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| Featured Content | Refer-and-follow privileges and beyond for low- and no-volume practitioners | With the rise of hospitalists, ambulatory surgery centers, and endoscopy suites, almost all hospitals find themselves confronting a growing number of low- and no-volume providers. At the same time, regulators have raised the bar regarding the need to link privileges with demonstrated current competence. |
Healthcare data breaches nearly tripled in 2019 | In 2019, more than 41 million patient records were breached, nearly tripling the number of breaches from 2018, according to a report from Protenus and DataBreaches.net. The 41.4 million patient records breached in 2019 nearly matches the total from the previous three years combined (47.9 million). |
Create a professional reference questionnaire policy | Your medical staff should have a policy that places the burden on the applicant to prove his or her clinical competence and provide all the information the medical staff leaders, credentials committee, MEC, and governing body need to make evidence-based decisions regarding membership and privileges. |
Use this letter to convince your organization to send you to the 2020 CRC Symposium | The CRC team has developed a justification letter that you can use to explain to your organization and supervisor why you should attend the 2020 CRC Symposium. Held from April 20-21 at the Sheraton New Orleans Hotel, the 2020 CRC Symposium gives MSPs, physician leaders, and quality professionals the chance to earn CEUs in their field while networking with colleagues from around the nation. Whether you’re a newly minted professional or an industry veteran, a symposium regular or a first-time attendee, you won’t want to miss out on the industry’s premier credentialing event. Click here to download the letter and customize it to fit your specific needs. |
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CRC Member Exclusive | Kill complexity, save lives | Consider alarm fatigue. Providers are supposed to respond with the same alacrity to each of the hundreds of pings, alerts, or notifications they get every day. But these systems are often so excessive and poorly calibrated that staff become numb to them. Then, when an important alert is inevitably missed, a patient can be hurt. |
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| Career Center | Post your open positions or find your next career move with the HCPro Career Center. | |
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