Requirements for laboratory accreditation are contained in the Comprehensive Accreditation Manual for Laboratory and Point-of-Care Testing. The standards emphasize the results a laboratory should achieve, not the specific methods of compliance, and were developed with input from professional laboratory organizations. In compliance with CLIA regulations, Joint Commission standards address processes that follow specimens through the laboratory from the time of collection to the time of result reporting, focusing on the provision of high quality, safe laboratory services.
The Joint Commission’s accreditation process concentrates on operational systems critical to the safety and quality of patient care. Surveys are conducted by Joint Commission-employed medical technologists. Surveyors must have a master’s degree, certification from the American Society for Clinical Pathology (ASCP), clinical work experience in three or more technical specialty areas of laboratory medicine, and five years of laboratory management experience. Full-time surveyors conduct up to 70 laboratory surveys annually. Pathologist surveyors are available by request.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) officially recognizes The Joint Commission Laboratory Accreditation program as meeting the requirements of CLIA. CLIA regulations require that all laboratories be surveyed on a two-year cycle. CLIA regulations also require an on-site survey or inspection by an approved agency such as The Joint Commission, for all tests of moderate or high complexity.
The main categories of laboratory testing, as defined by CLIA regulation, are:
Joint Commission standards and CLIA regulations require that a laboratory be enrolled in a CMS-approved proficiency testing program for all regulated tests conducted by the laboratory. CLIA requires that a laboratory’s proficiency testing results be monitored on an ongoing basis by The Joint Commission. The Joint Commission will contact the laboratory to request a Plan of Action if unsuccessful proficiency testing has been identified for a regulated analyte. The Joint Commission receives unsuccessful proficiency test data via an electronic link with CMS.
The on-site survey fee is paid at the end of the on-site survey and covers survey-related direct costs. The on-site survey fee starts at $2,575 for one surveyor per day. The additional annual fee, which is based on an organization’s volume and type of services provided, is due every January and covers Joint Commission accreditation-related services. The annual fee starts at $1,700 and increases based on the number of CLIA specialties, subspecialties, and locations for which testing is performed.
Leading Laboratories is a unique designation exclusively for Joint Commission-accredited laboratories that want to elevate and increase visibility of the collaborative work of the medical laboratory team among clinical colleagues, hospital leadership, and patients.
The program, developed in collaboration with the American Society for Clinical Pathology (ASCP), is the gold standard for laboratory excellence and provides visible and public recognition of a laboratory’s meaningful achievements in improving patient outcomes. Visit our webpage to learn more.