Governance Sustainability amp Global Citizenship Report Cleveland Clinic
Governance Sustainability & Global Citizenship Report Cleveland Clinic COVID-19 INFO Coming to a Cleveland Clinic location?
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Chief Integrity Officer Compliance committees provide additional support in fulfilling duties and oversight responsibilities and include the Corporate Compliance Committee, 14 regional hospital compliance committees, nearly 30 institute and division compliance committees and the Research Compliance Committee. Ensuring patient privacy and data security is paramount to providing our patients the highest quality care. To this end, we instituted the Privacy Office in 2003 under the Office of Corporate Compliance & Business Ethics to guarantee enterprise-wide integration of HIPAA regulations into our culture and procedures. The Office of Corporate Compliance & Business Ethics and the Cybersecurity Department collaborate to evaluate our compliance program on an ongoing basis, proactively implementing changes to address the evolution of technology and its application in the healthcare sector. One outcome of this partnership includes the Electronic Data Stewardship program, designed to prevent data loss and identify fraud, and to offer advanced malware protection. We encourage our growing number of patients and caregivers to contact the Office of Corporate Compliance & Business Ethics directly with questions and concerns related to privacy and ethics or through anonymous email accounts and hotlines. In 2020, Corporate Compliance investigated 1,890 reported compliance concerns, compared to 2,232 inquires in 2019 and 1,608 inquiries in 2018. The number of reported concerns each year is a positive reflection on the effectiveness and communication of the Cleveland Clinic compliance program. Cleveland Clinic has a culture of compliance, where caregivers know they can speak up and have their concerns appropriately addressed. Over the past several years, Cleveland Clinic developed and regularly tested its plan to address a sudden surge of patients, whether due to terrorist activities or a pandemic. As a result, Cleveland Clinic was able to quickly expand its number of beds from 3,400 to over 8,000, and had sufficient supplies of PPE on hand to protect caregivers during 2020 surges of the COVID-19 pandemic. Cleveland Clinic leadership also played a significant role in supporting and advising national and State of Ohio leadership on appropriate actions to be taken. Human Rights & Labor Standards
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Governance
Cleveland Clinic is committed to upholding its reputation of honesty and integrity. Regardless of title or position, all caregivers are required to comply with the laws, regulations, standards and policies that govern their daily job responsibilities. We uphold ethical standards at the highest level and provide caregivers with training and resources to guide them in making the right decisions for patients, one another and our organization. Contact Our Office Overview Awards Memberships Transparency & Anti-Corruption Conflict of Interest Human Rights & Labor Standards OverviewOverview
The Cleveland Clinic Foundation is an Ohio nonprofit corporation whose mission is caring for life, researching for health and educating those who serve. The Cleveland Clinic Foundation is the direct or indirect parent (or the "sole member" or "sole regular member") of each affiliate within the Cleveland Clinic Health System (CCHS), other than Ashtabula County Medical Center and Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi, both of which the Cleveland Clinic provides management services pursuant to agreements. Each of the various corporate entities that comprise CCHS has its own board of directors/trustees and officers. Cleveland Clinic governs the CCHS through direct representation on such boards, reserved powers and other governance controls via its Members, a Board of Directors and a Board of Governors. The Cleveland Clinic Board of Directors is the primary governing body for CCHS and is charged with the fiduciary duty to act on behalf of Cleveland Clinic. Directors are elected to four-year terms and selected for their expertise and experience in a variety of areas beneficial to Cleveland Clinic and CCHS. Directors who are not Cleveland Clinic employees are not compensated for their services, and a majority are required to be independent. Within the Board of Directors, the Governance Committee nominates new Directors, who then become Members if they are confirmed by a vote by the Board. When a Director's four-year term has concluded, the Governance Committee completes an evaluation to determine whether the Director should be re-nominated. Any Director may voluntarily resign from active service and request appointment as an Emeritus Trustee. The Cleveland Clinic Board of Trustees serves the Board of Directors in an advisory capacity. Like Directors, Trustees who are not employed by Cleveland Clinic do not receive compensation and are selected for their expertise and experience, including community service. Existing voting Members elect new Members, who must possess specific qualifications specified in Cleveland Clinic's Code of Regulations. Only Members serving as Directors of Cleveland Clinic have voting rights. The voting Members meet once or more per year to elect new Directors to the Board of Directors, consider and adopt amendments to governing documents and to address other matters as appropriate. The Board of Directors has the following committees: Audit, Board Policy, Compensation, Conflict of Interest and Managing Innovations, Finance, Governance, Medical Staff Appointment, Philanthropy and Technology. The Governance Committee nominates individuals annually to serve as Directors of Cleveland Clinic and periodically elects individuals to serve as Trustees of Cleveland Clinic. When evaluating Director and Trustee candidates for nomination, the Governance Committee considers business/professional expertise, independence, judgment, skill, diversity and civic involvement. A Board of Directors governs each Ohio and Florida regional hospital and delegates certain responsibilities and duties to an Executive Committee. Additionally, most Regional Hospitals have a Board of Trustees to assist in overseeing quality, safety, patient experience, credentialing, community engagement and hospital leadership evaluation issues, subject to final approval by its respective Regional Hospital Board of Directors. The Chair of the Cleveland Clinic Board of Directors holds the highest Board position but is not an executive officer, employee or staff member of Cleveland Clinic. As of May 2021, there are 29 members of the Cleveland Clinic Board of Directors, which includes three senior members of the Cleveland Clinic Board of Governors, ten female Directors (including the Board Chair), two African-American Directors, two Asian Directors and one Hispanic Director. According to Cleveland Clinic's Board Independence Policy, a majority of the Board of Directors must be independent. Under this Policy, a Director cannot be considered independent if he or she is employed by the Cleveland Clinic, receives compensation from the Cleveland Clinic or serves as director or executive officer of an entity that receives more than 1% of its gross revenues from Cleveland Clinic. Additionally, a Director's status as independent must be ratified by the Governance Committee, which considers the advice and guidance of the Chief Governance Officer, the recommendations of the Board's Conflict of Interest and Managing Innovations Committee and all relevant facts and circumstances in accordance with the Board Independence Policy. Presently the Board of Directors has 24 independent Directors. AwardsAwards
In 2020, Cleveland Clinic was recognized for excellence across several disciplines, including but not limited to clinical care, innovation, diversity, ethics, supply chain and environmental initiatives. View the full list of awards MembershipsMemberships
Cleveland Clinic is a member of the following organizations: American Association of Medical Colleges American Clinical Laboratories Association American College of Physicians American Hospital Association American Medical Group Association Association for Community Health Improvement Association of American Medical Colleges Association of Health System Pharmacies Center for Health Affairs Greater Cleveland Health Association Greater Cleveland Partnership Health Management Academy Healthcare Leadership Council Leadership Cleveland National Quality Forum OHA Environmental Leadership Council Ohio Hospital Association Ohio Minority Supplier Development Council Practice Greenhealth Research!America. Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) Society of Black Academic Surgeons (SBAS) US Green Building Council Through our participation in these boards and committees, we share best practices with other member organizations, recruit talent and take collective action to improve public health and advance healthcare policies. In doing so, member organizations, including Cleveland Clinic, benefit from their lobbying activities by extension. We also encourage our physicians and researchers to become members of organizations relevant to their areas of expertise. Transparency & Anti-CorruptionTransparency & Anti-Corruption
Cleveland Clinic's Chief Integrity Officer reports directly to the Board of Directors and oversees the audit and compliance programs focused on risk management, regulatory compliance, business ethics and internal controls for the health system, as well as dotted line responsibility for cybersecurity. Responsibilities of the Chief Integrity Officer include annually developing audit and compliance programs based on conducting annual audit and compliance risk assessments, conducting fraud detection audits, evaluating background check procedures performed by Protective Services, operating an anonymous whistle-blowing hotline and ensuring all caregivers complete annual compliance training. The Chief Integrity Officer also supervises the Internal Audit Department and Corporate Compliance Department to ensure compliance with federal, state and local laws and regulations. Our anti-corruption risk analysis includes the entire Cleveland Clinic healthcare system. We require all caregivers to review the Code of Conduct policies and procedures as part of the onboarding process. Additionally, caregivers can access the Code of Conduct at any time via our caregiver intranet. Following an investigation, caregivers found to have committed fraud are subject to disciplinary action, including termination and prosecution. Our commitment to transparency supports our ability to innovate, attract and retain talent, drive value throughout our value chain and deliver the highest quality of care. Through industry benchmarks, this report, email communications, social media platforms, our intranet site and a variety of other communication channels, we strive to provide timely and relevant information to patients, caregivers and communities. For example, during the height of the 2020 spring surge of the COVID-19 pandemic, our CEO provided daily communications to our caregivers and the community. Senior management also met weekly with the Board of Directors' Governance Committee to provide updates on issues and actions taken. Conflict of InterestConflict of Interest
The Office of Corporate Compliance & Business Ethics ensures caregivers, contractors and vendors understand and act in full compliance with applicable federal, state and local laws, regulations, policies and ethical standards. Cleveland Clinic offers comprehensive compliance training to establish expectations across the organization. All caregivers complete mandatory online compliance training annually and receive regular compliance highlights by newsletter. The Office of Corporate Compliance & Business Ethics provides in-person education sessions to all institutes each year, all new financial managers and at all regional annual board meetings. Additionally, the Office of Corporate Compliance & Business Ethics has their own intranet page accessible to all caregivers that contains compliance news, educational materials and training resources. Educational offerings include monthly corporate compliance education sessions, quarterly administrative compliance meetings, research compliance program meetings, research orientations and monthly clinical research roundtables. In 2020, the Ethisphere Institute named Cleveland Clinic one of the World's Most Ethical Companies for its strong ethics and compliance programs. The 2020 list included 132 organizations from 21 countries and 51 industries. Cleveland Clinic was one of only five healthcare providers to make list, and 2020 marked the tenth year we have received this honor."Being independently recognized as one of the World's Most Ethical Companies for ten years is significant because employees want to work for ethical organizations, patients want to be seen by ethical medical professionals, vendors want to do business with ethical partners and communities want to know that their tax dollars are being used in an ethical manner. Doing the right thing is a core value." – Donald A. Sinko, CPA, CRMA
Chief Integrity Officer Compliance committees provide additional support in fulfilling duties and oversight responsibilities and include the Corporate Compliance Committee, 14 regional hospital compliance committees, nearly 30 institute and division compliance committees and the Research Compliance Committee. Ensuring patient privacy and data security is paramount to providing our patients the highest quality care. To this end, we instituted the Privacy Office in 2003 under the Office of Corporate Compliance & Business Ethics to guarantee enterprise-wide integration of HIPAA regulations into our culture and procedures. The Office of Corporate Compliance & Business Ethics and the Cybersecurity Department collaborate to evaluate our compliance program on an ongoing basis, proactively implementing changes to address the evolution of technology and its application in the healthcare sector. One outcome of this partnership includes the Electronic Data Stewardship program, designed to prevent data loss and identify fraud, and to offer advanced malware protection. We encourage our growing number of patients and caregivers to contact the Office of Corporate Compliance & Business Ethics directly with questions and concerns related to privacy and ethics or through anonymous email accounts and hotlines. In 2020, Corporate Compliance investigated 1,890 reported compliance concerns, compared to 2,232 inquires in 2019 and 1,608 inquiries in 2018. The number of reported concerns each year is a positive reflection on the effectiveness and communication of the Cleveland Clinic compliance program. Cleveland Clinic has a culture of compliance, where caregivers know they can speak up and have their concerns appropriately addressed. Over the past several years, Cleveland Clinic developed and regularly tested its plan to address a sudden surge of patients, whether due to terrorist activities or a pandemic. As a result, Cleveland Clinic was able to quickly expand its number of beds from 3,400 to over 8,000, and had sufficient supplies of PPE on hand to protect caregivers during 2020 surges of the COVID-19 pandemic. Cleveland Clinic leadership also played a significant role in supporting and advising national and State of Ohio leadership on appropriate actions to be taken. Human Rights & Labor Standards