Featured Content | Improving medical staff and hospital board relations | The governing board of a hospital is fiscally responsible for the financial well being of the organization. They also are ultimately responsible for the credentialing and privileging of all practitioners in the organization and for monitoring the quality of care these practitioners provide. Because the board lacks the expertise to credential and privilege and monitor the quality of care, they delegate these tasks to the organized medical staff. Unfortunately, some medical staffs and boards do not have a good working relationship. |
The return of early bird pricing! | If you haven’t registered for the 2023 National Provider Enrollment Forum, now is the time to do so. Starting today you can take advantage of our throwback to our early bird registration price, an instant savings of $100. For more information, click here. |
Join us for a demo of the Credentialing Resource Center | We know you enjoy your free content from Credentialing Resource Center Digest. Now it's time to learn how a paid subscription to Credentialing Resource Center can help you in your daily tasks. Credentialing Resource Center is an easy-to-access portal that provides MSPs, quality professionals, and medical staff leaders with a collection of continuously updated tools, best practice strategies, and compliance tips developed by industry experts. Join our live, 30-minute demo on Tuesday, July 18 at 3 p.m. ET to learn how Credentialing Resource Center can help you and your team. To sign up, click here. |
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CRC Member Exclusive | Review emergency abortion protocols and educate staff as hospitals face EMTALA investigations | Establish an incident response team to handle decisions about high-risk pregnancy cases that may present dilemmas in your hospital’s emergency department (ED) as states continue to pass more restrictive abortion laws. If your facility already has such a team, make sure each member understands the hospital’s emergency maternal care policies as well as obligations under the federal Emergency Medical Treatment & Labor Act (EMTALA). |
How should credentialing teams handle mental health questions? | In May, J. Corey Feist, JD, MBA, co-founder and president of the Dr. Lorna Breen Heroes’ Foundation, and John Howard, MD, director of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, issued a statement calling for the removal of intrusive mental health questions from hospital credentialing applications. They aren’t the only ones lobbying for the removal of these types of questions. |
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