Wednesday, March 14, 2018

Free Resource

Prepare for practitioner pushback

Don’t be surprised if practitioners push back or give defensive responses about potential performance issues identified during professional practice evaluation. This free resource provides a few typical examples of complaints that practitioners may offer during the course of an evaluation, along with some tips on how to turn the critiques into productive feedback.

 

New Content: Members Only

APP privileging: Clarifying what they can do, collaborative practice agreements, and switching specialties

Published 3/14/18

The number of advanced practice professionals (APP) applying for hospital and ambulatory privileges is rising rapidly as physician shortages grow. However, regulations and internal standards governing APPs’ work remain variable. Some states grant advanced practice registered nurses full practice authority, while others permit narrower scopes of service and require a physician to provide oversight through a collaborative or supervisory agreement. The vast majority of states require physician assistants (PA) to work under such arrangements. To complicate matters, healthcare institutions may impose stricter practice parameters than those levied by their state.

The evolving role of APPs and their benefit to residents

Published 3/12/18

Today’s healthcare environment is ever-shifting, often making it difficult for providers to keep up. However, the incentives to do so remain high, especially with the continuing physician shortage. As of 2016, the number of nurse practitioners (NP) has increased by 23% and the number of physician assistants (PA) has gone up by 36%, yet both groups continue to be underrepresented on medical staff teams. The specialized training and unique perspectives of advanced practice professionals (APP) make them an invaluable asset, to physicians and residents alike. But do residents develop working relationships with their APPs, and if so, are they beneficial?

 

CRC Announcements

Help us plan our next book

What would you like to see included in the following book: The Credentialing Resource Center’s Top Tools and Forms of 2018. This book would be a compilation of the CRC expert community’s favorite field-sourced materials, complete with helpful commentary on each chosen resource’s merit and potential applications in the field. Please let us know what types of forms you would like to see included in this book, if you would prefer a hard copy or electronic version, and what type of advice should accompany the forms.

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Karen Kondilis
Managing Editor
Credentialing Resource Center
kkondilis@hcpro.com

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