Displaying 1 - 10 of 496 results for "logineo nrw login"
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Data submission
This page is for submitting data to Health Quality & Safety Commission Te Tāhū Hauora.
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Harm (adverse) event submission portal
Use this portal to report and manage harm (adverse) events, as part of the Healing, Learning and Improving from Harm policy. You can complete Part A and Part B sections, edit and review, and download your data.
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Adult hospital outpatient experience survey – have your say
We want to know about your experiences during your recent hospital outpatient clinic appointment. Your valuable feedback will be used to help improve the quality of care, patient safety and access to health services.
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Adult hospital inpatient experience survey – have your say
We want to know about your experiences during your recent stay in hospital. Your valuable feedback will be used to help improve the quality of care and patient safety.
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Adult primary care patient experience survey – have your say
We want to know about your experiences with doctors, nurses and other staff at your general practice or community health clinic. Your valuable feedback will be used to help improve the quality of care, patient safety and access to health services.
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SSI orthopaedic monitoring tool - variable life-adjusted display (VLAD) report
The orthopaedic monitoring tool (VLAD report) is a tool to track orthopaedic surgical site infections (SSI) in your DHB. It is updated quarterly.
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Home and community support services experience survey – have your say
We would like to hear about your experiences of home and community support services. Your valuable feedback will help improve the quality of these support services.
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Quality and Safety Markers
Quality and Safety Markers (QSMs) show whether key safety actions are being taken in health care and how they affect patient harm. They help us track processes and outcomes to understand good practice and where improvement is needed.
- QSMs January to March 2026
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Paediatric early warning system (PEWS) tools and guidance
The national paediatric early warning system (PEWS) helps clinicians identify hospitalised tamariki with the potential to become more unwell, so they can respond quickly.