The Joint Commission’s decision to eliminate more than 700 redundant accreditation standards is one of the most meaningful compliance updates healthcare organizations have seen in years.
While the headline number is attention-grabbing, the deeper implication matters more. This shift reflects a broader recalibration of how healthcare compliance should function in a modern, high-risk, high-pressure environment. For hospital HR leaders, compliance teams, and credentialing professionals, it reinforces an important truth. Effective compliance is not about volume. It is about clarity, accountability, and real-world impact.
A Clear Move Toward Smarter Compliance
The Joint Commission’s Accreditation 360 overhaul focused on identifying standards that were duplicative, overlapping in intent, or creating unnecessary documentation without improving patient safety. The result is a streamlined framework that preserves rigor while removing administrative noise.
This is not a rollback of expectations. Healthcare organizations are still responsible for maintaining strong compliance programs, demonstrating patient safety controls, and remaining survey-ready. What has changed is how those expectations are structured and evaluated.
For healthcare HR and compliance teams, this is an important signal. Regulatory bodies are acknowledging what hospitals have long experienced on the ground. Redundancy does not equal safety, and excessive documentation does not automatically reduce risk.
Why This Matters for Hospitals and Health Systems
Reducing redundant standards creates meaningful downstream impact across healthcare operations.
First, it reduces administrative burden. When the same controls no longer need to be documented multiple ways, teams can spend less time chasing paperwork and more time focusing on workforce integrity and patient safety.
Second, it creates clearer compliance expectations. Concise, distinct standards make it easier for organizations to interpret requirements, prioritize risk, and align internal policies. This clarity supports stronger decision-making across HR, compliance, credentialing, and vendor management teams.
Third, it signals modernization. Healthcare delivery models, staffing structures, and vendor ecosystems have evolved rapidly. Compliance frameworks must evolve alongside them. This update reflects a growing recognition that static, outdated approaches to risk management no longer align with how hospitals actually operate.
The Growing Risk Gap: Non-Employee Access and Outdated Screening
At the same time compliance frameworks are becoming more streamlined, healthcare organizations are facing a growing exposure that traditional processes were not designed to address.
Non-employee risk continues to expand. Vendors, contractors, travelers, students, and temporary staff move in and out of hospitals daily. Many organizations still rely on point-in-time background checks and credentialing processes that provide only a snapshot of risk.
Static screening creates blind spots. A background check completed months or years ago does not account for new criminal activity, license changes, or compliance violations that may occur after access is granted. In a regulated healthcare environment, those gaps matter.
That is why more health systems are exploring continuous monitoring and real-time compliance solutions. These tools help organizations maintain ongoing visibility into workforce and vendor risk without adding manual work or administrative complexity.
Compliance Is Evolving, and Internal Processes Should Too
One of the most overlooked consequences of regulatory change is over-compliance. Even when standards are removed or consolidated, internal policies and audit tools often remain unchanged. Teams continue to document retired requirements simply because “that’s how it’s always been done.”
The Joint Commission’s update creates an opportunity for healthcare organizations to reassess how compliance is operationalized.
This includes reviewing internal policies built around outdated standards, evaluating whether credentialing and background screening practices still align with current risk, and educating operational leaders so simplification is embraced rather than resisted.
In many cases, organizations may discover they are already meeting expectations, just through processes that can now be streamlined.
The Bigger Picture for Healthcare HR and Compliance Leaders
This change sets an important precedent. Effective compliance is not about checking more boxes. It is about understanding intent, managing real risk, and supporting safe care delivery without unnecessary friction.
For HR leaders, credentialing professionals, and compliance teams, the message is clear. Modern compliance should work with healthcare operations, not against them.
As technology, workforce models, and regulatory expectations continue to evolve, hospitals that modernize how they screen, monitor, and manage access will be better positioned to reduce risk, improve survey readiness, and protect their patients and people.
Go Deeper with Emmanuel Amaro’s Full Analysis
This article builds on insights from Emmanuel Amaro, UBS Regulatory Affairs Leader, who recently published a detailed analysis of the Joint Commission’s decision and what it means for healthcare organizations navigating compliance modernization.
For a deeper dive into what changed, what did not, and how healthcare leaders should respond, we encourage you to read Emmanuel’s full article and subscribe to his updates for ongoing perspective on regulatory trends shaping healthcare compliance.
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