Tried and true survey readiness

Jennifer Ann Yang, MPP, CHC, CPHQ (jennifer.yang@state.mn.us) is the Deputy Chief Compliance Officer at the Minnesota Department of Human Services in St. Paul, MN.

Serving as the compliance officer for a psychiatric hospital, which was under a Systems Improvement Agreement (SIA) with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) in the past two years, I had the opportunity to develop and implement a survey readiness framework to assist the facility in preparing for two unannounced, full Medicare certification surveys. With extensive pressure and a tight timeline of approximately six months, the survey readiness team went through a journey of major obstacles and challenges, but nevertheless succeeded.

In this article, I will share the survey readiness framework and provide practical tools and examples. With this framework, the facility successfully completed the SIA requirement of passing both surveys without any condition-level findings. Although this framework focuses on CMS Conditions of Participation (CoPs), other regulatory/accreditation standards can be applied to the framework.

Survey readiness is based on two parts: survey preparation (the year-round efforts prior to survey) and survey performance (the facility’s use of resources and response during the survey). Survey preparation depends largely on strong organizational skills and using practical project tools to move teams toward being in compliance and maintaining compliance. Leadership must build a culture that fully accepts and operates on being prepared for a survey 365 days of the year. Staff performance is critical during the week of survey. During this week, the facility must use resources and skills in the most optimal manner. The facility’s survey results will depend largely on how effectively and quickly staff respond to surveyors’ requests, and how knowledgeable and skilled staff are in navigating surveyors through patient charts and answering questions and concerns.

This document is only available to members. Please log in or become a member.


Would you like to read this entire article?

If you already subscribe to this publication, just log in. If not, let us send you an email with a link that will allow you to read the entire article for free. Just complete the following form.

* required field