Hospital Accreditation Standards: A Case Study from Egypt | ||
The Egyptian Journal of Hospital Medicine | ||
Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available Online from 19 October 2025 PDF (456.65 K) | ||
Document Type: Original Article | ||
DOI: 10.21608/ejhm.2025.428819.1851 | ||
Author | ||
Nailah Amin* | ||
Cairo university | ||
Abstract | ||
Background: The development of hospital accreditation standards is essential for ensuring healthcare quality and patient safety worldwide, Hospital accreditation standards in Egypt have evolved significantly along the years to be more specialized and outcome-driven systems. Objective: To examine Egypt’s hospital accreditation evolution from 2007–2025, and comparing the Ministry of Health and Population (MOHP) and the General Authority for Healthcare Accreditation and Regulations (GAHAR) frameworks. Methods: This study conducted a comparative analysis on Egyptian hospital accreditation standards across five iterations (2007, 2013, 2017, 2021, 2025) using a structured framework. Key parameters included ownership, ISQua accreditation status, chapter structure, standard characteristics, scoring methodology, and accreditation levels Results: GAHAR reduced standards by 66.4%, while expanding chapters (9 to 17), shifting from compliance-based to outcome focused metrics. Scoring transitioned from numerical counts to percentage tiers (e.g., ≥80% compliance). Qualitative improvements included clearer chapter structures and alignment with global benchmarks. The reforms reflect strategic consolidation—prioritizing precision over volume—while maintaining ISQua accreditation. Conclusion: Egypt’s approach mirrors international trends, balancing rigor and practicality to enhance healthcare quality. | ||
Keywords | ||
Egypt; Hospital accreditation standards; Healthcare quality in Egypt; quality in Egypt; Egyptian accreditation; Hospital standards | ||
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