WASHINGTON – Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley is pressing the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) for answers about hospital accrediting organizations’ access to patient mistreatment complaint databases.
According to Grassley’s oversight work, it appears that accrediting organizations do not have access to the “Immediate Jeopardy and High Priority” cases in CMS’ Automated Survey Processing Environment (ASPEN) database and ASPEN Complaints/Incidents Tracking System (ACTS).
“I have written several letters about the effectiveness of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and accrediting organizations, such as The Joint Commission, in preventing and addressing complaints about the mistreatment of patients at hospitals and similar facilities,” Grassley wrote.
Grassley is seeking confirmation that accrediting organizations do not have access to ASPEN and ACTS, and if that is the case, why are they prevented from accessing information that may aid them in the process of accrediting hospitals.
The letter can be found here