Plus how to credential foreign medical graduates

Monday, March 19, 2018

Featured Content

Should you create a dedicated health and wellness committee?

The individuals who review practitioner health issues will vary from organization to organization,and in the hospital setting it is dependent on the structure of the medical staff. Many healthcare organizations have established a working committee specifically dedicated to matters of physician health and well-being.

 

New Content: Members Only

Best practices for credentialing foreign medical graduates

Published 3/19/18

It can be an MSP’s worst nightmare, the dreaded Foreign Medical Graduate (FMG), an applicant who’s diploma and credentials may not even be in English. Obviously, the way they are credentialed is different, unfortunately the specific process remains rather elusive to those without extensive experience. FMG and International Medical Graduate (IMG) are often used interchangeably, though they are not necessarily the same. IMGs are physicians who obtained their basic medical degree outside of the U.S. or Canada (this includes current U.S. citizens). Meanwhile, an FMG is an IMG with foreign citizenship. It is the location of a graduate’s medical school, not their citizenship, that determines whether they are an IMG. A non-U.S. citizen who graduates from a medical school within the North America is not considered an IMG.

 

CRC Announcements

Take our new poll: Where is payer enrollment housed?

Let us know which department in your organization performs payer enrollment tasks. You must be signed in with your free or paid CRC account to participate.

Interested in learning more about payer enrollment? Sign up for one of our upcoming provider enrollment webinars. For more information, click here. 

Have a hot medical staff or credentialing topic you’d like your peers to weigh in on? Send proposed questions to Editor Son Hoang at shoang@hcpro.com, and you could see your idea showcased in a future poll.

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. Email managing editor Karen Kondilis. 

Did you know? CRC members have access to new tools and forms, depending on their level of membership. Click here to see a list of new tools and forms. 

Are you a subject matter expert?

Writing books/columns and speaking on webinars and at seminars are great ways to share your industry knowledge with peers. With the guidance of a solid publishing company, you’ll see your thoughts and tips become beacons to others in your field. We’re always looking for new authors, speakers, and reviewers. For more than 20 years, HCPro has been a leading provider of integrated healthcare information, education, training, and consulting products. Among HCPro’s need-to-know information products are a vast array of books, newsletters, websites, annual webinars, and annual live events. 

Interested in joining our team of subject matter experts? Visit our new opportunities page to learn more and see testimonials from other experts who work with HCPro. 

 

    

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Product Spotlight

Address fitness-to-practice concerns with confidence!

 

Managing Problem Practitioners: A Leadership Guide to Dealing With Impaired, Disruptive, Aging, and Burned-Out Clinicians is the medical staff’s answer for developing policies and procedures that address physician impairment, disruptive behavior, and problems associated with aging. Expert Todd Sagin, MD, JD, provides the guidance the medical staff office needs to develop and implement a process for assessing and resolving legally compromising situations. Don’t get caught unprepared—reduce your lawsuit risk and keep your patients and clinicians out of harm’s way. 

This book will help you:

  • Develop an aging physician policy that protects physicians and the organization
  • Train medical staff leaders on how to deal with a disruptive physician
  • Take the proper steps when  physicians fail to correct their behavior
  • Design a physician wellness committee that is supportive of the medical staff
  • Set and communicate clear expectations of physician behavior and competency
For more information, click here.
 

Contact Us

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

HCPro
35 Village Road, Suite 200
Middleton, MA 01949
800-650-6787
www.hcpro.com

For advertising and marketing opportunities with the Credentialing Resource Center, please email dhartley@hcpro.com.

 

 

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