Published on October 15, 2009
Three Rivers Community Hospital earn new hospital accreditation
Three Rivers Community Hospital
(TRCH) has earned full three-year accreditation from DNV
(Det Norske Veritas), the first and only Center for Medicare Services (CMS)
approved hospital accreditation service that surveys annually and integrates
the ISO 9001 quality
methods, considered by many as the most demanding standards for healthcare
performance, with Medicare Conditions of Participation (CoPs).
The CoPs are standards hospitals must meet in order to participate in Medicare
and Medicaid programs.
Rogue Valley Medical Center in
Medford also received DNV three-year accreditation. TRCH and RVMC are the first
hospitals in Oregon to earn DNV accreditation.
"We are very pleased to receive
this very demanding accreditation," said Win Howard, CEO, TRCH. "DNV
holds hospitals to the highest standards of safety and performance, and we are
confident that working with DNV will help us become an even better healthcare
organization."
This accreditation requires an annual
survey and the organization's continual compliance with the DNV Health Care
Accreditation Process.
DNV
uses a revolutionary, cooperative approach that creates new standards of
excellence from the skills, experience and ingenuity that already exist within
the hospital. This means TRCH and RVMC will excel in complying with healthcare
standards and work with DNV to make improvements.
The ISO 9001
standards are a quality management system maintained by the International
Organization for Standardization that is widely used in the manufacturing world
and is now able to be adopted in the healthcare setting. Through the ISO
program, TRCH and RVMC have implemented a framework that provides a general set
of management principles to dictate how it will perform quality control.
"This is the means by which all good
policies and procedures are built," said Howard. "And having DNV on
our team makes all the difference when it comes to patient outcomes."
All hospital accreditation
organizations are independent organizations and accreditation by hospitals is
completely voluntary. There are three hospital accreditation organizations,
with the Joint Commission being the largest. However, Modern Healthcare
magazine reports that many healthcare experts are saying that DNV is, "A refreshing
change to the standard processes now available in the healthcare
industry," and that DNV is actually ahead of other organizations in
meeting the upcoming changes in Medicare standards.
"We have decided upon
accreditation with DNV because we believe it will ultimately improve patient
care," concluded Howard.