What JCI Accreditation Actually Is
Joint Commission International (JCI) is the international arm of the US-based Joint Commission — the largest accreditor of US hospitals. JCI accredits healthcare organisations outside the United States against standardised criteria covering:
- International Patient Safety Goals (correct patient identification, effective communication, medication safety, surgical site verification, infection control, fall prevention).
- Access to care and continuity of care.
- Patient and family rights and education.
- Assessment and care of patients.
- Anaesthesia and surgical care.
- Medication management and use.
- Prevention and control of infections.
- Governance, leadership, and direction.
- Facility management and safety.
- Staff qualifications and education.
- Management of information.
A JCI survey is a multi-day on-site evaluation by trained international surveyors. Accreditation is awarded for three years, at which point the hospital must re-earn it through a new survey. The standards are updated periodically as international patient-safety consensus evolves.
Why JCI Accreditation Matters for Medical Tourism
If you are selecting a hospital in Bangkok, Istanbul, Mexico City or São Paulo, most of the normal proxies you would use at home (reputation, doctor recommendations, a GP referral network) are unavailable or difficult to calibrate. JCI gives you a cross-border benchmark that has the same meaning in every country.
Specifically, JCI-accredited hospitals have demonstrably better baseline systems for:
- Surgical-site infection prevention — specific protocols, monitoring, antibiotic prophylaxis timing.
- Medication safety — drug reconciliation, high-alert medication controls, look-alike/sound-alike protocols.
- Identification of patients before procedures, medications and transfusions.
- Surgical site marking and timeout protocols to prevent wrong-site surgery.
- Infection control including hand hygiene audits and antimicrobial stewardship.
- Emergency management and ICU quality standards.
JCI accreditation raises the probability that the systems around your surgery are reliable. It does not speak directly to the individual surgeon’s skill. You still need to vet the surgeon independently.
How to Verify JCI Accreditation
- Go to jointcommissioninternational.org.
- Navigate to “Who is Accredited” (the public searchable directory).
- Search by country, city, or organisation name.
- Confirm the hospital is listed with a current accreditation status — not an expired one.
Do not rely on logos on clinic marketing. Accreditation can lapse; some providers continue to display old logos. Always verify directly on the JCI public directory. The same applies to ISO, Qmentum, ONA and national accreditations.
Other Credible Accreditations
| Scheme | Scope | Credibility |
|---|---|---|
| JCI | International hospitals/clinics | Highest international recognition |
| Qmentum International | International (Accreditation Canada) | Strong |
| DNV GL International | International hospitals | Strong |
| ISO 9001 | General quality management | Generic; not healthcare-specific |
| ISO 15189 | Medical laboratories | Strong for labs specifically |
| ONA (Brazil) | National Brazilian scheme | Credible; tiered levels 1–3 |
| COHSASA | Sub-Saharan Africa | Credible regional |
| HA (Thailand) | National Thai scheme | Credible at top hospitals |
| MSQH (Malaysia) | National Malaysian scheme | Credible |
| NABH (India) | National Indian scheme | Credible at leading chains |
| CSG (Mexico) | National Mexican scheme | Credible at certified hospitals |
ISO 9001 is meaningful but generic. A hospital that lists only “ISO certified” without a healthcare-specific accreditation is making a weaker claim than it sounds.
Limitations of Accreditation
- Accreditation is a system-level signal, not a surgeon-level signal. The best-accredited hospital can still host an average surgeon and vice versa.
- Accreditation is a snapshot. It happens every 3 years; things can change in between.
- Some clinics operate next to an accredited hospital but are not themselves accredited. Patients have been misled on this point.
- National accreditation schemes vary in rigour. Not all country programs are equivalent.
Why Accreditation Alone Isn’t Enough
Even at a JCI-accredited hospital with a qualified surgeon, complications happen. They happen at every hospital in the world. What accreditation does is reduce the probability and improve the facility’s ability to manage a complication when it occurs. But the financial consequences of that complication — hospitalisation, ICU, revision, evacuation, follow-up at home — are still on you unless you have specific cover in place.
Standard travel insurance and your national or private health plan do not cover elective procedures abroad or their complications. Medical travel complication insurance is the specific category built for this gap.
Picking a JCI-accredited hospital is step one. Putting medical travel complication insurance in place before you travel is step two. Both raise your safety floor.
Get Your Quote Ask AvaFrequently Asked Questions
What is JCI accreditation?
Joint Commission International accredits hospitals outside the US against standardised international patient-safety criteria. Three-year cycle.
Why does it matter for medical tourism?
It’s the most internationally-recognised cross-border safety benchmark. Raises the floor on facility-level safety systems.
How do I verify it?
Go to jointcommissioninternational.org and search the public directory by country/city/name. Don’t rely on clinic logos.
Are other accreditations credible?
Qmentum International, DNV GL, national schemes (ONA, HA, MSQH, NABH, CSG) — generally yes, at top hospitals. Generic ISO 9001 is weaker.
Does accreditation guarantee a good outcome?
No. It raises the floor; it does not guarantee the ceiling. Vet the surgeon independently and get complication insurance.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical, insurance or financial advice. Accreditation status should be verified directly with the accrediting organisation.
Related reading: How to Vet a Medical Tourism Facility · How to Find a Reputable Surgeon Abroad · Is Medical Tourism Safe? · Medical Tourism Risks · Medical Tourism Statistics 2026 · Best Countries for Surgery Abroad · Medical Tourism Checklist