain illustrate the ongoing conflict between openness and consumer sovereignty in health care on the one hand and professional autonomy on the other.
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