The Handbook for Credentialing Healthcare Providers

This handbook enables your organization to systemize the tedious, ongoing, and mandatory process of credentialing your medical staff and to understand why you must!

Healthcare organizations must have credentialed medical staffs to deliver their services. The reasons are two-fold: First, educated, licensed, experienced, and proven caregivers ensure that a hospital or medical practice is capable of delivering quality care. Secondly, payers require that the physicians and other licensed healthcare professionals are qualified and licensed to work with their patients. Before receiving payment for services, the provider must have specific credentials for providing that service.

Verifying and documenting the credentials of a healthcare provider is tedious, ongoing, and mandatory. An organization with a large medical staff may struggle with keeping the credentialing function current, as many licenses have rolling expirations.

Credentialing ensures that clinical practitioners are duly qualified, licensed, and board certified. It reports the history of malpractice claims, state-instituted sanctions, or other undesirable professional circumstances of providers.

Credentialing and privileging of healthcare professionals protects patients and hospitals by minimizing the risk of medical errors that may result from the work of incompetent providers. It also undergirds the reputation and credibility of the institution in the eyes of providers and across the healthcare community.

Further, credentialing with insurers forms the basis for reimbursement for professional services. Without the acceptance of the professional credentials of a provider, insurers and other third-party payers will not compensate his or her claims.

The purpose of this book is to explain the necessity and to provide the process for the official documentation of each practitioner. The information presented in these chapters will serve as a practical resource for strengthening your organization's credentialing function.

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Book Features!

-Outlines the necessity for credentialing in the delivery of care and in attaining reimbursements for services provided

-Explores options for in-house and outsourced credentialing function

-Provides systematic process for ongoing credentialing operations

1133507346
The Handbook for Credentialing Healthcare Providers

This handbook enables your organization to systemize the tedious, ongoing, and mandatory process of credentialing your medical staff and to understand why you must!

Healthcare organizations must have credentialed medical staffs to deliver their services. The reasons are two-fold: First, educated, licensed, experienced, and proven caregivers ensure that a hospital or medical practice is capable of delivering quality care. Secondly, payers require that the physicians and other licensed healthcare professionals are qualified and licensed to work with their patients. Before receiving payment for services, the provider must have specific credentials for providing that service.

Verifying and documenting the credentials of a healthcare provider is tedious, ongoing, and mandatory. An organization with a large medical staff may struggle with keeping the credentialing function current, as many licenses have rolling expirations.

Credentialing ensures that clinical practitioners are duly qualified, licensed, and board certified. It reports the history of malpractice claims, state-instituted sanctions, or other undesirable professional circumstances of providers.

Credentialing and privileging of healthcare professionals protects patients and hospitals by minimizing the risk of medical errors that may result from the work of incompetent providers. It also undergirds the reputation and credibility of the institution in the eyes of providers and across the healthcare community.

Further, credentialing with insurers forms the basis for reimbursement for professional services. Without the acceptance of the professional credentials of a provider, insurers and other third-party payers will not compensate his or her claims.

The purpose of this book is to explain the necessity and to provide the process for the official documentation of each practitioner. The information presented in these chapters will serve as a practical resource for strengthening your organization's credentialing function.

=

Book Features!

-Outlines the necessity for credentialing in the delivery of care and in attaining reimbursements for services provided

-Explores options for in-house and outsourced credentialing function

-Provides systematic process for ongoing credentialing operations

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The Handbook for Credentialing Healthcare Providers

The Handbook for Credentialing Healthcare Providers

by Ellis M. Knight
The Handbook for Credentialing Healthcare Providers

The Handbook for Credentialing Healthcare Providers

by Ellis M. Knight

Paperback

$59.00 
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Overview

This handbook enables your organization to systemize the tedious, ongoing, and mandatory process of credentialing your medical staff and to understand why you must!

Healthcare organizations must have credentialed medical staffs to deliver their services. The reasons are two-fold: First, educated, licensed, experienced, and proven caregivers ensure that a hospital or medical practice is capable of delivering quality care. Secondly, payers require that the physicians and other licensed healthcare professionals are qualified and licensed to work with their patients. Before receiving payment for services, the provider must have specific credentials for providing that service.

Verifying and documenting the credentials of a healthcare provider is tedious, ongoing, and mandatory. An organization with a large medical staff may struggle with keeping the credentialing function current, as many licenses have rolling expirations.

Credentialing ensures that clinical practitioners are duly qualified, licensed, and board certified. It reports the history of malpractice claims, state-instituted sanctions, or other undesirable professional circumstances of providers.

Credentialing and privileging of healthcare professionals protects patients and hospitals by minimizing the risk of medical errors that may result from the work of incompetent providers. It also undergirds the reputation and credibility of the institution in the eyes of providers and across the healthcare community.

Further, credentialing with insurers forms the basis for reimbursement for professional services. Without the acceptance of the professional credentials of a provider, insurers and other third-party payers will not compensate his or her claims.

The purpose of this book is to explain the necessity and to provide the process for the official documentation of each practitioner. The information presented in these chapters will serve as a practical resource for strengthening your organization's credentialing function.

=

Book Features!

-Outlines the necessity for credentialing in the delivery of care and in attaining reimbursements for services provided

-Explores options for in-house and outsourced credentialing function

-Provides systematic process for ongoing credentialing operations


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780997284768
Publisher: Greenbranch Publishing
Publication date: 04/01/2016
Pages: 50
Product dimensions: 6.80(w) x 9.80(h) x 0.20(d)

About the Author

Ellis M. "Mac" Knight, MD, MBA, FACP, FACHE, FHM Dr. Knight is senior vice president and chief medical officer of Coker Group and he oversees Coker Group's hospital strategy and operations services. He has a particular interest and expertise in population health management, clinical care process design, cost accounting, and hospital-physician integration. Before joining Coker, Dr. Knight served as the chief physician and clinical integration officer for Palmetto Health in Columbia, South Carolina, where he oversaw Palmetto Health's employed physician network and helped to develop and manage their clinical integration program.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Credentialing The Foundation for Quality and Safety

Chapter 2: Types of Credentialing

Chapter 3: The Pros and Cons of Outsourcing Credentialing

Chapter 4: Regulatory Requirements

Chapter 5: Automated Payer and Medical Staff Credentialing System

Chapter 6: Training for the Credentialing Function

Chapter 7: Conclusion The Importance of the Credentialing Process

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