The Benefits of Outsourcing for Hospital Credentialing

By: Tammy White | Posted: 11th May 2006

Hospital credentialing is the most intensive credentialing process for medical providers, repeated more frequently than other credentialing standards and involving more organization contacts and supporting documents. The amount of staff time and the expense of researching every medical provider can be heavy, draining resources from other administrative functions, and requiring experienced staff and access to research resources. Yet hospitals have been slower than other medical organizations to outsource the credentialing process, despite potential benefits: faster turnaround time, cost-effectiveness, and savings in staff time and training.

Hospital credentialing covers the most detailed questions of any credentialing standard, from medical school through the provider's complete career. The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) creates manuals outlining the credentialing processes for all different medical providers within an institution. The proscribed areas have to be verified in ways that meet JCAHO standards. This entails direct contact with organizations associated with the provider, as well as receiving copies of all certificates and licenses. All of these areas must be verified:Both the contact results and supporting documentation are gathered to create a final profile report for the provider, which is given to the credentialing committee for review. Any warning signs or previous problems with the provider must specifically be brought to committee attention.

Most hospitals still do credentialing verification internally. If they have full access to information resources and available money and manhours to dedicate staff, as well as having experienced personnel to do it, then in-house credentialing can be as fast and thorough as outsourcing it. Most hospitals do not have those resources or need to assign those resources elsewhere. Moreover, hospitals bear the liability of any mistakes or oversights made during the credentialing process, and those mistakes can affect the results of future audits, resulting in reprimands or penalties.

Credentialing verification organizations (CVO) allow hospitals to outsource the credentialing process for all medical providers, such as physicians, respiratory therapists, X-ray technicians, nurses, and mental health specialists. CVOs dedicate resources and training to credentialing, meaning personnel have experience, comply with appropriate standards, and have access to verification resources. Hospitals can better utilize their staff and finances, while lowering hospital liability for mistakes. Additionally, CVOs can offer support services in addition to credentialing which can make managing audits, renewing licenses, and other processes more efficient.

There are minimum services that CVOs should offer to hospitals:Quality CVOs offer other beneficial, resource-intensive services to hospitals:Using a CVO for medical provider credentialing saves hospitals time in staff hours, money and resources, and also offers support services, such as audit support and surveillance of providers for sanctions or problems even after completing credentialing, that a hospital may not be able to maintain internally. Hospital credentialing standards are the tightest and most detailed of medical provider credentialing standards. CVOs can remove the burden of meeting those standards for hospitals through dedicated resources, experience, and support services.
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Tags: cost effectiveness, direct contact, information resources, warning signs, faster turnaround time, medical school, staff time, sanctions, medical provider, medical providers, medical organizations, administrative functions