WGU D026 AXM2 | Passed on First Attempt |Latest
Update with Complete Solution
Achieving Quality Outcomes through Value-Based Nursing Care
Author Name Samantha J Matley
Leavitt School of Health, Western Governors University
D026: Quality Outcomes in a Culture of Value-Based Nursing Care
Laura Simmons
February 23rd 2026
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A. Value-Based Care
Three Components of Value-Based Care
The National Academy of Medicine developed an approach describing value-
based care as timely, effective, safe, efficient, patient-centered, and equitable (STEEP,
2020). Effectiveness significantly guides value-based care by applying evidence-based
practices in patient care, thus reducing any and all costs or unnecessary treatments.
Effective care also reduces hospitalizations, decreases disease progression, and
increases value-based care by decreasing waste. Excessive waste may include
supplies, overstaffing, underutilizing staff capabilities, human resources, and hospital
and clinical stock. Focusing care on individual patient needs rather than global level is
the core of patient-centered care. Each patient has individual needs, which differ from
one patient to another. What may benefit one patient’s needs may not meet another
patient’s; therefore, each patient’s care plan is to be patient-centered as well as patient-
specific.
B. Culture of Continuous Quality Improvement
Two Benefits of Continuous Quality Improvement
According to O’Donnell and Gupta, continuous quality improvement is an
incremental progressive improvement project focusing on system processes, patient
care, and, most importantly, safety (O’Donnell & Gupta, 2023). Ongoing quality