Biomed Middle East

ISO Certification for Hospitals

HOSPITALS, QUALITY AND ISO

Delivering the right care at the right time in the right setting is the core mission of hospitals. This can be achieved only by quality. Ensuring the safety of patients and hospital care providers and improving quality of patient care have become important objectives for health systems.

The Dictionary provides numerous definitions for the word Quality. One short definition of quality is “customer satisfaction and loyalty”. “Fitness for use” is an alternative short definition.

Until the late 19th century hospitals were not a place where health was created, but rather, a place to die. But now, there is rapid improvement with the development of aseptic and antiseptic techniques, more effective anesthesia, greater surgical knowledge and skills, trauma techniques, blood transfusion, coronary artery bypass surgery, effective pharmaceuticals, transplantation techniques and minimal invasive surgery has called for quality management system in the hospitals. All organizations periodically need a companywide assessment of quality. This involves quality control programme i.e. planning, control and implementing. For hospital quality control, audits are carried, internal audits and external audits. Some Organisations which carry external audits are:

Most of the modern Hospitals are ISO certified. 

ISO’s declared mission is to be the leading value-adding platform and partner for the production of globally and market-relevant international standards, covering product specifications, services, test methods, conformity assessment, management and organizational practices.

Certification applicable for hospitals is ISO 9001:2000. Hospitals get certified in order to identify, define, document, implement (follow), monitor/measure, and continually improve the effectiveness of their patient care processes. 

For hospitals, ISO 9001 means identifying the elements in clinical and administrative practices that contribute to desirable outcomes, documenting those elements and instituting them as standard practice. Some examples include improved communication among staff members, revisions to policies to reflect best practice, standardization of forms used for documentation of patient care activities, and detection of problem-prone issues.

The website of International Standards Organization (www.iso.org) on ISO certification for hospitals Healthcare Quality Management through the Application of ISO 9001 states that using the ISO family of standards, the organization can establish a comprehensive Quality / Business Management System which:

 The Structure of the ISO 9001:2000 Standard comprises of eight Clauses. The first three are introductory in nature. The subsequent five clauses include the requirements the healthcare organization must address. They are as follows:

Clause 4 – Quality Management System

Clause 5 – Management Responsibility

Clause 6 – Resource Management

Clause 7 – Product / Service Realization

Clause 8 – Measurement, Analysis, and Improvement

GETTING AN ISO CERTIFICATION:

DOCUMENTATION REQUIREMENTS:

Each organization should develop the minimum amount of documentation needed in order to demonstrate the effective planning, operation and control of its processes and the implementation and continual improvement of the effectiveness of its QMS. ISO 9001 requires a “documented QMS” and not a “system of documents”.

 DOCUMENTS REQUIRED:

 References:

       www.iso.org official website of ISO

       www.qualityimprovementwithiso.htm

       www.wikipedia.com

       www.mscertification.org

                      

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