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Family-centered ICUs improve outcomes

To improve medical outcomes in intensive care units, some hospitals are attempting to make units more accessible for patients’ family and caregivers. Allowing patients to have more access to their families have been shown to reduce hospital stays, improve satisfaction, and help prepare patients for post-discharge.

Briefings on Accreditation and Quality

Joint Commission shifts position on texting medical orders again

The Joint Commission has reversed its position on the use of text messaging to send patient care orders, once again banning the practice months after saying they were acceptable The original ban had been put in place in 2011 because at the time there were concerns over:
1.    Private medical information being sent through unencrypted texting services
2.    A lack of a way to verify who was actually sending the text

In the May 2016 Perspectives, the accreditor wrote that technology had improved enough so that the twin issues of verification and encryption weren’t concerns anymore. The announcement listed various conditions for appropriate text messaging platforms, policies, and procedures. When announced, there had been some support for the ban’s repeal. A Medscape poll found that 74% of physicians and 66% of nurses strongly or somewhat favored the idea of texting medical orders. And a study published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine found that switching between paging to texting in a hospital cut its average length of stay by 0.6 days a month. However, by June The Joint Commission and CMS announced that they were temporarily reinstating the ban while they worked on additional guidance. By December, The Joint Commission announced that it was placing the ban back into effect.


 

Marketing Spotlight

The Survey Coordinator’s Handbook, 17th Edition

The ultimate resource in survey prep, The Survey Coordinator's Handbook, 17th Edition, is the perfect tool for all accreditation professionals, no matter the experience!

Not only will you get insider information on how to prepare for, survive, and respond to a hospital survey, you’ll also learn the historical context behind the accreditation process to show you the “why” as well as the “how.”

This book includes:
•    The core information that every new and experienced survey coordinator needs to get up to speed on accreditation survey preparation, including CMS and Joint Commission processes
•    Chapter-by-chapter tips for survey readiness and compliance
•    Advice from industry veterans on what to do before, during, and after your survey visit
•    Overviews of problematic survey components
•    Follow-up tips for post-survey actions

Click here for a free excerpt!
 


 

Editor's Picks

The Joint Commission Mock Tracer Made Simple: 17th Edition

January 26, 2016


 

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Contact Us

Brian Ward
Associate Editor
Accreditation Insider
bward@hcpro.com

HCPro
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800-650-6787
http://www.hcpro.com
 



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