This program will cover the Joint Commission sentinel event policy changes and how to help hospitals ensure compliance. The Joint Commission (TJC) Patient Safety System chapter will also be covered. The patient safety system chapter and the sentinel event policy are designed to be used together.
Knowing the TJC standards on how to create a thorough and credible root cause analysis (systematic analysis) will help establish that the underlying questions and requirements can be met.
The Patient Safety System chapter is to inform and educate hospitals about the importance and how to structure an integrated patient safety system. The chapter did not include any new requirements. Rather, it describes how current standards can be used to improve patient safety. It provides the direct link and framework between the accreditation standards and patient safety.
Every hospital should know when an RCA or FMEA should be performed. This describes how to ensure your RCA is thorough and credible and acceptable. The policy talks about when one must be done and the time frame to complete it. Hospitals should implement all sentinel event alerts and incorporate them into practice.
The CMS final hospital QAPI worksheet that discusses patient safety, adverse events, and medical errors will be addressed. CMS has a root cause analysis (RCA) tracer, which they call a causal analysis that lists many things that a surveyor will ask a hospital during a validation or certification survey. The surveyor will select three RCAs to evaluate.
TJC Sentinel Event Policy and Procedure
TJC Patient Safety Systems
CMS QAPI Worksheet on Patient Safety, Adverse Events (AE) and Medical Errors
(BS, JD, RN, CPHRM)
Laura A. Dixon served as the Director, Facility Patient Safety and Risk Management, and Operations for COPIC from 2014 to 2020. In her role, Ms. Dixon provided patient safety and risk management consulting and training to facilities, practitioners, and staff in multiple states. Such services included the creation of and presentations on risk management topics, assessment of healthcare facilities; and development of programs and compilation of reference materials that complement physician-oriented products. Ms. Dixon has more than twenty years of clinical experience in acute care facilities, including critical care, coronary care, peri-operative services, and pain management. Prior to joining COPIC, she served as the Director, Western Region, Patient Safety and Risk Management for The Doctors Company, Napa, California. In this capacity, she provided patient safety and risk management consultation to the physicians and staff for the western United States. Ms. Dixon’s legal experience includes representation of clients for Social Security Disability Insurance providing legal counsel and representation at disability hearings and appeals, medical malpractice defense, and representation of nurses before the Colorado Board of Nursing. As a registered nurse and attorney, Laura holds a Bachelor of Science degree from Regis University, RECEP of Denver, a Doctor of Jurisprudence degree from Drake University College of Law, Des Moines, Iowa, and a Registered Nurse Diploma from Saint Luke’s School Professional Nursing, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. She is licensed to practice law in Colorado and California.
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