Joint Commission Nixes 1-Year Implant Surveillance Requirement

The Joint Commission announced it has changed the surgical site infection surveillance requirement for surgical procedures with an implant to align with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s revised requirement.

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Element of performance 5 of the National Patient Safety Goal on surgical site infection prevention no longer requires providers to measure SSIs for surgical procedures involving an implant one year after the procedure. Instead, providers must measure SSIs for only the first 30 or 90 days following these procedures.

The Joint Commission placed a moratorium on scoring noncompliance for the surveillance requirement in February due to CDC’s new definition of the surveillance period. The Joint Commission requirement is now formally revised.

More Articles on The Joint Commission:

Joint Commission Certification Decisions Revised: Certified or Not Certified
Joint Commission Offers Reducing Readmissions Consulting Service
Recognize National Time Out Day, Curb Surgical Mistakes, says Joint Commission

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