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Quality Improvement in Primary Care

Quality Improvement is central to how Redmoor works. It shapes how services are reviewed, how problems are understood, and how change is tested, refined and sustained.

In primary care, better outcomes rarely come from effort alone. They come from improving the systems behind access, workflow, communication, capacity and patient journeys.

Why it matters

General practice is under constant pressure. Demand shifts, teams are stretched, and expectations keep rising. In that environment, change needs to be structured. Without that, improvement becomes reactive, fragmented and hard to sustain. 

Redmoor helps practices, PCNs and systems take a more disciplined approach to improvement by focusing on what is happening now, what needs to change, and how progress will be measured. 

How Redmoor approaches improvement

Our approach starts with a clear view of the current position, then moves into practical testing and implementation. We typically focus on:

Defining the aim

Understanding the current process

Identifying pressure points, delay and duplication

Using data to measure progress over time

Testing changes on a manageable scale

Refining what works and embedding it into day-to-day practice

This keeps improvement practical. The aim is not to create activity for its own sake, but to make services work better for the teams delivering care and the patients using them.

The PDSA cycle

We use the Plan, Do, Study, Act cycle to test and refine change in a structured way.

Rather than rolling out major change all at once, we test ideas in practice, review the impact, adjust where needed and build from what works. This reduces risk, supports team engagement and helps improvement stick.

Turning insight into change

Redmoor combines improvement thinking with hands-on delivery. Depending on the programme, that may include:

  • process mapping
  • workflow review
  • prioritisation and action planning
  • variation analysis
  • root cause analysis
  • structured testing of change
  • support for implementation and follow-through

The focus is always practical. Improvement has to work in the reality of live primary care, not just in theory.

Where we apply this approach

This methodology runs across the full range of Redmoor’s transformation work, including:

  • patient access and care navigation
  • telephony and online journeys
  • websites and digital front doors
  • communication workflows
  • demand and capacity
  • planned care and call and recall
  • prevention pathways
  • neighbourhood and INT working
  • CAIP and wider contractual improvement
  • operational workflow redesign

While each programme is different, the method stays consistent: understand the system, test change properly, and measure whether it is making a real difference.

Building confidence within teams

Good improvement work should not end with a report. It should leave teams with better ways of working and more confidence to continue improving. That is why Redmoor’s approach also focuses on helping teams to:

  • make better use of data
  • review and improve processes more confidently
  • strengthen local leadership for change
  • embed improvement into daily practice

Supporting national improvement priorities

This approach also aligns closely with national primary care improvement programmes, including Practice Level Support, where hands-on facilitation, measurement for improvement, process mapping and capability building are central to successful delivery.

Patient Comms
Patient CommunicationsServices

Patient Communications

Redmoor’s Patient Communications services helps GP practices and PCNs connect with patients across the digital channels that matter.
Digital & Transformation SupportServices

Digital & Transformation Support

Redmoor’s Digital & Transformation (D&T) Support helps practices, PCNs and regions deliver measurable improvements.
Training and coaching
Implementation & CapabilityServices

Implementation & Capability

Redmoor offers a full suite of training and coaching services to support practices, PCNs, Federations and Neighbourhood teams.