PROFESSIONAL ISSUES
Patient safety under scrutiny
The Joint Commission is mandating low-cost strategies for reducing
medical errors.
By
Andis Robeznieks, AMNews staff. Aug. 26, 2002.
Additional information
Failure to institute "a culture of safety" is no longer an option for
health care organizations, because the Joint Commission on Accreditation of
Healthcare Organizations is ordering them to get serious about reducing
medical errors -- or else.
Next year, when the Joint Commission conducts its on-site surveys,
patient-safety programs will receive more scrutiny than ever. Survey teams
will check to see whether facilities have implemented 11 recommended
procedures (or suitable alternatives) geared toward achieving the following
patient-safety improvement goals:
- More accurate patient identification and better communication among
caregivers.
- Safer use of high-alert medications and infusion pumps.
- More effective systems for clinical alarms.
- Elimination of wrong-site, wrong-patient and wrong-procedure
surgeries.
Failure to follow this directive could lead to a citation and possible
loss of the Joint Commission's seal of approval. "If you don't remedy, your
accreditation is at risk," said Joint Commission president Dennis O'Leary,
MD.
Dr. O'Leary stressed there is little or no cost associated with the
recommendations, which include standardizing abbreviations to improve
written communication and implementing preventive maintenance and testing
programs.
"These are so basic," he said. "They are just the road map to doing the
right thing."
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Copyright 2002 American
Medical Association. All rights reserved.
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