Why we accredit facilities
Accreditation ensures quality, competence and safety through conformance to an acknowledged standard. Accreditation can lead to improved quality of service. It also provides formal recognition that the facility meets industry best practices.
Ensuring quality, competence and safety
The DAP is the regulatory accreditation body for polysomnography services in BC. We ensure availability of accreditation services to all diagnostic facilities and apply all policies and procedures in a non-discriminatory manner.
The DAP does not:
- provide competing services
- offer consultancy services
Accreditation scheme
The accreditation scheme employs program specific standards developed by the DAP using international best practices and expert consensus through the program’s advisory committees. Staff and peer assessors with appropriate knowledge of the scope of accreditation are chosen to assess the diagnostic facility to the DAP standards.
Accreditation
An accreditation agreement stating the terms of accreditation must be signed by the diagnostic service medical director as part of each assessment and when there is a change of diagnostic service medical director. The accreditation agreement explicitly states the ºÚÁÏÉç’s expectations of the medical director within the ºÚÁÏÉç Bylaws.
Initial assessments
Facilities require provisional accreditation prior to opening and operating in BC. The provisional accreditation certificate is valid for up to two years. The DAP will reassess the diagnostic service to the full set of applicable standards within one year of the initial assessment.
Full assessments
Diagnostic facilities accredited by the DAP will have an on-site assessment conducted every four years.
Relocation assessments
Accreditation is only valid for the location (physical address) assessed. Relocation of a facility requires application for a relocation assessment. The existing accreditation award is transferred to the new physical address when the assessment standards are successfully met.
Hybrid (peer and staff-based) assessment methodology/node/17988
What assessors do
The use of system and patient tracers allows the diagnostic service’s performance to be assessed as staff conducts their daily work.
The assessors are required to observe and assess the full scope of service that occurs at the facility, including all modalities.
The assessors follow specific assessment protocols that direct their assessment activities. The protocols provide direction to the assessors by outlining what to ask, observe and assess. The use of protocols also assists to increase the objectivity and consistency among assessors. It allows for comments, observations and recommendations to be recorded.
Collaborative assessment model
A collaborative assessment model will be used where facilities have common medical and administrative leadership, including:
- oversight of the quality manual
- safety program, human resource management
- quality management system
Collaborative assessments are used to reduce the duplication of work when multiple facilities under the same medical and administrative leadership are required to provide the same evidence.
Where a collaborative assessment is conducted, a comprehensive assessment to the DAP organizational standards will be conducted at a primary site. Site leaders will attend the assessment to confirm conformance to regional standards in each related facility.