PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Kim Hansen AU - Adrian Boyle AU - Brian Holroyd AU - Georgina Phillips AU - Jonathan Benger AU - Lucas B Chartier AU - Fiona Lecky AU - Samuel Vaillancourt AU - Peter Cameron AU - Grzegorz Waligora AU - Lisa Kurland AU - Melinda Truesdale ED - , TI - Updated framework on quality and safety in emergency medicine AID - 10.1136/emermed-2019-209290 DP - 2020 May 13 TA - Emergency Medicine Journal PG - emermed-2019-209290 4099 - http://emj.bmj.com/content/early/2020/05/13/emermed-2019-209290.short 4100 - http://emj.bmj.com/content/early/2020/05/13/emermed-2019-209290.full AB - Objectives Quality and safety of emergency care is critical. Patients rely on emergency medicine (EM) for accessible, timely and high-quality care in addition to providing a ‘safety-net’ function. Demand is increasing, creating resource challenges in all settings. Where EM is well established, this is recognised through the implementation of quality standards and staff training for patient safety. In settings where EM is developing, immense system and patient pressures exist, thereby necessitating the availability of tiered standards appropriate to the local context.Methods The original quality framework arose from expert consensus at the International Federation of Emergency Medicine (IFEM) Symposium for Quality and Safety in Emergency Care (UK, 2011). The IFEM Quality and Safety Special Interest Group members have subsequently refined it to achieve a consensus in 2018.Results Patients should expect EDs to provide effective acute care. To do this, trained emergency personnel should make patient-centred, timely and expert decisions to provide care, supported by systems, processes, diagnostics, appropriate equipment and facilities. Enablers to high-quality care include appropriate staff, access to care (including financial), coordinated emergency care through the whole patient journey and monitoring of outcomes. Crowding directly impacts on patient quality of care, morbidity and mortality. Quality indicators should be pragmatic, measurable and prioritised as components of an improvement strategy which should be developed, tailored and implemented in each setting.Conclusion EDs globally have a remit to deliver the best care possible. IFEM has defined and updated an international consensus framework for quality and safety.