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Accreditation

Helping clinical services improve quality and safety by highlighting strengths, pinpointing areas for growth, and promoting ongoing development.

The RCP has a long history of driving up high quality care by setting standards against what good practice should look like. The Accreditation Unit at the RCP manages a range of accreditation programmes, with the aim of improving the quality, safety and experience of patients and improving service delivery.

We do this by developing standards with a multi-professional group of clinicians, managers and patients and working to an accreditation pathway which involves self-assessment and improvement against the standards. Accredited services submit evidence annually to demonstrate that they are continuing to meet the standards and have a 5-yearly on-site assessment carried out by our experienced assessment team.

The Accreditation Unit also supports the quality assurance process and certification of endoscopy trainee practitioners.

Within our JAG endoscopy accreditation programme, we support the delivery of high quality and standardised training for endoscopists as well as the endoscopy workforce. We have designed an e-portfolio to allow endoscopy trainees to record their endoscopic experience in order to demonstrate their performance and competence in core endoscopic procedures. In addition JAG oversees the Bowel Cancer Screener Accreditation programme and developed the National Endoscopy Database, which collects live procedure data from endoscopy units across the UK into one central database.

This further supports the delivery of excellent patient care by ensuring endoscopists are continually developing their practice. More information about this can be found on the JAG website.

Why accreditation is essential

Accreditation is a voluntary process for services to engage with. It is a team-led process and acts as an indicator of quality for patients, services, commissioners and the wider community.

Benefits of accreditation include:

  • Raising the profile of a service across the organisation and leveraging support for investment
  • Independently measuring services against national standards and reducing variation
  • The opportunity to showcase the achievements of a service and the quality provided to patients
  • Inspiring services to continue to achieve increasingly high standards
  • Demonstrating a service’s dedication to improvement, patient safety and reducing risk.

Put simply, accreditation means that patients can have increased confidence in their service and be assured of receiving high quality consistent care.

Accreditation is supported by the Care Quality Commission (CQC) and a number of our RCP accreditation programmes have already been recognised as an information source to inform inspections.

Just another example

Inpatient Diabetes

Diabetes Care Accreditation Programme

Endoscopy

Joint Advisory Group on gastrointestinal endoscopy (JAG)

Pulmonary Rehabilitation

Services Accreditation Scheme (PRSAS)

Liver

Improving Quality in Liver Services (IQILS)

Allergy

Improving Quality in Allergy Services (IQAS)

Primary Immunodeficiency

Quality in Primary Immunodeficiency Services accreditation scheme (QPIDS)