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H2E AND JCAHO COMPLIANCE

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Title: H2E AND JCAHO COMPLIANCE


1
H2E ANDJCAHO COMPLIANCE
  • Susan B. McLaughlin
  • Barrington, Illinois

2
JCAHO AND THEGOVERNMENT
3
Health Care Finance Administration
  • Deemed status
  • Medicare reimbursement
  • Go-behind surveys
  • OIG report, 1999

4
Occupational Safety Health Administration
(OSHA)
  • Worker safety
  • Applicable law and regulation

5
JCAHO/OSHA PARTNERSHIP
  • Established 1996
  • Educational
  • Surveyors and Inspectors
  • Health care organizations
  • Reduce duplicative compliance activities

6
RELATIONSHIP
ENVIRONMENT OF CARE
ENVIRONMENT OF WORK
OSHA
JCAHO
7
STATUS
  • Renewed for 3 years in 2000
  • Hammer Award
  • Remains educational
  • Additional examples of compliance

8
MOVING 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

9
SURVEYOR 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

10
EPA ISSUES
  • Storage gt 180 days
  • Toxic waste storage facility

11
JCAHO / EPA RELATIONSHIP
  • No formal relationship
  • Letter to Committee on Healthcare Safety
  • Cited as an example of applicable law and
    regulation in EC.1.3

12
DOT ISSUES
  • Department of Transportation
  • Hazardous materials
  • Regulated medical waste
  • Shipping papers
  • Training
  • Home care

13
JCAHO / DOT
  • No formal relationship
  • Applicable law and regulation

14
REMEMBER
  • Always comply with the strictest authority having
    jurisdiction (AHJ)
  • JCAHO frequently asked question (FAQ) related to
    hazmat, www.jcaho.org

15
ENVIRONMENT OF CAREREQUIREMENTS
16
ENVIRONMENT OF CARE
  • Seven management plans
  • Safety
  • Security
  • Hazardous Materials Waste
  • Emergency Management
  • Fire Prevention
  • Medical Equipment
  • Utilities

17
EC REQUIREMENTS
  • Written plans
  • Implementation of plans
  • Risk assessment
  • Staff knowledge and skill
  • Maintenance, testing, inspection activities
  • Monitoring and evaluation
  • Annual evaluation

18
RISK ASSESSMENT
  • All management plans
  • Specific to organization
  • Non-prescriptive standards

19
PERFORMANCE 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

20
PERFORMANCE 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

21
SURVEY PROCESS
  • Size of organization determines
  • Length of survey
  • Number of surveyors
  • Administrator - Nurse - Physician
  • Nurse - Physician
  • Surveyor cross-training

22
CLOSED 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

23
BUILDING TOUR
  • Participants
  • Administrator or Nurse Surveyor
  • Safety Officer
  • Engineering Director
  • Etc.
  • Function
  • Validation of SOC
  • Assessment of Implementation
  • Staff Interviews

24
EC 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

25
EC.1.1 SAFETY MANAGEMENT
  • Policies distributed,
    practiced, enforced
  • Policies reviewed at least every 3 years

26
EC.1.1.1 WORKER SAFETY
  • Occupational illness
  • Personnel injury
  • Safety orientation and training

27
EC.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

28
EC.1.3 CRADLE TO GRAVE
  • A) 1. Selection
  • -What is to be purchased
  • -Supplier
  • -Screening Process
  • 2. Handling
  • Receipt
  • Documentation

29
EC.1.3 CRADLE TO GRAVE
  • 3. Storage
  • -Chemical type
  • -Medical gas
  • 4. Transportation
  • -Chemicals
  • -Cylinders
  • -Intra- and inter-facility

30
EC.1.3 CRADLE TO GRAVE
  • 5. Use
  • -Training
  • 6. Disposal
  • -Chemicals
  • -Potentially infectious medical waste
  • -Empty gas cylinders
  • -Waste anesthetic gas

31
B) APPLICABLE LAW REGULATION
  • 1. OSHA
  • 2. EPA
  • 3. DOT
  • Includes but not limited to. . .

32
B) 1. OSHA ISSUES
  • Bloodborne Pathogens
  • Hazard Communication
  • Hazardous Drugs
  • Formaldehyde
  • Ethylene Oxide
  • Tuberculosis
  • Respiratory Protection
  • Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
  • Etc.

33
B) 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

34
B) 2. MANAGING WASTE
  • Chemical
  • Chemotherapeutic
  • Radioactive
  • Regulated medical
  • Sharps

35
B) 2. MANAGING WASTE
  • Intra-facility tracking
  • Disposal methods
  • Training
  • Documentation

36
C) SPACE EQUIPMENT
  • Adequate
  • Appropriate
  • Segregation

37
REPORTING and INVESTIGATING
  • Problems, failures, user errors
  • Information collection and evaluation system
    (ICES)
  • Input into Safety Committee

38
E) GASES VAPORS
  • 1. Formaldehyde
  • 2. Ethylene Oxide
  • 3. Waste Anesthetic Gas
  • 4. Glutaraldehyde
  • 5. Xylene

39
ORIENTATION EDUCATION
  • Personnel who use or have contact with hazmat
  • Procedures Precautions
  • Emergency Procedures
  • Spills and exposures
  • Health Hazards
  • Reporting Procedures
  • Spills or exposures

40
EMERGENCY PROCEDURES
  • Spills
  • Chemical
  • Mercury
  • Potentially infectious
  • Chemotherapy
  • Major clean-up operations
  • OSHA Hazardous Waste Operations (HAZWOPR)
  • Fire department

41
EMERGENCY PROCEDURES
  • Radiation Exposure
  • Personal Protective Equipment

42
D) PERFORMANCE MONITORING
  • Examples
  • Waste volume
  • Solid waste
  • Hazardous waste
  • Waste disposal costs
  • Staff knowledge and skill
  • Monitoring of gases vapors
  • Etc.

43
DOCUMENTATION
  • EC.2.3 Implementation
  • Permits
  • Licenses
  • Manifests

44
EC.1.4 EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT
  • Facilities for chemical and radioactive
    decontamination

45
FREQUENTLY 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?

46
H2E IMPACT ONJCAHO COMPLIANCE
47
WASTE 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)

48
CHEMICAL WASTE MINIMIZATION
  • Demonstrated performance improvement
  • Reduced need for
  • Storage
  • Training
  • PPE
  • MSDS

49
CHEMICAL 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

50
MERCURY VIRTUAL ELIMINATION
  • Demonstrated performance improvement
  • Eliminate need for spill clean-up procedure
  • Eliminate specialized disposal
  • Reduce regulatory compliance
  • Worker / patient safety improved

51
THE BOTTOM LINE
  • If you have less to manage. . .
  • Less waste
  • Fewer chemicals
  • No mercury
  • . . .you will streamline your process

52
AND JCAHO WILL HAVE LESS TO QUESTION AND LOOK AT
ON SURVEY!
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