Summary
Clinical audits are vital tools for improving quality and safety. They are designed to identify care gaps, inform practice improvement, and ensure accountability. Yet, in practice, the utility of audits are often limited by poor feedback mechanisms, redundancy and workforce disengagement. Nurses, in particular, frequently report audit fatigue and frustration when the same data are reviewed repeatedly without visible change. This disconnect between data collection and clinical improvement raises an important question: Are we auditing for improvement, or auditing for auditing's sake?
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