1. Discovery and accreditation scope
Implementation starts by understanding the hospital's accreditation target, current maturity, departments, services, locations, ownership structure, and readiness pain points.
- Confirm NABH, JCI, mid-cycle, entry-level, full-cycle, or local standard scope.
- Identify leadership sponsor, quality owner, department coordinators, and operational users.
- Review current readiness status, recent audit findings, CAPA backlog, and documentation baseline.
2. Standards mapping and readiness model
AccredAI maps standards to departments, owners, evidence expectations, audit checkpoints, and readiness signals. This becomes the operating model for continuous accreditation work.
- NABH objective elements or JCI-style measurable elements are structured into actionable workflows.
- Departments and owners are assigned so accountability is visible.
- Evidence, CAPA, mock audit, and leadership views are connected to the same readiness model.
3. Team setup and role configuration
The platform is configured for the way the hospital actually operates. Quality teams, department heads, nursing leaders, committee owners, and leadership users receive views aligned with their responsibilities.
- Set user roles, departments, services, and escalation paths.
- Define who can upload, review, approve, and monitor evidence and CAPA actions.
- Configure leadership visibility for readiness scores, risk trends, and closure confidence.
4. SOP, evidence, and CAPA baseline
Existing SOPs, policies, audit findings, committee notes, and evidence records are brought into a structured baseline. The goal is not to upload files for storage; the goal is to connect proof to standards and owners.
- Map SOPs and evidence to the relevant accreditation requirements.
- Identify missing, stale, weak, or unreviewed evidence.
- Convert known gaps into owned CAPA actions with timelines and proof requirements.
5. Activate mock audits and continuous monitoring
Once the baseline is in place, teams move into working rhythm: daily gap visibility, mock audit preparation, CAPA follow-up, evidence review, and leadership reporting.
- Run mock audit or internal audit workflows against priority areas.
- Track overdue CAPA, weak evidence, repeated gaps, and department readiness.
- Use leadership dashboards to review risks, bottlenecks, and progress to accreditation milestones.
6. Training, handover, and go-live
Go-live is not just technical activation. It is the point at which quality teams and department owners can use AccredAI as part of their normal readiness rhythm.
- Train quality teams on control room, evidence, CAPA, mock audit, and leadership views.
- Train department users on ownership, evidence updates, and closure expectations.
- Agree on weekly review cadence and readiness reporting rhythm.
A typical AccredAI rollout aims to make accreditation visible, owned, and repeatable within 2-4 weeks.
Integration stance: standalone first, meaningful integration later
AccredAI does not require HIS, HMS, EMR, or EHR integration to begin. Most accreditation readiness work depends first on standards mapping, ownership, evidence quality, audits, CAPA closure, and leadership visibility.
Integrations can be considered where they create clear accreditation value, reliable data flow, and a meaningful implementation case. This avoids forcing accreditation work to depend on clinical or billing systems before the readiness operating model is proven.