The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations.
The hospital I do my nursing school rotations at just got visited by JCHAO because of alot of complaints from the community AND from nurses and doctors that work there. They came in and did a HUGE evaluation and the hospital CEO was just given a vote of no-confidence, and like 18 ER doctors walked off and had to be replaced with Dr's from a temp staffing agency! -- also, this is a town with ONLY two hospitals and a huge migrant worker, native american, lower income population. The hospital that I'm talking about was basically the 'community' hospital out of the 2.
At any rate--if they're with JCHAO, file a complaint with them.
http://www.jcaho.org/http://www.jcaho.org/general+public/public+input/report+a+complaint/report+a+complaint.htmReport a complaint about a Health Care Organization
Do you have a complaint about the quality of care at a Joint Commission-accredited health care organization? The Joint Commission wants to know about it. Send us your complaint by mail, fax or e-mail. Summarize the issues in one to two pages and include the name, street address, city, and state of the health care organization.
When submitting a complaint to the Joint Commission about an accredited organization, you may either provide your name and contact information or submit your complaint anonymously. Providing your name and contact information enables the Joint Commission to inform you about the actions taken in response to your complaint, and also to contact you should additional information be needed.
It is our policy to treat your name as confidential information and not to disclose it to any other party. However, it may be necessary to share the complaint with the subject organization in the course of a complaint investigation.
Joint Commission policy forbids accredited organizations from taking retaliatory actions against employees for having reported quality of care concerns to the Joint Commission.
E-Mail:
complaint@jcaho.org
Fax:
Office of Quality Monitoring
(630) 792-5636
Print a Quality Incident Report Form
Mail:
Office of Quality Monitoring
Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations
One Renaissance Boulevard
Oakbrook Terrace, IL 60181
Print a Quality Incident Report Form
If you have questions about how to file your complaint, you may contact the Joint Commission at this toll free U.S. telephone number, 8:30 to 5 p.m., Central Time, weekdays.
(800) 994-6610
Scope Of Complaint Evaluations
Complaint information is used to strengthen the oversight activities of the Joint Commission and improve the quality of care in accredited facilities. The Joint Commission addresses all complaints that relate to quality of care issues within the scope of our standards. These include issues such as patient rights, care of patients, safety, infection control, medication use and security.
The Joint Commission does not address individual billing issues and payment disputes. Also, we do not have jurisdiction in labor relations issues or the individual clinical management of a patient. The Joint Commission does not review complaints of any kind in unaccredited organizations.
How The Joint Commission Responds To Complaints
The Joint Commission encourages you to first bring your complaint to the attention of the health care organization's leaders. If this does not lead to resolution, bring your complaint to us for review.
The Joint Commission's response to a complaint begins with a review of past complaints about the organization, if any, and the organization's accreditation survey report. Depending on the nature of the complaint, the Joint Commission will take one or more of the following actions:
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Where serious concerns have been raised about patient safety or standards compliance, the Joint Commission will conduct an unannounced, on-site evaluation of the organization.
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The Joint Commission may ask the health care organization to provide a written response to the complaint.
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The Joint Commission may incorporate the complaint in the quality monitoring database that is used to continuously track the performance of health care organizations over time.
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The Joint Commission may review the complaint at the time of the health care organization's next scheduled accreditation survey if it is scheduled in the near future.
For more information about how the Joint Commission analyzes and follows up on complaints, see the Quality Incident Review Criteria.
Release Of Complaint-Related Information
Upon request, the Office of Quality Monitoring provides the number of complaints an organization has had and the category by contacting (800) 994-6610. In addition, if an on-site review of an organization results in a change of accreditation status to conditional or preliminary denial of accreditation, these changes will be reflected in the organization's Quality Report, available in Quality Check on this website or by calling the Customer Service Center at (630) 792-5800.
After the Joint Commission completes its review of a complaint, we inform the complainant of the actions we have taken if contact information has been provided.
File a complaint with your State's Health Board
File a complaint with the Nursing Supervisor with the hospital (since the nurses were complicit in the error)
File a complaint with the NURSING LICENSING BOARD --- errors like this are (in some cases) grounds to have professional licenses temporarily OR permanently suspended.
File a complaint with the head of the Emergency Room and whoever the "head" doctor is there.
What happened to your dad was completely unacceptable and the textbook model my professors use in what SHOULD NEVER happen in a hospital (or other health-care) setting.
Because your dad was old and having breathing problems, one of the BIGGEST things that you look for in the elderly is disorientation--one of the hallmark signs of other bad things (from pneumonia, lack of O2, bleeding problems---a plethora of things). Since you were there, they should have DEMANDED you be there with him and to verify all the information he gave.
In the ER setting I worked in, if there was someone else with the patient, they were CONTINUOUSLY asked things like "Do you know if they're allergic to anything?" in ADDITION to asking the patient.
What they did was beyond sloppy and just pure neglegent. I'm very disappointed to hear about that, and it really gives the profession a super bad name. There are alot of compitent nurses and doctors out there who are NOT willing to cut corners or take the easy way out, and it's a shame that WE are blighted because of these completely avoidable and unexcusable actions on the part of bad practitioners.
Good luck. You need to take actions with regards to this. There are licensing boards (nursing, medical) who NEED to know this. The hospital NEEDS to know about this. The state NEEDS to know about this. JCHAO NEEDS to know about this.
Good luck, and keep us informed