Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Purpose Performance improvement; deemed status in some states licensure and/or Medicare/Medicaid provider
certification
Oversight private, not-for profit company governmental entity
Compliance voluntary mandatory
Emphasis evaluation inspection
Frequency triennial annual
Funding provider fees tax dollars
Focus What is the organization doing right? How can it improve? What is the organization doing wrong?
Expectations achievable standards minimum expectations
Scoring systems and processes individual deficiencies
Value improvement enforcement
Process survey to standards survey to regulations
Approach education/consultation sanctions/penalties/fines
Findings recommendations for improvement citations
Award accreditation licensure or certification
In order for an organization to be accredited under Hospital program, the following requirements determine eligibility.
The organization is located in the United States or its territories or, if outside the United States, is operated by the U.S.
government, or under a charter of the U.S. Congress.
The organization assesses and improves the quality of its services. This process includes a review of care by
clinicians, when appropriate.
The organization identifies the services it provides, indicating which services it provides directly, under contract, or
through some other arrangement.
The organization provides services addressed by the Joint Commission's standards.
In order for an organization to be accredited under our Critical Access Hospital program, the following requirements
determine eligibility.
The critical access hospital must be located in the United States or its territories or, if outside the United States, is operated by
the U.S. government, or under a charter of the U.S. Congress, meeting the following criteria:
The nature of the health care practices in the applicant critical access hospital is compatible with the Joint Commission
standards and their elements of performance.
With the use of interpreters provided by the critical access hospital, as necessary, the surveyors can effectively
communicate with substantially all of the critical access hospital's management and clinical personnel and at least half
of the critical access hospital's patients, and can understand medical records and documents that relate to the critical
access hospital's performance.
United States citizens make up at least 10% of the critical access hospital's patient population, or a United States
government agency contracts with the critical access hospital to provide services to United States citizens, or United
States citizens preferentially use the critical access hospital in that country.
The critical access hospital assesses and improves the quality of its services. This process includes a review of care by
clinicians, when appropriate.
The critical access hospital identifies the services it provides, indicating which services it provides directly, under
contract, or through some other arrangement.
The critical access hospital provides services addressed by the Joint Commission's standards.
Accreditation Process
Preparing for a Hospital Survey
Preparing for a Joint Commission survey can be challenging. The hospital must:
Know the standards;
Examine the current processes;
Improve areas that are not currently in compliance; and
Must be in compliance with the standards for at least four months prior to your initial survey. For resurveys, it requires a
12-month "track record" of standards implementation. However, it expects the hospital to be in compliance with
applicable standards during the entire period of accreditation, so surveyors will look for a full three years of
implementation for several standards-related issues, including performance improvement activities.
For an initial survey, allow 9-12 months of preparation before the survey date. The management will have sufficient time to:
Review the standards carefully;
Conduct an organizational self-assessment;
Take measures to improve where needed;
Develop new policies or processes; and
Conduct staff training
The following checklist can help you prepare for an initial or triennial survey.
Read all the information in the Comprehensive Accreditation Manual for Hospitals (CAMH). This manual includes all the
hospital standards as well as a section covering official Joint Commission accreditation policies and procedures. Read
all the standards and determine their relevance to your hospital. Remember that you are responsible for items in the
intent statements as well as in the standards; be sure to read the scoring guidelines. Surveyors will look for
multidisciplinary or organization wide approaches to the standards, so don't limit your compliance to specific
departments or disciplines. The examples of implementation and the scoring guidelines can help you understand the
meaning of the standards and intent statements.
Attend seminars to help you understand the standards. Besides the many seminars that we sponsor throughout the
year, state hospital associations and other professional associations often give presentations on Joint Commission
standards. Read some of the many publications and other resources on hospital standards and related topics. For
answers to questions about a specific standard, call the Department of Standards at 630-792-5900.
Network with colleagues from hospitals that have recently gone through the accreditation process. Attend professional
association meetings or call your counterparts in other organizations. Online bulletin boards sponsored by professional
associations can be particularly helpful.
Ensure that staff understand how to comply with the standards. Develop programs to educate staff about new systems.
The surveyors will interview staff members to see how well they understand your processes.
Use the scoring guidelines in the CAMH to conduct a mock survey. Document any areas of partial compliance and
noncompliance that you identify. Mock surveys are most helpful when conducted regularly throughout the accreditation
cycle. Regular mock surveys help you judge your hospital's efforts at continuously improving performance and help you
fix problems before surveyors arrive. Some organizations hire consultants to conduct mock surveys if they don't have
the time or expertise to do it themselves.
Review the results of your mock survey with your staff. Develop a plan to correct the problems you found and set
priorities for improvement. Establish a realistic schedule for improvements. We offer several tools to assist you. Visit
the Joint Commission Resources website for more information.
Immediately before your survey, meet with your staff to review expectations and relieve anxiety. Reviewing what will
happen during the survey will help boost staff confidence and help your people relax.
The best way to prepare for a survey is to incorporate the standards requirements into your daily activities. By continuously
improving your hospital's processes, you can improve existing methods and correct problems before they become serious.
Comprehensive Accreditation Manual for Hospitals (CAMH)
Status Definitions
Individual Rights
Filming And Recording
Organ Donation
Patient Rights and Informed Consent When Videotaping or Filming
Provision of Care
Assessment
Waived Testing
Patient/Client Self Glucose Testing
Physician Competency For Waived & P.P.M.P. Testing
Survey Of Urine Drug Testing In A Behavioral Health Care Facility
Waived Testing Logs
Screening Vs. Definitive
Reference Ranges In Medical/Clinical Record
Reagents Stored With Medications Or Specimens
Professional Vs. Home Use Tests (Glucose Meters, Etc.)
Provider Performed Microscopy Procedures (P.P.M.P.)
Color-Blind Testing
Operative/High-Risk Procedures/Sedation/Anesthesia
Follow-up Phone Calls In Outpatient Surgery
Procedures Requiring Surgical Site Marking
Sedation and Anesthesia
Moderate Sedation Medication and Patient Monitoring
Permission to Administer Moderate Sedation
Medication Management
Patient-Specific Information
Minimum Patient Information - Medication
Leadership
Leadership
Credentialing And Privileging For Providers From Joint Commission Accredited Organization
Annual Requirements in New Standards
Management of Information
Confidentiality and Security
Medical Records Security After Hours
Continuing Education
Documenting CME's
How long does it take to prepare for survey after I receive the manual?
- This varies considerably from organization to organization and depends on the amount of time and resources available to
prepare for survey. Most organizations take one full year from the point of the initial decision to the actual survey date.
When will we get our report? When can we start advertising our accreditation?
- This varies with the number of surveys conducted in the previous month but averages about 15 days. Your organization is
retroactively accredited to the day after survey, but you may not market your accreditation until you receive the final award
letter.
What happens to my accreditation when I sell my organization or am acquired by another organization? If I add a new
service, is it automatically accredited until the time of my next survey?
- We do not automatically transfer accreditation to new owners who acquire an accredited health care organization.
Accreditation will not continue if significant changes occur to the circumstances existing at the time of the previous survey. An
accredited organization must notify us no more than 30 days after it merges, is acquired, or undergoes any major change in
services, location, capacity, or corporate structure. We will extend accreditation until we can determine if a special survey is
necessary. Failure to notify us of ownership and service changes can result in a loss of accreditation.
How do I determine if my group of hospitals can use the multi-hospital survey option, or if we must be surveyed as a
network?
- If your system owns or operates at least two hospitals, you may be able to use the multi-hospital survey option. However, if
your hospitals do not each have their own medical staffs and unique patient populations, we may survey you under health care
network standards. A hospital network offers a continuum of care and will refer patients to the most appropriate facility. If
several of your hospitals draw from the same geographic population (sending cardiac cases to one hospital, pediatrics to
another, for example), you may be a network.
Our hospital owns a physician group. Will the physician practice be included in our hospital survey?
- We survey physician groups as part of the hospital if they are organizationally and functionally integrated with the hospital, or if
the hospital publicly represents the group as part of its organization.
Can a surgical hospital or a long term acute care hospital be accredited by the Joint Commission?
- Yes, they would be accredited using the hospital accreditation manual.
I am a surgical hospital, am I required to have an emergency department, intensive care unit, pharmacy, radiology, and
a laboratory?
- No, your organization is not required to have these essential services if you are a surgical hospital. If your organization
provides these services via a contract, then only the contract would be evaluated at the time of survey.
I am a long term acute care hospital, am I required to have an emergency department, intensive care unit, pharmacy,
radiology, and a laboratory?
- No, your organization is not required to have these essential services if you are a long term acute care hospital. If your
organization provides these services via a contract, then only the contract would be evaluated at the time of survey.
Example of Comprehensive Accreditation Manual for Hospital: The Official Handbook (CAMH)