Comprehensive accreditation manual for hospitals free download
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State Code. State Manual. State Plan. State Standards. Study Guide. Technical Bulletin. Year Publisher Title Annual Price Complete Accreditation Manuals Package. Book Keywords. US Local Codes. The Greeley Company provides the most up-to-date knowledge regarding JCAHO standards and interprets them in a flexible, constructive manner. We have the resources to help you solve any accreditation challenge in a timely, cost-effective way, while assuring the high-quality service you expect.
Based on your unique organizational needs, our accreditation and regulatory compliance professionals can:. The Greeley Company stands out from other accreditation and regulatory compliance services with our unique method for using the standards to drive improvements in care; consultants who have been through the survey process; practical, hands-on strategies for complying with the toughest standards; and exceptional expertise in managing the survey process.
Briefings on Accreditation and Quality will help you with all of your accreditation and survey preparation needs. Briefings on The Joint Commission will help you with all of your accreditation and survey preparation needs. Every month The complexity of modern information management points to the increased importance of the medical library and the need for leadership by the medical librarian. Recent trends in information sciences and the demand for current, authoritative information throughout the hospital necessitates a new appreciation of the medical library.
With the future promising even more aspects of virtual libraries, the librarian remains the gatekeeper to cataloging vast amounts of raw information into the knowledge-based products needed by patrons. The librarian's role may change to accommodate future trends, but the need for quality information management remains strong. One such sentinel event took place in June at Johns Hopkins University. Ellen Roche, a healthy twenty-four-year-old patient, was participating in a clinical study on asthma.
She was given a drug, hexamethonium, which caused irreversible lung damage, and she died. If a librarian had done a comprehensive search on hexamethonium, articles published in the s would have warned about possible lung damage. Even if a librarian had done a quick current PubMed search of the literature, reports pointing to the older articles would have been found.
Other factors may have contributed to this tragedy, but clearly in this case, the lack of a librarian's search was an essential factor. Medical librarians provide the knowledge-based information resources to patrons in the hospital library.
Hospital libraries house the resources that librarians use to ensure that the information is up to date and readily available. Although managing information is librarians' main job, they are often involved in other duties in the hospital. With hospital budgets being cut, librarians take on other duties, as needed.
Some librarians run the audiovisual department, some are in charge of continuing education departments, and some provide resources for patient education. Librarians attend department head meetings and often get involved in many other committees in the hospital. They are also involved in professional organizations outside the hospital. For patient care, librarians provide most of the background information that enables health care workers to make wise decisions based on evidence found in the literature.
It is not a highly visible function, but it is essential to quality of care. The latest standards make no provision that the hospital should have a library or a librarian. Instead, they focus on the functions the library provides to the hospital. In section IM 4. This is hardly a ringing endorsement of libraries and librarians in the hospital. JCAHO is not the only accreditation agency, but it is by far the largest and most prestigious. For , the inspection visit is not officially announced ahead of time, but word usually gets out.
This hospital is tentatively scheduled for a visit in March or April Anyone who has spent any time in a hospital knows that this visit is highly anticipated and very important. In my experience, this usually consists of several general questions being asked, with the bulk of time spent on concerns about medical records. Librarians should mention that.
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