By the time credentialing gaps surface during an audit, they require significant work to be corrected. Files must be re-viewed, documentation must be reconciled, and processes must be reevaluated under pressure.
Credentialing Resource Center Journal - Volume 35, Issue 6
A recent decision by the Texas Fourth Court of Appeals presents a complex dispute at the intersection of hospital peer review, physician competition, and the limits of injunctive relief.
The medical executive committee (MEC) is the only medical staff committee that The Joint Commission requires accredited hospitals to have. Learn who should be on the committee and what they should be responsible for.
Credentialing Resource Center Journal - Volume 35, Issue 5
MSPs are being asked to do more than ever—often without the structural support to match. Governance frameworks often fail to keep pace with how work is truly being executed.
Credentialing Resource Center Journal - Volume 35, Issue 5
A recent decision by the Court of Appeals of North Carolina offers a detailed examination of the limits of evidentiary privilege in the context of medical malpractice litigation, particularly when those privileges intersect with modern hospital safety and review systems.