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Physician Joint Commission Compliance

Physician Joint Commission Compliance. IDENTIFICATION BADGE. ALWAYS, ALWAYS wear your ID Your ID defines your role and access to certain systems and locations Keep key contact info with your ID. GENERAL DOCUMENTATION. Handwriting is legible Sign, date and time all entries.

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Physician Joint Commission Compliance

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  1. Physician Joint Commission Compliance

  2. IDENTIFICATION BADGE • ALWAYS, ALWAYS wear your ID • Your ID defines your role and access to certain systems and locations • Keep key contact info with your ID

  3. GENERAL DOCUMENTATION • Handwriting is legible • Sign, date and time all entries

  4. Patient Involvement • Encourage the active involvement of patients and their families in the patient’s own care as a patient safety strategy • Educate patients and families on methods available to report concerns related to care, treatment, services and patient safety issues

  5. History and Physical • H&Ps are complete • All patients must have a H&P within 24 hours of admission • If an H&P is > 24 hrs but less than 30 days an interval update is acceptable • Interval updates must address any and all significant changes – USE THE FORM • If > 30 days must have new H&P

  6. Pain Assessment • Appropriate to the patient’s condition & treatment • Includes: • Nature • Location • Duration • Severity • Reassessment after intervention (nursing)

  7. National Patient Safety Goal Medication Reconciliation • On admission: MD • List pre-admission medications on the first (white) page of med recon form; this serves as the medication section of the H&P • Reconcile on the third (pink) page – state whether each home med will be continued or not continued • Surgical patients admitted to hospital on day of surgery • List pre-admission medications on med recon form in clinic • Reconcile (pink page) at the time admit med orders are written (PACU) • On admission: RN • Review home meds with patient, alert MD of any discrepancy • Verify the CPOE orders match the reconciled list, alert MD if not consistent

  8. National Patient Safety Goal Medication Reconciliation • On Discharge: • MD provides instructions for discharge meds on first (white) page • RN reviews med recon form and discharge Rx with patient • Patient is given white copy of med recon form and pink copy of discharge Rx form

  9. Medication Orders • Requirements • Write legibly (for non-CPOE) • RNs and/or pharmacy must clarify the order, embrace requests for clarification • PRN orders require a reason and range clarification • Avoid therapeutic duplication of orders • Distinguish between types of medication and when to use

  10. Medication Orders • Write your own orders • Understand the limitation of NP and PA ordering privileges. RNs cannot write orders • Verbal orders require • RN to write the order • RN to read back the order • Provider must confirm the accuracy of read back • Must be signed off within 48 hours; any physician of the treating team may sign off

  11. Restraints • Requires a reason which is behavioral • Requires face-to-face evaluation by MD • Must be time limited, never more than 24 hours • Type of restraint should be specified • Use CPOE restraint order set, assures compliance

  12. Diagnostic Testing • Requirements: • Test, side/site, • Clinical condition being studied • Any specific instructions • e.g. mammogram - palpable right breast mass

  13. Informed Consent • A discussion of risks and benefits as well as a signed consent is required • Consent form promotes compliance • Require date and time on the physician signature

  14. Sedation & Anesthesia • Moderate sedation requires a specific DOP (delineation of privileges) • Minimum requirements: • Assessment of heart and lungs • Airway assessment • Family/patient history of anesthesia/sedation complications • Plan for Sedation/Anesthesia • CRNA’s plan must be approved by anesthesiologist

  15. Sedation Documentation Tool

  16. Pre-Procedure Assessment

  17. Universal Protocol(Site Marking) • MUST be done for procedures with laterality, multiple structures, levels, even orifice with side • MUST involve the patient, if possible • MUST be unambiguous (no ‘x’, use initials) • MUST be visible when prepped and draped • DO NOT mark a non-operative site • SHOULD be performed by the person performing the procedure

  18. Universal Protocol(Time Out) • Requirements • Immediately prior to any surgery or invasive procedure • Always includes procedure & patient ID • Includes side/site and availability of diagnostic studies or special equipment (if applicable), including implantable items • Includes bedside procedures, bronchoscopy, IR procedures

  19. Safe Use of Medications • Label all medications on and off the sterile field • Drug name, strength & amount • Normal saline (even in a basin) and contrast are medications • Even if there’s only one medication in the field • Many standard kits include pre-labeled syringes

  20. Physician DocumentationPost Procedure • Requires post anesthesia or sedation note • Brief post op note written, in addition to any dictated note • Post op orders • Medication reconciliation for same day and same day admit surgeries/procedures

  21. National Patient Safety Goal Patient Identification • Requirements • Two patient identifiers prior to medication, blood, diagnostic study, procedure, treatment • Patient Name – ask them to say their name, if conscious (don’t offer their name and wait for a ‘yes’) • Medical Record # (DOB is the second choice in areas without arm bands) • Confirm both prior to entering orders

  22. National Patient Safety Goal Hand Offs • Requirements • Patient handoffs must contain standard elements, including: diagnosis, current condition, what to watch for in next interval of care • Opportunity to clarify & ask question • Contact information (pgr #) • Update who to call

  23. Document Critical Results • If a nurse phones you with the critical test results (or Radiology or Laboratory call directly), repeat back the critical result to the caller. If you’re on the unit, document the result in the chart. • Document what actions you took based on the critical result. When you document the critical result, date, time and sign your entry.

  24. Infection Control • Requirements • No food/drink in the OR and in other patient care areas • Limited use of papers and lap top computers • Adherence to standard based and transmission precautions • TB screening and Fit testing annually

  25. National Patient Safety Goal Hand Hygiene • Requirements • Alcohol-based hand gel between patients • Wash hands, soap and water, for at least 15 seconds when visibly soiled or caring for a patient on C.difficile precautions • No artificial finger nails (includes tips and wraps) for direct caregivers; polish must be intact

  26. National Patient Safety Goal Unacceptable Abbreviations • DO NOT USE • U • IU • QD • QOD • Trailing zero • MS • MgSO4 • Requirements • Spell out “units”, “daily”, “morphine sulfate”, etc. • Use a leading zero (0.1 mg), but not a trailing zero (5 mg)

  27. Suicide Risk • Suicide is the #11 cause of death in the US (#3 in young people) • Suicide in 24-hr facilities is the #1 sentinel event reported to Joint Commission • We must • Identify patients at risk for suicide • Address immediate safety needs, provide for a safe environment • Provide info (crisis hotline) to individuals and their families for crisis situations

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