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HRSA Readiness: How Community Health Centers Can Prepare for a Successful Operational Site Visit

July 12, 2026info@qualitypeersolutions.com

Community Health Centers (CHCs) and Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) operate in one of the most highly regulated healthcare environments in the United States. In addition to providing comprehensive, accessible, and high-quality care to underserved populations, health centers must continually demonstrate compliance with the requirements established by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA).

An HRSA Operational Site Visit (OSV) is not simply an inspection—it is a comprehensive evaluation of an organization’s governance, clinical operations, quality improvement program, financial management, credentialing, risk management, and compliance with the Health Center Program Requirements.

Organizations that treat HRSA readiness as a year-round process rather than a once-every-three-years event consistently achieve stronger survey outcomes, reduce organizational risk, and improve patient care.

What Is an HRSA Operational Site Visit?

The Operational Site Visit is HRSA’s formal process for determining whether a health center complies with the 19 Health Center Program Requirements and other applicable federal regulations.

During the site visit, HRSA reviewers evaluate documentation, interview leadership and staff, review patient records, assess governance, and verify that policies and practices align with federal requirements.

The review typically includes:

  • Governance and Board Oversight
  • Clinical Services
  • Quality Improvement and Quality Assurance
  • Risk Management
  • Credentialing and Privileging
  • Clinical Workforce
  • Financial Management
  • Sliding Fee Discount Program
  • Patient Records
  • Contracts and Referral Arrangements
  • Program Data Reporting
  • Patient Safety
  • Compliance Program
  • Performance Improvement Activities

Every area of the organization contributes to survey success.

HRSA Readiness Is More Than Documentation

One of the most common misconceptions is that passing an HRSA survey simply requires organized binders and policies.

Documentation is important—but surveyors focus equally on implementation.

For example, organizations should be able to demonstrate:

  • Policies are current and consistently followed.
  • Staff understand organizational procedures.
  • Clinical documentation supports quality care.
  • Quality improvement activities result in measurable improvements.
  • Governing boards actively oversee organizational performance.
  • Credentialing and privileging processes are consistently implemented.
  • Provider performance is routinely evaluated.

Surveyors frequently compare written policies with actual practice.

Common HRSA Readiness Gaps

Even high-performing health centers often encounter recurring challenges.

Provider Peer Review

Many organizations maintain peer review policies but lack evidence that reviews are:

  • Independent
  • Specialty-specific
  • Objective
  • Conducted on schedule
  • Used to improve provider performance

External peer review can strengthen objectivity while reducing potential conflicts of interest, particularly in smaller organizations where providers work closely together.

OPPE and FPPE

Organizations should demonstrate ongoing provider performance monitoring through:

  • Ongoing Professional Practice Evaluation (OPPE)
  • Focused Professional Practice Evaluation (FPPE)

Reviews should include measurable quality indicators, documentation quality, adherence to evidence-based guidelines, patient safety considerations, communication, and professionalism.

Surveyors often request examples showing how performance concerns were identified and addressed.

Credentialing and Privileging

Credentialing files should include complete documentation supporting:

  • Primary source verification
  • Current licensure
  • Board certification (when applicable)
  • Professional references
  • Peer recommendations
  • Privileging decisions
  • Governing board approval

Missing documentation is one of the most frequently identified deficiencies.

Clinical Documentation

Medical records should consistently support:

  • Appropriate diagnoses
  • Medical necessity
  • Evidence-based treatment
  • Medication management
  • Preventive services
  • Follow-up care
  • Patient education
  • Continuity of care

Documentation should clearly reflect clinical decision-making rather than relying on templated language alone.

The Importance of Independent External Peer Review

Independent external peer review has become an increasingly valuable component of HRSA readiness.

Unlike internal reviews, external peer review provides:

  • Specialty-matched reviewers
  • Objective clinical assessment
  • Conflict-of-interest protection
  • Standardized evaluation methodology
  • Evidence-based recommendations
  • Defensible documentation

External reviewers can also identify opportunities for improvement before they become findings during an Operational Site Visit.

Building a Year-Round Readiness Program

Successful organizations avoid preparing only when an HRSA survey is announced.

Instead, they establish ongoing readiness activities throughout the year.

A comprehensive readiness program typically includes:

Quarterly Activities

  • OPPE reviews
  • Medical record audits
  • Peer review
  • Credentialing audits
  • Policy review
  • Quality metric monitoring

Semiannual Activities

  • Mock HRSA surveys
  • Department readiness assessments
  • Leadership education
  • Clinical documentation reviews

Annual Activities

  • Comprehensive compliance assessment
  • Governing board education
  • Risk assessment
  • Performance improvement evaluation
  • External peer review
  • Readiness gap analysis

This proactive approach reduces last-minute preparation while promoting continuous quality improvement.

Leadership’s Role in HRSA Success

Survey readiness cannot be delegated to one department.

Executive leadership, clinical leadership, quality professionals, medical staff services, compliance officers, and governing boards all play critical roles.

Leaders should routinely ask:

  • Are our policies current?
  • Can we demonstrate implementation?
  • Are provider performance evaluations meaningful?
  • Are peer reviews objective?
  • Do our quality metrics show improvement?
  • Can we produce requested evidence immediately?

Organizations that can confidently answer these questions are generally well positioned for a successful survey.

Benefits Beyond Survey Success

Investing in HRSA readiness provides advantages that extend far beyond regulatory compliance.

Organizations often experience:

  • Improved patient safety
  • Stronger clinical quality
  • Better documentation
  • Increased provider accountability
  • More effective quality improvement initiatives
  • Reduced organizational risk
  • Enhanced board oversight
  • Greater confidence during accreditation and regulatory surveys

Ultimately, readiness activities strengthen the organization while improving care for the communities it serves.

How Quality Peer Solutions (QPS) Supports HRSA Readiness

Quality Peer Solutions (QPS) partners with Community Health Centers and Federally Qualified Health Centers nationwide to strengthen provider quality programs and prepare organizations for successful HRSA Operational Site Visits.

Our services include:

  • Independent External Peer Review
  • Specialty-Matched Physician and Allied Health Reviewers
  • OPPE and FPPE Reviews
  • Medical Record Audits
  • Clinical Documentation Reviews
  • HRSA Readiness Assessments
  • Mock Operational Site Visits
  • Credentialing and Privileging Support
  • Dental and Behavioral Health Peer Review
  • Quality Improvement Consultation

With a nationwide network of experienced, board-certified reviewers across medical, dental, behavioral health, and allied health specialties, QPS delivers objective, evidence-based evaluations that help organizations strengthen compliance, improve provider performance, and enhance patient safety.

Conclusion

HRSA readiness should be viewed as an ongoing commitment to excellence rather than a periodic compliance exercise. Organizations that invest in continuous quality improvement, independent peer review, robust provider evaluations, and strong governance are better prepared not only for Operational Site Visits but also for delivering safe, high-quality care every day.

A structured, year-round readiness strategy reduces survey risk, supports regulatory compliance, and fosters a culture of accountability and continuous improvement that benefits providers, leadership, and, most importantly, patients.

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