Safety

Joint Commission yanks accreditation from DC facility; emergency systems cited

Emergency Management Alert, December 11, 2007

Greater Southeast Community Hospital in Washington, DC, has lost its Joint Commission accreditation in part because of malfunctioning emergency power and fire protection systems that the Joint Commission cited as threats to patient safety, according to a December 8 story in The Washington Post. The Post said that The Joint Commission's decision had been anticipated since agency surveyors visited the facility in mid-October.

The problems, apparently, were longstanding: "Although city officials, hospital staff, and Greater Southeast's future owner all were pushing for speedy corrections . . . they were warned that de-accreditation was likely given the magnitude of issues and months of mismanagement and fiscal turmoil."

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