Dear medical Staff leader:
Today’s medical staff leaders are encountering many challenges, but one of the most difficult-and one we have been least trained to meet-is confronting other practitioners about issues concerning clinical competence, behavior, responsibilities, or ethics.
Credentialing Resource Center Digest - Volume 8, Issue 42
Dear medical staff leader:
Medical staff leaders need to be aware of diversity-related conflicts between medical staff members as well as those that can arise between medical staff members and the hospital staff.
Credentialing Resource Center Digest - Volume 8, Issue 42
Medical staff leaders need to communicate with multiple stakeholders-the medical staff, the hospital administration, the governing board, and the community. A comprehensive communication plan must include multiple modalities, approaches, and channels to communication.
Credentialing Resource Center Digest - Volume 8, Issue 42
You should treat proctoring results in the same manner as other peer review findings. You should add them to the physician's peer review file and communicate them to the committee that requested the proctoring.
Credentialing Resource Center Digest - Volume 8, Issue 41
When concerns regarding a physician’s disruptive behavior arise, the medical staff leader’s first step is to validate any specific incidents. Turn to the data included on the physician performance report. Does the objective data show that the physician’s performance differs significantly from...
Credentialing Resource Center Digest - Volume 8, Issue 41
Dear medical staff leader:
Last month we talked about the actions that should trigger a fair hearing and appeal due process.
Let us now talk about and clearly state what actions should not trigger a fair hearing. In general, unless an adverse recommendation pertains to clinical...