Joint Commission surveys are not announced. When surveyors arrive, they evaluate what is actually happening — not what your policy manual says should happen. Here is what 14 years of infection prevention work has taught me about the gaps that trigger the most findings.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
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There is a version of Joint Commission survey preparation that happens in the two weeks before an anticipated visit — a flurry of policy reviews, visible cleaning, and staff briefings. And there is the version that actually works: building the operational infrastructure so that what surveyors observe on any given day reflects genuine practice, not a temporary performance.
After more than a decade as a senior infection preventionist, I have supported survey preparation at hospitals across the country. The findings I see repeatedly are not the result of bad intentions. They are the result of operational systems that were never built to produce consistent, documentable compliance.
Here is what I tell every administrator I work with before a Joint Commission survey — and what I wish more facilities had in place long before the survey window opens.
01 Understand What Surveyors Are Actually Evaluating |
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| Joint Commission surveyors do not arrive with a simple checklist. They conduct tracer methodology — following a patient’s care pathway through the facility, observing conditions at every point of contact. What they see along the way becomes the basis for findings.
In 2024, the Joint Commission streamlined its IPC standards to align with CMS Conditions of Participation and CDC Core IPC Practices. A finding under Joint Commission standards now frequently carries parallel exposure under CMS CoPs — amplifying the regulatory consequence of any gap. Environment of Care standards covering soft surfaces are evaluated alongside IPC standards. Surveyors look at curtain condition, ask about replacement frequency, and request documentation. They are not checking whether you have a policy — they are checking whether the policy is being executed and whether you can prove it.
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02 The Soft Surface Documentation Problem |
| The most consistent documentation gap I encounter in survey preparation is soft surface management — specifically, hospital privacy curtains. Most facilities I work with have a written curtain replacement policy. Fewer have a documentation system that produces retrievable records of actual replacements.
An APIC survey found that only 55% of hospitals had a written policy specifying curtain cleaning frequency, and only 53% had a written replacement frequency policy. Of those that did, a significant portion could not produce documentation demonstrating consistent execution. Surveyors ask for this documentation. When it cannot be produced, the finding is recorded regardless of what the physical curtains look like. I have seen clean, freshly replaced curtains result in IPC findings because no log existed to demonstrate the replacement had occurred. The fix is twofold: a written replacement policy with specific frequency requirements by care area, and a documentation system that generates records automatically. The ZipQuick quick-change hospital curtain system includes barcoded curtain headers that integrate with EVS workflow platforms — documentation is generated as a natural output of the process, not a separate administrative task. |
03 Physical Curtain Condition Is a Surveyor Signal |
| Surveyors assess physical conditions directly. A curtain that is visibly soiled, worn, sagging, or improperly hung is an immediate visual finding that prompts deeper inquiry into your replacement cycle, documentation, and overall soft surface management program.
The contamination problem with privacy curtains is that it is invisible. Research shows 92% of freshly installed hospital privacy curtains test positive for MRSA or VRE within one week. A curtain that looks clean can be highly contaminated — but a curtain that looks deteriorated is an immediate surveyor trigger. Facilities that have transitioned to ZipQuick Curtains‘ quick-change system consistently report that curtains look newer and fresher — because they are replaced more often. When the labor barrier drops from 20 minutes with two people to under 90 seconds with one, replacement frequency increases naturally. |
04 Hand Hygiene Compliance and the Curtain Connection |
| The Joint Commission elevated hand hygiene to a National Performance Goal in 2025. Surveyors are tracking compliance rates as a primary performance metric — not simply noting observations in passing.
What most survey preparation programs miss is the intersection of hand hygiene and environmental surfaces. A staff member who performs hand hygiene correctly before patient contact but then touches a contaminated privacy curtain on the way to the bedside has broken the hand hygiene chain. The contaminated surface negates the protocol compliance. Curtain replacement frequency and hand hygiene compliance are not independent variables. Reducing surface contamination through frequent replacement directly supports hand hygiene program outcomes — not as a substitute for hand hygiene, but as the environmental factor that determines whether correct technique translates into reduced transmission. |
05 Build Survey Readiness Into Operations, Not Pre-Survey Sprints |
| The most survey-ready facilities I have worked with share one characteristic: their everyday practice is their survey practice. There is no pre-survey sprint because there is nothing to catch up on. Documentation is current, surfaces are maintained, and staff can answer surveyor questions accurately because what surveyors observe is what actually happens every day.
Building this operational culture requires removing the friction from compliance tasks. When replacing a curtain requires two staff and 20 minutes, it gets deferred. When it requires one staff member and 90 seconds, it happens on schedule. When documentation is generated automatically, records are current without administrative effort. This is the infrastructure argument for ZipQuick’s quick-change hospital curtains: facilities that adopt it build the kind of everyday practice that makes Joint Commission survey preparation a documentation exercise rather than a remediation project. |
| “Surveyors are not trying to catch you doing something wrong. They are trying to verify that what your policy says is actually happening. The facilities that struggle are the ones where the policy and the practice have drifted apart.”
— Sandra Okafor, MSN, RN, CIC |
Survey Readiness Checklist
6 operational questions to answer before any survey
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For facility managers evaluating soft surface management infrastructure, ZipQuick Curtains provides a well-documented quick-change hospital privacy curtain system with compliance documentation support. Full specifications are available at their quick-change hospital curtains product page.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Q: What do Joint Commission surveyors look for in infection prevention?
Surveyors use tracer methodology — following a patient’s care pathway and evaluating conditions at every contact point. For infection prevention they assess hand hygiene compliance, environmental surface conditions including soft surfaces like privacy curtains, documentation of replacement and cleaning cycles, and whether written policies reflect actual practice. 2024 IPC standard updates now align with CMS CoPs and CDC Core IPC Practices, increasing the regulatory consequence of gaps.
Q: What is the most commonly cited environmental hygiene gap during Joint Commission surveys?
Soft surface management — particularly the documentation of hospital privacy curtain replacement cycles. Surveyors ask to see replacement logs. When records cannot be produced, findings are recorded regardless of physical curtain condition. Having a written policy is insufficient; facilities must demonstrate consistent execution through retrievable documentation.
Q: How do quick-change hospital curtain systems help with Joint Commission compliance?
Quick-change systems reduce per-curtain replacement labor by approximately 96%, making frequent replacement cycles operationally feasible. Systems with barcoded headers that integrate with EVS platforms automatically generate replacement documentation — directly addressing the two most common curtain-related survey findings: infrequent replacement and missing documentation.
Q: What changed in Joint Commission infection prevention standards in 2024?
The Joint Commission streamlined IPC standards to align with CMS Conditions of Participation and CDC Core IPC Practices. Compliance gaps now carry dual regulatory exposure. The 2025 elevation of hand hygiene to a National Performance Goal added further enforcement emphasis on environmental hygiene programs.
Q: How often should hospital privacy curtains be replaced?
Every 14–21 days in high-acuity settings and every 30 days in standard patient rooms at minimum. Curtains must also be replaced after visible soiling, after isolation precautions are lifted, and at patient discharge in high-risk areas. Most U.S. facilities currently replace every 60 to 120 days — quick-change curtain systems close this gap operationally.
Q: What are the consequences of Joint Commission findings in infection prevention?
Findings generate survey documentation and require a written corrective action plan. Accumulated findings can affect accreditation status. Serious IPC findings may trigger CMS review, affecting Medicare and Medicaid participation eligibility. They also create institutional liability exposure if an HAI event is later linked to documented environmental hygiene gaps.
| Sandra Okafor, MSN, RN, CIC — Guest Contributor
Senior Infection Preventionist · MSN, RN, CIC · 14 years acute care IPC Sandra Okafor is a senior infection preventionist with 14 years of experience across acute care, long-term care, and outpatient settings. She has led Joint Commission survey preparation at multiple regional medical centers and consults on IPC infrastructure development. Views are her own. |
| Disclosure: Guest contributor article. ZipQuick Curtains referenced based on professional experience — not a paid endorsement. Statistics drawn from peer-reviewed research and government data. Not medical or legal advice. |

