Preparing for the Future: What the Joint Commission’s New National Performance Goals Mean for Hospitals

Starting January 1, 2026, a significant shift is coming to healthcare standards. The Joint Commission’s new National Performance Goals will officially take effect, and for the first time, staffing will be recognized as a defined standard of care. 

This landmark change reflects a growing recognition that staffing is not just an operational concern; it’s a critical component of patient safety and care quality.   

What’s Changing? 

According to The Joint Commission: “The hospital is staffed to meet the needs of the patients it serves, and staff are competent to provide safe, quality care.” 

This means hospitals and health systems will be held accountable not just for having staff present, but for ensuring the right number of people, with the right skills and competencies, are in place to meet patient needs safely and effectively. 

What does this mean for your hospital? 

 

  • Staffing becomes a patient safety metric: It will now directly influence accreditation status and care outcomes. 
  • Skill mix and competency matter: Headcount alone is no longer sufficient for organizations to demonstrate that their workforce is capable and appropriately skilled. 
  • Workforce alignment is essential: It’s not just about coverage; it’s about matching staff capabilities to patient needs in real time.  

For hospitals, this shift represents both a challenge and an opportunity. Highly proactive organizations will position themselves well for the future.  It calls for a strategic reassessment of workforce planning, including: 

  • Evaluating current staffing models and identifying gaps in competency. 
  • Investing in training and professional development to ensure staff readiness. 
  • Leveraging data and technology to align staffing with patient acuity and demand. 

How HealthLinx Supports Compliance with the Joint Commission’s 2026 Staffing Standards:  

Nursing Excellence & Workforce Transformation 
  • RN engagement 
  • Patient satisfaction 
  • Quality and safety metrics (NSIs) 
  • Benchmarking against high-performance standards in pursuit of role model performance
    These align with the Joint Commission’s emphasis on staffing as a patient safety metric 
Expert Transitional, Interim, and Project Management Leadership 
  • Nurse executives to develop and deploy tailored department and organization specific staffing plans 
  • Department leaders to stabilize and optimize team performance 
  • Support for transitions and vacancies that could impact care quality 
Data-Driven Planning and Execution: Through proprietary tools and project management expertise, HealthLinx helps hospitals: 
  • Assess, Plan, and Execute upon deliverables to achieve optimal performance 
  • Analyze and benchmark to identify gaps in staffing and skill mix 
  • Align workforce with patient acuity and patient volume demand 
  • Ensure performance improvements over time 

Preparing for 2026: Strategic Questions to Ask 

  • Is your nursing leadership equipped to direct staffing strategy? 
  • Are your staffing models aligned with patient acuity and service needs? 
  • Do you have systems in place to measure competency and outcomes? 

This is more than a regulatory update; it’s a call to action for every healthcare leader to prioritize staffing as a cornerstone of clinical excellence. 

Hospitals that proactively adapt to these standards will not only meet compliance requirements, they’ll also be better positioned to deliver safer, more effective care and improve patient outcomes. 

Don’t wait until the joint commission comes knocking- contact HealthLinx today to speak with one of our team members who specialize in identifying leadership gaps and opportunities. 

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