If you are unable to see the message below,
click here to view.
The Joint Commission is placing increased emphasis on the importance of oral care. In a recent blog post, Trina Crow, RN, MJ, associate project director at The Joint Commission, wrote that the long-term care facilities need to pursue oral care policies more intently. Along with tooth and gum disease, poor oral care is linked to pneumonia and endocarditis (an infection of the heart's inner lining). |
| Briefings on Accreditation and Quality 2016 has been a year of big changes; some unexpected, some you saw coming miles away. To help you find what you need, here’s our annual index of all this year’s BOAQ articles. We hope you find this helpful in the upcoming year and we look forward to keeping you up to date on all things accreditation and quality. We’ve included links as well
Marketing Spotlight Date: Tuesday, February 7, 1:00-2:30 p.m. EST Presented by: Kimberly Roaten, PhD, CRC Celeste Johnson, DNP, APRN, PMH CNS Level of Program: Intermediate Summary: Suicides were the third most common sentinel event of 2015. Universal screening is the best strategy to identify patients in general healthcare settings whose suicide risk would otherwise go undetected. This webinar will take a case study approach to bring to light proven methods to reduce patient suicide. Join Parkland Health and Hospital System expert speakers Kimberly Roaten, PhD, CRC, and Celeste Johnson, DNP, APRN, PMH CNS, as they explain how Parkland became the first in the nation to establish a universal suicide screening program in all its departments. Parkland was recognized in Sentinel Event Alert 56 for making significant progress in suicide prevention. Roaten and Johnson will discuss processes for implementation, strategies to obtain support, universal screening data, and lessons learned from implementation. At the conclusion of this program, participants will be able to: Discuss the process for implementation of a hospitalwide suicide screening protocol Describe strategies for obtaining nursing and physician stakeholder support for universal suicide screening Describe the prevalence data collected from the first two years of a universal screening program Apply lessons learned from the implementation of the program in a large hospital system Sign up today!
Editor's Picks February 2, 2016
Is All of Your Team In The Know? Our weekly e-newsletters can keep your team abreast of up-to-date industry information; including expert analysis where you need it most. Subscribe to any -- or all -- of our e-newsletters. |
|
Sponsor this Newsletter | For advertising opportunities in this or other HCPro email newsletters, please contact adsales@hcpro.com or call 207-747-4812. |
|
DISCLAIMER Advice given is general, and readers should consult professional counsel for specific legal, ethical, or clinical questions. Users of this service should consult attorneys who are familiar with federal and state health laws. HCPro is not affiliated in any way with The Joint Commission, which owns the JCAHO and Joint Commission trademarks, the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, which owns the ACGME trademark, or the Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health Care (AAAHC). If you prefer not to receive this email newsletter, you can unsubscribe here
Copyright 2017 HCPro |
|
| |
|