While most credentialing teams conduct background checks, certain areas remain weak when screening for sexual boundary violations. To improve their techniques, hospitals should take several key steps.
As accreditation manuals continue to evolve, surveyors keep drilling into the same operational pressure points that create real patient risk—transitions, medications, documentation, and the environment of care.
Credentialing Resource Center Journal - Volume 35, Issue 6
For credentialing staff, operational transformation rarely starts with technology alone. It often begins with a harder question: Does the department’s structure still match the complexity of the work?
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.
As workplace violence continues to rise, hospitals are discovering that some of their most serious security gaps are not rooted in staffing or policy. Instead, they may come down to life safety systems that were designed decades ago.
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.