Tokyo Adventist Hospital has obtained certification from Joint Commission International (JCI), an organization that evaluates healthcare facilities globally.
JCI assesses medical institutions using international benchmarks, striving for ongoing enhancements in care quality and patient welfare.
The hospital remains dedicated to upholding a system that ensures patients receive medical treatment with unprecedented reassurance.
Tokyo Adventist Hospital has undergone an assessment to maintain a system that ensures patients receive medical treatment with even greater peace of mind while elevating the standard of medical care. The audit preparation spanned multiple years.
The JCI audit necessitated several years of preparation, leading to the establishment of the JCI Secretariat and the Quality Control Office.
The entire staff, under the guidance of the Secretariat, Quality Control Office, and department heads designated for JCI audits, collaborated seamlessly to “enhance the quality of health care for our patients!” The collective endeavor has been directed towards achieving this goal. The focus has been on achieving JCI accreditation.
The objective extends beyond acquiring JCI certification; it’s about progressing and evolving to continually deliver improved medical care to patients.
Rather than fixating solely on JCI accreditation, Tokyo Adventist Hospital aims for growth to consistently provide superior medical care. The team views this certification, not as an endpoint, but as a fresh beginning.
This certification, to the hospital team, symbolizes not a culmination but a new commencement. Its commitment remains unwavering to serve every patient in line with the ethos of “caring for each individual with the compassion of Christ for the restoration of both, mind, and body.”
Tokyo Adventist Hospital will persistently strive to enhance patient safety and medical care quality, reflecting its aforementioned philosophy, which guides the endeavors to persist in improving patient safety and medical care quality.
The original version of this story was posted on the Northern Asia-Pacific Division website.