Verifying quality across the house of surgery
The ACS Quality Verification Program (ACS QVP) is based on the Optimal Resources for Surgical Quality and Safety or “Red Book,” the surgical quality how-to manual gleaned from the knowledge of hundreds of surgeon content experts and the ACS’ experience working with the 3,000 hospitals that currently participate in ACS Quality Programs. The Red Book manual establishes an overarching framework to ensure quality resources and infrastructure improve care for all surgical patients at your institution. The ACS Quality Verification Program takes core elements of the Red Book to establish standards and a process for verification that aims to establish a surgical quality program that improves efficiency, care, and value for all surgical patients across all divisions of surgery within the hospital. It is designed to establish a comprehensive surgical quality program at both the hospital level and across hospital systems and networks. Participating hospitals have found this verification process to be essential to establishing and improving their hospitals’ organizational infrastructure for surgical quality.
Twelve standards create the foundation for surgical quality
Twelve salient elements of surgical quality have been adapted from the Red Book manual into standards that form the foundation of the ACS QVP. These standards span all surgical specialties to provide a roadmap for hospitals to build a successful surgical quality program—by establishing, measuring, and continuously improving their hospital’s infrastructure for surgical quality. Standards include detailed resources at both the hospital level and individual specialty level to guide surgical departments broadly and dive deep into surgical quality in each specialty. Communication flow is an overarching theme, up and down from top-level administrators to frontline staff, as well as across specialties to minimize silos of quality.
Ultimately, the ACS QVP improves value for all surgical patients by helping hospitals:
- Find problems; identify opportunities
- Fix problems
- Provide standardized care
- Use meaningful data
Finally, if you were unable to attend the Herand Abcarian Lecture: Quality Leadership and Zero Harm during Congress, we encourage you to watch this session on-demand. The sessions is presented by James W. Fleshman, MD, FACS, professor and chair of surgery, Baylor University Medical Center Dallas, TX, who serves as the vice-chair of the National Accreditation Program for Rectal Cancer and on the Standards Committee for High Risk Gastrointestinal Surgery, and recently led his hospital through an ACS QVP site visit.
For more information about the program, visit The ACS QVP website or ACS Central on the Clinical Congress meeting platform.
Improving surgical quality for older adults
The Geriatric Surgery Verification (GSV) Program aims to improve the quality of geriatric surgical care by creating a system that allows for a prospective match of every older adult’s individual surgical needs with a care environment that has the optimal resources for patients 75 years and older undergoing inpatient surgery. The program will prepare for the influx of older adults considering surgery with care standards that define the resources hospitals need in order to perform operations effectively, efficiently, and safely in this vulnerable population.
The GSV Program is available to all hospitals in the United States, regardless of size, location, or teaching status and offers institutional verification to sites that meet the prescribed standards. There are three levels in which sites can apply: Level 1 Verification–Comprehensive Excellence, Level 2 Verification–Focused Excellence, and Commitment Level. Hospitals seeking Level 1 or Level 2 Verification must demonstrate all 30 GSV standards are in place through a comprehensive site visit. These visits will confirm hospitals comply with the required structure, processes, and standards of care as outlined by the program.
For more information about the program, visit the GSV Program website.