The Joint Commission’s 4 National Patient Safety Goals for ambulatory healthcare

The Joint Commission released its 2018 Ambulatory Health Care National Patient Safety Goals.

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The organization has four main goals for ambulatory healthcare with a number of specialized goals related to each.

1. Identifying patients correctly

  • NPSG.01.01.01 — The Joint Commission recommends using two methods to identify a patient to ensure every patient receives correct medicine and treatment.
  • NPSG.01.03.01 — Ensure patients receive the correct blood in a transfusion.

2. Use medicines safely

  • NPSG.03.04.01 — Label unlabeled medicines and do this where medicines are stored.
  • NPSG.03.05.01 — Pay careful attention to patients who take blood thinning medicines.
  • NPSG.03.06.01 — Properly inform patients about their new medications, ensuring a patient knows what medicines to take when they get home. Encourage a patient to bring a list of up-to-date medicines every time they visit a physician.

3. Prevent infection

  • NPSG.07.01.01 — Use hand cleaning guidelines from the CDC or World Health Organization. Use goals to improve hand cleaning.
  • NPSG.07.05.01 — Follow guidelines aimed at preventing infection after surgery.

4. Prevent mistakes in surgery

  • UP.01.01.01 — Ensure each surgery is performed on the right patient, on the correct body part.
  • UP.01.02.01 — Mark where the surgery should be done.
  • UP.01.03.01 — Take a moment before surgery to ensure a mistake isn’t being made.

More articles on quality:
More than half of healthcare organizations see ROIs of 10%+ on telemedicine platforms
Common deficiencies AAAASF cites & how to fix them — continuing discussion on keeping up with documentation
Jeopardizing patient safety in ambulatory settings: Clinician stress, burnout

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