Information provided by the Health Quality and Safety Commission said the idea of quality accounts first came from Britain, where the National Health Service introduced them in 2010.
"The primary purpose of quality accounts is to encourage boards and leaders of healthcare organisations to assess quality across all of the healthcare services they offer, and encourage them to engage in ... continuous quality improvement," the commission said.
"The visible product of this process is a document aimed at a local, public readership."
However, committee members were unenthusiastic about the introduction of quality accounts.
Member Kate Joblin said it was simply more paperwork.
Another committee member, Judith MacDonald, said she was uneasy about the idea.
"I don't believe it will give an accurate picture of what is truly going on," she said.
Mrs MacDonald also said more discussion needed to happen with other health providers which would be involved in putting together the quality account.
Nancy Tuaine said she believed quality accounts were about "quality of systems, rather than quality of practice".
Mrs Schiebli said she would take the feedback from committee members and report back to a later Whanganui DHB meeting.