A four-part series on what separates a department that is audit-ready from one that is genuinely well-governed — and the three structural properties that make the difference. Founder essays by László Bús.
Information maintained at the pace clinical work changes — not the pace inspections arrive. Current data is queryable, not merely reportable.
A signal sensitive to where clinical activity is actually happening. Governance at institutional distance loses value with every layer of mediation.
Governance at the level of the individual practitioner and the individual episode, where aggregate figures mask what matters clinically.
The department that presents immaculately at inspection and the department that is genuinely well-run are not always the same department. Why continuous governance is a posture, not a periodic state of preparation.
Read the essayA divisional executive asks on a Tuesday morning whether the department can absorb a six-month CT contract — and the honest answer arrives the following Thursday. The cost of workforce data that is recorded but not current.
Read the essayAn imaging director covering MRI across four sites needs to know whether a radiographer's standing is confirmed for this deployment, at this site, on this day. The governance system answers a different question.
Preview the draftNinety-four percent of radiographers are credential-current. The figure is accurate — and nearly useless for the question governance accountability actually requires: which six percent, and why.
Preview the draft