Research
appears in May issue of Joint Commission
Journal on Quality and Patient Safety
Accredited nursing homes report a
stronger resident safety culture than
nonaccredited facilities, according to a new
study published in the May 2012 issue of The
Joint Commission Journal on Quality and
Patient Safety.
The study shows that senior
managers at more than 4,000 facilities
across the U.S. identify Joint Commission
accreditation as a positive influence on
patient safety issues such as staffing,
teamwork, training, nonpunitive responses to
mistakes, and communication openness. The
findings that accreditation stimulates
positive changes in safety-related
organizational structures and processes are
significant, given that few studies have
examined the impact of Joint Commission
accreditation in nursing homes.
The lead author of the study –
Laura M. Wagner, Ph.D., R.N., an assistant
professor at the New York University College
of Nursing at the Hartford Institute for
Geriatric Nursing – notes that the research
is “both timely and of great importance”
given that senior managers, such as the
nursing home administrators and directors of
nursing who were surveyed, can greatly
influence the culture of an organization.
“It has been suggested that the
process of sustaining the level of standards
compliance required for accreditation can
create a safety-oriented culture within a
facility, and our results appear to support
this contention,” says Wagner. “Although
there are costs associated with
accreditation, these findings suggest that
the benefits of voluntary accreditation may
ultimately outweigh the extra costs. “
This is the second study by Wagner
and her co-authors, Shawna M. McDonald,
M.Sc., and Nicholas G. Castle, Ph.D., that
demonstrates the benefits of Joint
Commission accreditation for long term care
organizations and their residents. The
article “Impact of Voluntary Accreditation
on Deficiency Citations in U.S. Nursing
Homes,” which appeared in the March 5 issue
of the journal The Gerontologist showed that
Joint Commission accredited long term care
facilities had fewer survey deficiency
citations than nonaccredited facilities. A
forthcoming study by Wagner and her
co-authors to be published in the journal
Policy, Politics & Nursing Practice
shows that Joint Commission accredited long
term care organizations also had better
resident outcomes which continued to improve
over time. The article will appear online
April 25.
The Joint Commission Journal on
Quality and Patient Safety, published
monthly by Joint Commission Resources,
features peer-reviewed research and case
studies on improving quality and safety in
health care organizations. For more
information, please visit www.jcrinc.com.