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Bulletin of the Medical Library Association logoLink to Bulletin of the Medical Library Association
. 1991 Jul;79(3):263–270.

Developing a quality assurance program for online services.

A W Humphries 1, G V Naisawald 1
PMCID: PMC225549  PMID: 1909197

Abstract

A quality assurance (QA) program provides not only a mechanism for establishing training and competency standards, but also a method for continuously monitoring current service practices to correct shortcomings. The typical QA cycle includes these basic steps: select subject for review, establish measurable standards, evaluate existing services using the standards, identify problems, implement solutions, and reevaluate services. The Claude Moore Health Sciences Library (CMHSL) developed a quality assurance program for online services designed to evaluate services against specific criteria identified by research studies as being important to customer satisfaction. These criteria include reliability, responsiveness, approachability, communication, and physical factors. The application of these criteria to the library's existing online services in the quality review process is discussed with specific examples of the problems identified in each service area, as well as the solutions implemented to correct deficiencies. The application of the QA cycle to an online services program serves as a model of possible interventions. The use of QA principles to enhance online service quality can be extended to other library service areas.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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