Earning the Gold Seal of Approval from the Joint Commission

Revised September 2022

Complying with the latest regulations will always be a critical priority for healthcare compliance professionals. But earning approval from The Joint Commission, the recognized global leader for health care accreditation, is growing in importance across healthcare organizations, including hospitals, physician group practices, surgery centers, and other treatment facilities. 

This accreditation, known as The Gold Seal of Approval®, acknowledges an organization’s dedication to providing quality care and services to patients. Some states require health care organizations to be accredited by the Commission in order to participate in particular insurance programs.  

If a healthcare organization is accredited by The Joint Commission, it may be deemed to exceed Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS) requirements, along with state law requirements. Additionally, with the public’s attention increasingly focused on becoming informed consumers, earning accreditation also offers organizations a competitive edge.   

Meet the Joint Commission 

The Joint Commission is an independent, not-for-profit organization based in Illinois. Founded more than 65 years ago, the Commission provides an unbiased assessment of a health care organization’s quality achievements in patient care and safety. 

It offers the following accreditation programs: 

  • Ambulatory Care Accreditation 
  • Behavioral Health Care Accreditation 
  • Critical Access Hospital Accreditation 
  • Home Care Accreditation 
  • Hospital Accreditation 
  • Laboratory Services Accreditation 
  • Nursing Care Center Accreditation 
  • Office-Based Surgery Accreditation 

In addition, The Joint Commission offers 20 different certifications for a variety of clinical programs and services. 

Understand the Accreditation Process 

The Commission’s standards set expectations for an organization’s performance that are reasonable, achievable, and measurable. Its on-site surveys are rigorous and are customized for each organization and its efforts to improve patient outcomes. And the start of a survey is usually unannounced. 

During an on-site survey, Commission surveyors perform their evaluation by: 

  1. Tracing the care delivered to patients, residents, or individuals served 
  1. Reviewing the information and documentation provided by the organization 
  1. Observing and interviewing staff and, when appropriate, patients 

The Commission provides a Summary of Survey Findings Report at the conclusion of the on-site survey, with a final accreditation decision made at a later date. Surveyors could recommend: 

  1. Preliminary accreditation 
  1. Accreditation 
  1. Accreditation with follow-up survey 
  1. Preliminary denial of accreditation 
  1. Denial of accreditation 

An organization’s accreditation is continuous as long as it has a full, unannounced survey within 36 months of the previous survey and it meets all accreditation-related requirements. 

Benefits from Accreditation 

The Gold Seal of Approval is a way to let medical professionals, government regulators, and patients know that an organization stands for quality care, and that it’s always seeking ways to identify known or unknown risks to patient safety. 

For example, healthcare organizations that want to participate in Medicare have to be certified to have met specific CMS quality-related standards. If the organization is accredited by The Joint Commission, CMS will have deemed the entity to have met or exceeded these requirements. That means the organization is not subject to Medicare’s survey and certification process because it has already gone through the Commission’s survey process. 

Additionally, being Commission-accredited may allow the organization to be exempt from meeting state law survey or quality or requirements. Here you want to be sure and check your state laws to see if they exempt entities accredited by The Joint Commission. 

In what other ways can an organization benefit from Joint Commission accreditation? 

  • It can earn various Joint Commission certifications for continued improvement and maintaining performance excellence 
  • It can connect with other like-minded organizations to collaborate on issues affecting the quality and safety of patient care 
  • It can attract more qualified personnel who prefer to serve in a prestigious environment 

Earning Accreditation Means Maintaining Compliance 

Earning the Joint Commission’s Gold Seal of Approval depends on a strong culture of compliance. Organizations that are challenged to manage compliance, or effectively demonstrate compliance, are unlikely to meet the Joint Commission’s rigorous standards. (Read more about Compliance Culture on the YouCompli blog.) 

A culture of compliance is a commitment throughout all levels of an organization to do the right thing and do things right.  When an organization has a strong culture of compliance, there is a spillover effect to obtaining and maintaining Commission accreditation.  Employees see their leaders ensuring the organization is maintaining compliance with elevated standards. Additionally, they see their leaders making business decisions based on organizational policy requirements.  The end result is actions being taken that demonstrate leading by example and modeling that behavior to employees. 

The Gold Seal of Approval accreditation is an important acknowledgment of an organization’s dedication to providing quality care and services to patients. The effort to earn this accreditation is certainly significant, but the payoff in terms of reputation, recruiting and deeming status is worth the effort. Not only that, the process of earning accreditation can help you uncover opportunities to further shape your culture of compliance so that a mindset of always doing the right thing permeates all levels of your organization. All of that is good for the long-term health of your business – and your patients.  

The accreditation process requires significant metrics to demonstrate the effectiveness of your compliance program, YouCompli can help you verify that you took the proper steps to comply with the regulations that apply to you. Find out how.  


Jerry Shafran is the founder and CEO of YouCompli. He is a serial entrepreneur who builds on a solid foundation of information technology and network solutions. Jerry launches, manages, and sells software and content solutions that simplify complex work. His innovations enable professionals to focus on their core business priorities.


Never Miss a Compliance Related Article

How to Juggle Medicare and Medicaid Compliance in a Fluid Regulatory Landscape

Do you treat patients insured by Medicaid or Medicare at your hospital? While participation is voluntary for for-profit healthcare systems, accepting Medicaid and Medicare patients is a condition of federal tax exemption for non-profits. Currently, Medicare and Medicaid account for more than 60 percent of care provided by hospitals making it nearly impossible for healthcare systems to forgo these programs.

So, if the stark reality is that you must participate, compliance becomes an issue. And it’s complex. Especially for hospitals that have multiple outpatient locations and inpatient campuses. Under Medicare provider-based rules, it’s not possible to certify just part of the system. When you consider there’s nearly a 500-page certification process, it’s clear that it’s crucial to have effective compliance tracking.

An effective compliance program is multi-faceted and includes monitoring and auditing, legal reviews of procedures and contracts, reporting mechanisms as well as training for employees. Healthcare systems are multi-faceted too with labs, pharmacies, rehabilitation centers, clinics, surgery centers and more. Keeping on top of compliance not only to effectively report but to identify and then prevent misconduct before it balloons into a much bigger problem is anything but easy.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has attempted to streamline information into quarterly updates for providers, suppliers and the public. While this helps curate the information and updates to regulations, management and oversight of compliance and putting these regs into practice represents an enormous task for each healthcare system. The distance between knowing and doing can be vast when providers are juggling regulations alongside providing quality patient care. Maintaining oversight of not just the Medicare and Medicaid federal regulations, but compliance with other state and local regulations is required.

The regulatory landscape continues to be muddled with additional requirements to safeguard privacy and to fight fraud and abuse today. Since governing bodies are vigilant about fighting fraud, your compliance process needs to be tight or you’ll risk criminal charges, fines and even the possibility of losing licenses. Every state has its own Medicaid Fraud Control Unit (MFCU), typically as part of the State Attorney General’s office. When your compliance tracking system is thorough, the auditing process and working with your MFCU becomes simpler.

Streamline Compliance Tracking

If your hospital is juggling Medicare and Medicaid payment compliance along with all the other mandates and reporting requirements, it can easily get overwhelming. But, it doesn’t have to be that way. Solutions such as youCompli’s compliance system monitors and translates Medicare and Medicaid regulations for easier understanding. Then, it helps you track and oversee your hospital’s compliance.

If you’re ready to take the headache out of Medicare and Medicaid compliance, it’s time to see what a compliance management system can do for you. Schedule a call today where you can see how our risk management software can support your healthcare system’s compliance program.

Worker Fatigue and the Potential Negative Impact on Compliance

When workers get fatigued, what is the impact on compliance?

We all know that, during a normal workday, workers can get fatigued. Fatigue can come from a variety of sources, including personal and professional challenges or stressors. Mental fatigue specifically occurs when there is a need to process overwhelming amounts of new data or information.

The impact and stressors of working during a pandemic can make this worse. Mental fatigue is exacerbated because there is so much new information to cull through on a daily (sometimes more frequent) basis. Combine this information overload with rapidly changing pandemic recommendations and guidelines, and it’s no wonder that workers are becoming more fatigued.

Effects of Fatigue

Memory and performance both decline when a person is mentally fatigued, which can lead to non-compliant behaviors and actions. This happens because fatigue decreases the ability to make new, short-term memories. Lack of short-term memories prevents the formation of long-term memory knowledge. And a person simply cannot recall information which has not been transferred to long-term memory. In this way, fatigue decreases the ability to recall information – whether recently learned or already known.

For example, if the organization has not previously billed for telehealth visits, a fatigued coder may not remember the education that was provided regarding telehealth documentation requirements or the codes applied to these visits. Moreover, the coder may have difficulty recalling in-person visit codes or coding modifiers. When these effects of fatigue happen, coding compliance will decrease.

Mental and physical fatigue can affect worker performance in other ways. Think about the last time you did not get a good night’s sleep. At work the next day, all you can think about is drinking more coffee or taking a nap or going to bed early that night.

Signs of this kind of fatigue include decreased awareness or a general decrease in interest with respect to work or job tasks. Other signs of fatigue include changes in judgment or decision-making. Take, for example, an employee who is usually very engaged on the job, but unexpectedly shows up late for a scheduled meeting. During the meeting, the employee is unusually quiet and provides limited feedback. If that employee’s knowledge and feedback are necessary to make a critical compliance-related decision there would be not only a negative effect on compliance, but potentially a negative effect on the entire organization.

Compliance Fatigue

There is also a form of specific compliance fatigue – where people are overwhelmed and wearied by the numerous adherence requirements in healthcare policies and procedures and rules and regulations. This combines with mental fatigue, which inhibits the ability to remember and follow these policies and procedures, which is the cornerstone of good compliance.

Employees may know and understand policies and procedures addressing HIPAA. For example, they must use encryption when emailing protected health information (PHI) or personally identifiable information (PII) or payment card information (PCI). Similarly, in the course of their work, they must exercise heightened caution before clicking on links embedded in emails. If they are experiencing fatigue, the possibility of compliance failures increases.

As physical, mental and compliance fatigue increase the potential for job related mistakes, they conversely decrease worker compliance. The overall impact of worker fatigue can have very real and negative impact on compliance ranging from simple mistakes or lapses in judgment to catastrophic errors related to breach of PHI/PII or PCI.

Practice Tips

Encourage supervisors to regularly meet with their staff to evaluate the level of information fatigue or physical fatigue. If possible, conduct education and feedback sessions to help the team talk through fatigue challenges.

Utilize resources, such as youCompli, to assist the team in staying current with healthcare compliance related changes to guidelines, regulations and laws, and managing compliance-related workflows automatically.

Denise Atwood, RN, JD, CPHRM
District Medical Group (DMG), Inc., Chief Risk Officer and owner of Denise Atwood, PLLC
Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this article or blog are the author’s and do not represent the opinions of DMG.


Denise Atwood, RN, JD, CPHRM has over 30 years of healthcare experience in compliance, risk management, quality, and clinical areas. She is also a published author and educator on risk, compliance, medical-legal and ethics issues. She is currently the Chief Risk Officer and Associate General Counsel at a nonprofit, multispecialty provider group in Phoenix, Arizona and Vice President of the company’s self-insurance captive.  


LTCs Could Use Some Compliance TLC This Year

You can’t say they didn’t warn us.

For almost four years, since November 2016, the LTC Final Rule for qualifying to receive Medicare and Medicaid payments has been looming like a little dark cloud on the horizon, getting bigger and closer each year.

Now, a streamlined version of the HHS Office of Inspector General’s (OIG) recommendations and guidance have become mandatory. And the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is tasked with enforcing them. In full.

To begin with, you’ll need to have a fully detailed, written compliance and ethics program for increasing quality of care and preventing “criminal, civil, and administrative violations” and abuses. Since the OIG recommendations, which you’re familiar with, already cover such programs, that shouldn’t be a huge problem.

You’ll also need to designate your CEO, a board member, an operating division head, or, for smaller LTC facilities, a compliance officer, to be in charge of implementing every aspect of the program. Again, determining which “high-level personnel” to designate shouldn’t be a huge problem either.

Then, you’ll need to actually implement the program and document compliance.

That’s the hard part.

The program will have to include everything from pre-employment screening to person-centered care, special diets, crime and abuse prevention, and a compliance hotline that preserves whistleblowers’ anonymity and prevents retribution.

What’s more, you’ll need to break the program into specific steps and train not only each member of your full- and part-time staff, but also your contractors in the parts of the program that affect their duties.

And then you’ll need to track, audit and report on compliance, every step of the way. Are your current procedures up to the task? Is your IT?

That’s where the TLC comes in.

What if someone could monitor regulatory changes for you, and translate them from legalese into clear business requirements in everyday English?

What if they could give you policies and procedures that comply with the regulations, but that you can tailor to your own facility?

If they could tell you exactly which policies and procedures to follow, which tasks to perform, how, and by whom in your organization, and generate reports on each step towards compliance?

If they gave you the capability to track, audit and report on every step of the compliance process, at any time, with just a few mouse clicks?

Could your LTC use that kind of TLC? If so, click here to learn more.