Title: H2E AND JCAHO COMPLIANCE
1H2E ANDJCAHO COMPLIANCE
- Susan B. McLaughlin
- Barrington, Illinois
2JCAHO AND THEGOVERNMENT
3Health Care Finance Administration
- Deemed status
- Medicare reimbursement
- Go-behind surveys
- OIG report, 1999
4Occupational Safety Health Administration
(OSHA)
- Worker safety
- Applicable law and regulation
5JCAHO/OSHA PARTNERSHIP
- Established 1996
- Educational
- Surveyors and Inspectors
- Health care organizations
- Reduce duplicative compliance activities
6RELATIONSHIP
ENVIRONMENT OF CARE
ENVIRONMENT OF WORK
OSHA
JCAHO
7STATUS
- Renewed for 3 years in 2000
- Hammer Award
- Remains educational
- Additional examples of compliance
8MOVING FORWARD
- Cooperative arrangement with Veterans
Administration - Some exemplary hospitals will invite OSHA in with
JCAHO to survey organization - 10 facilities
- Central office
- Evaluation of programs
- NOT enforcement
9SURVEYOR FOCUS
- Increased knowledge of OSHA issues
- Emphasize areas of overlap in requirements
- Example of applicable law and regulation in
EC.1.3 - Verification vs. inspection
- New emphasis in standards
- EC.1.1.1 Worker Safety
10EPA ISSUES
- Storage gt 180 days
- Toxic waste storage facility
11JCAHO / EPA RELATIONSHIP
- No formal relationship
- Letter to Committee on Healthcare Safety
- Cited as an example of applicable law and
regulation in EC.1.3
12DOT ISSUES
- Department of Transportation
- Hazardous materials
- Regulated medical waste
- Shipping papers
- Training
- Home care
13JCAHO / DOT
- No formal relationship
- Applicable law and regulation
14REMEMBER
- Always comply with the strictest authority having
jurisdiction (AHJ) - JCAHO frequently asked question (FAQ) related to
hazmat, www.jcaho.org
15ENVIRONMENT OF CAREREQUIREMENTS
16ENVIRONMENT OF CARE
- Seven management plans
- Safety
- Security
- Hazardous Materials Waste
- Emergency Management
- Fire Prevention
- Medical Equipment
- Utilities
17EC REQUIREMENTS
- Written plans
- Implementation of plans
- Risk assessment
- Staff knowledge and skill
- Maintenance, testing, inspection activities
- Monitoring and evaluation
- Annual evaluation
18RISK ASSESSMENT
- All management plans
- Specific to organization
- Non-prescriptive standards
19PERFORMANCE MONITORING
- Actual or potential risk
- Staff knowledge skills
- Level of staff participation
- Monitoring inspection activities
- Emergency incident reporting
- Inspection, PM, testing of equipment
- At least one monitor per management plan
20PERFORMANCE MONITORING
- Data collection
- Report to Safety Committee
- At least one annual recommendation for a
performance improvement activity in EC made to
leadership - Leadership prioritization and decision
21SURVEY PROCESS
- Size of organization determines
- Length of survey
- Number of surveyors
- Administrator - Nurse - Physician
- Nurse - Physician
- Surveyor cross-training
22CLOSED DOCUMENT REVIEW
- All seven EC management plans
- Statement of Conditions (SOC)
- Safety Officer Documentation
- Job Description
- Appointment Letter
- Intervention Authority
- Interim Life Safety Measures (ILSM) policy
documentation
23BUILDING TOUR
- Participants
- Administrator or Nurse Surveyor
- Safety Officer
- Engineering Director
- Etc.
- Function
- Validation of SOC
- Assessment of Implementation
- Staff Interviews
24EC DOCUMENT REVIEW
- All seven EC management plans
- Documentation of performance monitoring
performance improvement activities - Hazmat permits, licenses, manifests
- Hazard surveillance surveys (12 months)
- Safety Committee records
25EC.1.1 SAFETY MANAGEMENT
- Policies distributed,
practiced, enforced - Policies reviewed at least every 3 years
26EC.1.1.1 WORKER SAFETY
- Occupational illness
- Personnel injury
- Safety orientation and training
27EC.1.3 HAZMAT WASTE
- A) Selection, handling, storage,
transportation, use, disposal - B) Applicable law and regulation
- C) Space and equipment
- D) Performance monitoring
- E) Monitoring disposing of hazardous gases
vapors
28EC.1.3 CRADLE TO GRAVE
- A) 1. Selection
- -What is to be purchased
- -Supplier
- -Screening Process
- 2. Handling
- Receipt
- Documentation
29EC.1.3 CRADLE TO GRAVE
- 3. Storage
- -Chemical type
- -Medical gas
- 4. Transportation
- -Chemicals
- -Cylinders
- -Intra- and inter-facility
30EC.1.3 CRADLE TO GRAVE
- 5. Use
- -Training
- 6. Disposal
- -Chemicals
- -Potentially infectious medical waste
- -Empty gas cylinders
- -Waste anesthetic gas
31B) APPLICABLE LAW REGULATION
- 1. OSHA
- 2. EPA
- 3. DOT
- Includes but not limited to. . .
32B) 1. OSHA ISSUES
- Bloodborne Pathogens
- Hazard Communication
- Hazardous Drugs
- Formaldehyde
- Ethylene Oxide
- Tuberculosis
- Respiratory Protection
- Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
- Etc.
33B) 2. 3. EPA, DOT, other
- EPA
- Clean Air Act
- Clean Water Act
- Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, Rodenticide Act
- Incinerators
- Generators (proposed)
- Boilers (proposed)
- Etc.
- DOT
- Medical Waste
- Hazardous Materials
34B) 2. MANAGING WASTE
- Chemical
- Chemotherapeutic
- Radioactive
- Regulated medical
- Sharps
35B) 2. MANAGING WASTE
- Intra-facility tracking
- Disposal methods
- Training
- Documentation
36C) SPACE EQUIPMENT
- Adequate
- Appropriate
- Segregation
37REPORTING and INVESTIGATING
- Problems, failures, user errors
- Information collection and evaluation system
(ICES) - Input into Safety Committee
38E) GASES VAPORS
- 1. Formaldehyde
- 2. Ethylene Oxide
- 3. Waste Anesthetic Gas
- 4. Glutaraldehyde
- 5. Xylene
39ORIENTATION EDUCATION
- Personnel who use or have contact with hazmat
- Procedures Precautions
- Emergency Procedures
- Spills and exposures
- Health Hazards
- Reporting Procedures
- Spills or exposures
40EMERGENCY PROCEDURES
- Spills
- Chemical
- Mercury
- Potentially infectious
- Chemotherapy
- Major clean-up operations
- OSHA Hazardous Waste Operations (HAZWOPR)
- Fire department
41EMERGENCY PROCEDURES
- Radiation Exposure
- Personal Protective Equipment
42D) PERFORMANCE MONITORING
- Examples
- Waste volume
- Solid waste
- Hazardous waste
- Waste disposal costs
- Staff knowledge and skill
- Monitoring of gases vapors
- Etc.
43DOCUMENTATION
- EC.2.3 Implementation
- Permits
- Licenses
- Manifests
44EC.1.4 EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT
- Facilities for chemical and radioactive
decontamination
45FREQUENTLY ASKED SURVEYOR QUESTIONS
- What chemical are you using?
- How did you learn about it?
- Where would you go to get more information?
- What would you do if you spilled it?
- May I see the MSDS?
- May I see the mercury spill clean-up procedure?
46H2E IMPACT ONJCAHO COMPLIANCE
47WASTE REDUCTION
- Demonstrated performance improvement
- Less expensive to use environmentally friendly
disposal methods - Decreased waste volume
- Decreased hazardous waste
- Increased worker safety (i.e., sharps reduction)
48CHEMICAL WASTE MINIMIZATION
- Demonstrated performance improvement
- Reduced need for
- Storage
- Training
- PPE
- MSDS
49CHEMICAL WASTE MINIMIZATION
- Eliminating some chemicals completely
- Reduce number of policies procedures
- Eliminate particular disposal processes
- Potentially eliminate some regulatory compliance
- Decreased documentation
- Improved worker safety
50MERCURY VIRTUAL ELIMINATION
- Demonstrated performance improvement
- Eliminate need for spill clean-up procedure
- Eliminate specialized disposal
- Reduce regulatory compliance
- Worker / patient safety improved
51THE BOTTOM LINE
- If you have less to manage. . .
- Less waste
- Fewer chemicals
- No mercury
- . . .you will streamline your process
52AND JCAHO WILL HAVE LESS TO QUESTION AND LOOK AT
ON SURVEY!