Should teaching physicians, who are brought in to a hospital for short time periods to instruct others in using new equipment or techniques, be given temporary privileges? Scenarios involving visiting physicians can vary depending on the kind of instruction offered and the practitioners involved...
Credentialing Resource Center Journal - Volume 24, Issue 11
The rise of locum tenens practitioners presents a variety of challenges: How many of a locum tenens' myriad past assignments should be verified? How can the process be streamlined, or at least be made less stressful? When everyone wants a practitioner to be brought on board as fast as possible,...
The United States District Court for the Southern District of Illinois (the "Court") rejected a hospital's argument that the state's peer review statute applied to electronic medical record audit trails.
Credentialing Resource Center Journal - Volume 24, Issue 11
Our radiology department does a great job of bringing American College of Radiology (ACR) guidelines for credentialing to our attention. Do we have to adopt their published recommendations? If we don't, are we at risk for having to defend why we did not adopt them?
Credentialing Resource Center Digest - Volume 16, Issue 43
With the estimate that nearly one in three individuals in the U.S. will be Latino by 2050, advances must be made to increase the Latino physician workforce, says the authors of a commentary published in Academic Medicine. The growth in proportion of Latino medical school applicants between 2002...
Credentialing Resource Center Digest - Volume 16, Issue 43
Sooner or later, as a medical staff leader, you will be called upon to run a meeting. It may be in the service of directly carrying out a key responsibility delegated to the medical staff by the governing board. Or it may be that the meeting is required to meet some standard of a regulatory or...