About accreditation

The IQILS programme was launched in July 2017 by the Royal College of Physicians' accreditation unit, who also oversee several other clinical service accreditation programmes. The programme is designed to support improvement in liver services in the UK.  It is supported by the British Association for the Study of the Liver (BASL) and the British Society of Gastroenterologists (BSG) and also works in partnership with the liver Community, professional bodies and patient organisations.

What is accreditation?

Accreditation is a supportive process of evaluating the quality of clinical services against established standards.
Accreditation promotes quality improvement through highlighting areas of best practice and areas for change, encouraging the continued development of the clinical service. Accreditation is a voluntary process for services to engage in.
Having developed standards with a multi-professional group of clinicians, managers and patient representatives, services participating in IQILS accreditation work to an accreditation pathway which involves self-assessment and quality improvement against the standards. Accredited services submit evidence to demonstrate that they are continuing to meet the standards and have a 5-yearly on-site assessment carried out by our experienced assessment team.
Accreditation pathway

By participating in accreditation, services are enrolled on an ongoing programme of service and quality improvement. A high-level overview of the accreditation pathway is depicted below.

Participating services have access to the accreditation standards via a self-assessment tool. The tool allows services to review:

  • which standards they meet and have evidence for
  • which standards they meet but need to collate evidence for
  • which standards they are not meeting.

The tool enables services to target their team’s improvement efforts and make progress towards accreditation.

Once a service can fully demonstrate that they meet the standards, an accreditation assessment will be organised to review the evidence submitted by the service. An on-site assessment will also take place, usually lasting one day.

Award of accreditation is subject to an ongoing annual review process to ensure the standards are continuing to be met. A site assessment is undertaken every five years and between these assessments there is an annual remote review of key pieces of evidence to show that the service is maintaining the standard.

There is an annual service subscription for participating in the programme you can find out more here.

Assessment teams

The programme provides a comprehensive training package for supporting assessors. Typically, the assessment team consists of a doctor and nurse who work in a liver service and a lay assessor, representing the patient voice. They may not have personal experience of using a liver service.

Assessors undergo a blended training programme of both face to face and online learning to fully understand the accreditation pathway, the standards and how to carry out assessments. 

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