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February
24, 2006 |
Ready
for JCAHO: MGHers learn about tracers
As MGHers continue their efforts to be ready for the upcoming
unannounced survey by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations (JCAHO) to take place some time this year, employees and
staff are learning about a new survey tool the JCAHO will be using called
the tracer methodology. With this new process, surveyors will focus on
how services are perceived from the patient's point of view and on how
well the organization coordinates care.
As part of this new process, JCAHO surveyors will select patients who
have gone through a variety of services at the hospital — including
inpatient and outpatient areas and the health centers — and "trace"
compliance with JCAHO standards at each stop along the patient's journey
through the system. For example, a tracer could begin with a patient's
arrival in the emergency room and follow his or her path of care to the
timeof discharge from a patient care unit. In an outpatient setting, a
tracer could begin with a primary care practice and include visits to
specialists. Along the way, surveyors will ask questions about the care
that each patient received, and the steps the hospital took to ensure
patient care was safe and of high quality. The surveyors will want to
talk with front-line staff rather than just leaders about how specific
policies and procedures affect the patients they are tracing.
There are certain priority areas that the surveyors will focus on throughout
the tracers and some additional areas will be identified as they learn
more about the hospital. Generally, the surveyors will begin by examining
issues such as communication among caregivers, equipment use, infection
control, assessment and care/services,credentials of practitioners, lab
procedures, staffing, rights and ethics, information management, orientation
and training, patient safety, physical environment, medication management,
organization structure and quality improvement expertise.
"When being interviewed by a surveyor during a tracer, staff should
remember to relax and answer the questions as best as they can,"
says Maryanne Spicer, director of Compliance and chair of the hospital's
JCAHO Operations Committee. "If they don't know an answer to a question,
it is OK to say that they don't know. They can tell the surveyor what
resources are available to find the answer. Tracers are an opportunity
to show the surveyors the excellent work that is done throughout the MGH."
For example, if a surveyor asks a question that an employee doesn't know
the answer to, he or she can respond: "I don't know that specific
answer, but our clinical resource nurse is available to help," or
"I'm not sure of that, but I would look in our online policy manual
to find that specific information."
For more information about the survey, visit the hospital's JCAHO website
at www2.massgeneral.org/jcaho.
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