Criminal Background Checks - Requirements
What is the Joint Commission requirement for criminal background checks and for which type of individual must it be performed?
Any examples are for illustrative purposes only.
Staff, students and volunteers who work in the same capacity as staff who provide care, treatment, and services, would be expected to have criminal background checks verified when required by law and regulation and organization policy. This means that if state law, regulation or organization policy requires background checks on all employees, volunteers and students, Joint Commission expects them to be done on all three categories.
If state law requires background checks on only specified types of health care providers (e.g. nursing assistants/child care workers), then Joint Commission would require background checks on only those specified in state law (unless organization policy goes beyond state law). If state law requires background checks on all "employees", the organization should seek an opinion from the state on what categories of health care workers are considered "employees". If the state clearly does not consider volunteers or students to be employees, then Joint Commission would not require background checks on them (unless organization policy goes beyond state law and requires it).
If state law is ambiguous as to the definition of employee, the organization can define the scope of background checks to fit its own definition. As such, they may include or exclude students and volunteers, and Joint Commission would survey to organization's policy. In the absence of a state law on criminal background checks, each organization can develop its own expectations, e.g., an organization elects to screen employees and not students/volunteers. Joint Commission would evaluate compliance with the organization's internal policy only. There would be no Joint Commission expectation that an organization check categories of providers beyond what is required in their own policy, which must comply with law and regulation. All criminal background checks must be documented by the organization.
Staff, students and volunteers who work in the same capacity as staff who provide care, treatment, and services, would be expected to have criminal background checks verified when required by law and regulation and organization policy. This means that if state law, regulation or organization policy requires background checks on all employees, volunteers and students, Joint Commission expects them to be done on all three categories.
If state law requires background checks on only specified types of health care providers (e.g. nursing assistants/child care workers), then Joint Commission would require background checks on only those specified in state law (unless organization policy goes beyond state law). If state law requires background checks on all "employees", the organization should seek an opinion from the state on what categories of health care workers are considered "employees". If the state clearly does not consider volunteers or students to be employees, then Joint Commission would not require background checks on them (unless organization policy goes beyond state law and requires it).
If state law is ambiguous as to the definition of employee, the organization can define the scope of background checks to fit its own definition. As such, they may include or exclude students and volunteers, and Joint Commission would survey to organization's policy. In the absence of a state law on criminal background checks, each organization can develop its own expectations, e.g., an organization elects to screen employees and not students/volunteers. Joint Commission would evaluate compliance with the organization's internal policy only. There would be no Joint Commission expectation that an organization check categories of providers beyond what is required in their own policy, which must comply with law and regulation. All criminal background checks must be documented by the organization.
Manual:
Laboratory
Chapter:
Human Resources HR
Last reviewed by Standards Interpretation: April 27, 2022
Represents the most recent date that the FAQ was reviewed (e.g. annual review).
First published date: April 11, 2016
This Standards FAQ was first published on this date.
This page was last updated on April 27, 2022
with update notes of: Review only, FAQ is current
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