What are standards?
The standards, published in the Accreditation
Handbook for Ambulatory Health Care, describe organizational
characteristics that AAAHC believes are essential to high-quality
patient care. They relate to such areas as quality of care and
quality management and improvement, clinical records, surgical and
pharmaceutical services, environmental safety, governance,
administration, and professional development.
The standards have been devloped over a period of
more than 20 years by individuals presenting the highest levels of
achievement in clinical practice and health care management. The
standards are by definition dynamic and changing as medicine and health
care change to reflect the highest levels of care.
Who decides whether an
organization is accredited?
Before accreditation is awarded, an
organization participates in a thorough multi-step evaluation
process. The basic elements of the process are a self-assessment
completed by the organization itself and an on-site survey conducted by
a team of physicians, health care managers, and other health
professionals who actively practice in organizations similar to those
AAAHC surveys. All surveyors are volunteers, serving without pay
because they believe in promoting high-quality ambulatory health care.
The AAAHC Accreditation committee - another
volunteer group of health care professionals - renders the final
accreditation decision based on the surveyors' findings and other
information gathered during the survey process. Accreditation may
be awarded for either six months, one or three years, depending on the
level of compliance with the standards.