Measurement sits at the heart of healthcare improvement.
Whether you’re reducing discharge delays, improving patient safety, or redesigning a clinical process, one question always remains the same:
How will we know if our changes are making a difference?
Yet despite its importance, measurement is often one of the biggest sources of friction in improvement work. Teams struggle to access data. Measures become overly complicated. Data collection feels time-consuming. Before long, improvement starts to feel like reporting rather than learning.
This is a challenge faced by improvement teams in organisations of all sizes. It is not usually a lack of commitment or capability that causes the problem. More often, it is uncertainty about what to measure, how much to measure, and how to use data in a way that genuinely supports improvement.
The good news is that measurement does not have to be complicated to be effective. By focusing on a few simple principles, teams can reduce the burden of measurement while increasing its value.
At its simplest, improvement is about learning.
Teams introduce a change because they believe it will improve outcomes, processes, or experiences. Measurement provides the feedback needed to test that belief.
Without measurement:
This is why one of the fundamental questions in improvement science is: How will we know that a change is an improvement?
The purpose of measurement is not simply to prove success at the end of a project. It is to help teams learn throughout the journey.
One reason measurement creates so much friction is that many teams approach it with assumptions that make the process more difficult than it needs to be.
This is perhaps the most common misconception.
Improvement teams often delay action while waiting for a complete dataset, a new report, or access to a particular system. In reality, waiting for perfect data can delay improvement for weeks or even months. High-quality improvement work often starts with the best available information and refines measurement over time. For example, a ward team may manually collect a small sample of data each week while working towards a more automated solution later.
The goal is not perfection. The goal is learning.
When teams first begin improvement work, there can be a temptation to measure everything. The logic feels sensible. More data should provide more insight. Unfortunately, the opposite is often true.
Too many measures create confusion, increase workload, and make it harder to identify what is really happening. The most effective projects focus on a small number of meaningful measures that everyone understands. Clarity is usually more valuable than complexity.
Many healthcare professionals have experienced measurement primarily through performance management, targets, and reporting requirements. As a result, data collection can feel like something that is done for somebody else. But improvement measurement serves a different purpose.
Its primary audience should be the team doing the work. The most useful measures help frontline teams answer questions, test ideas, and make decisions. When teams see data as a tool for improvement rather than compliance, engagement tends to increase significantly.
One of the most important shifts improvement teams can make is changing how they think about measurement.
Traditionally, data is often used for judgement. Questions might include:
These are legitimate questions, but they are not always the most useful questions during improvement work.
Improvement requires a different mindset. Questions become:
This approach encourages curiosity rather than defensiveness. It creates space for experimentation and learning.
It also helps teams remain engaged when early tests do not produce the results they expected. When measures sit alongside project aims, tests of change, and documented learning, teams can see the full story behind the data. This helps shift the focus from judgement towards continuous improvement. Learn more about using data to tell a compelling story.
One of the simplest ways to reduce measurement burden is to start with fewer measures.
Many successful projects begin with one outcome measure and one process measure. In some cases, teams may also include a balancing measure.
For example, a project focused on reducing discharge delays might use:
Outcome measure
Process measure
Balancing measure
Together, these measures provide a useful picture of whether improvement is happening without overwhelming the team with data collection requirements. Our article on 'Metrics to measure the success of a QI project' provides useful examples of a range of different types of measure.
A good rule of thumb is to ask: What is the minimum amount of data we need to make informed decisions?
The answer is often much less than teams initially expect.
Healthcare organisations generate vast amounts of data. The challenge is rarely the absence of information. The challenge is accessing and using it effectively.
Data may sit across: Electronic patient records, Local spreadsheets, Audit systems, Departmental databases. Trying to bring everything together can become a project in its own right. Instead, improvement teams should focus on simplicity.
This might mean:
The key question is: What is the simplest way we can understand whether our change is helping?
Starting with practical measures allows teams to learn quickly and maintain momentum.
Data has limited value if nobody sees it.
One of the most common challenges in improvement work is that measures are collected, reported, and stored away without influencing day-to-day decisions. High-quality improvement projects make data visible. Allowing teams to: see progress, spot trends, celebrate successes, and identify problems early.
Simple visualisations such as run charts can often be more powerful than complex reports. When measures are updated regularly and discussed openly, they become part of the team’s routine rather than an administrative task. Visibility also creates motivation.
People are more likely to stay engaged when they can see the impact of their efforts. This is one reason many organisations are moving away from isolated spreadsheets and towards shared improvement platforms (like Life QI 😀). When aims, measures, tests, and learning are captured in one place, teams gain a clearer picture of progress and leaders can provide support where it is needed most.
Sometimes the simplest way to improve measurement is to remove unnecessary complexity. Warning signs include:
If a measure disappeared tomorrow and nobody would miss it, it may not be adding meaningful value.
Regularly reviewing measures can help ensure effort remains focused on what matters.
When measurement is working well, it tends to share a few common characteristics. It is:
Most importantly, it helps teams answer three questions:
Good measurement supports improvement. It does not distract from it.
Many healthcare improvement teams assume measurement is difficult because healthcare itself is complex. There is some truth in that. Healthcare systems are complex. But effective measurement does not have to be.
The most successful projects are rarely those with the largest datasets or the most sophisticated dashboards.
They are the projects that focus on a small number of meaningful measures and use them consistently to guide learning and decision-making. When teams prioritise learning over judgement, simplicity over perfection, and visibility over reporting, measurement becomes one of the most powerful enablers of improvement.
The next time you begin an improvement project, try starting with a different question.
Instead of asking: What data can we collect?
Ask: What do we need to learn?
The answer will often lead to simpler measurement, better decisions, and ultimately more successful improvement.
And remember: Run your project on Life QI so your colleagues can learn and benefit from the amazing work you are doing!