April 2024 Bad Actor Roundup By Verisys Each month we will give a roundup of recent healthcare fraudsters and compliance busters. Here is a round up of bad actors: Doctor sentenced to...
The Importance of Primary Source Verification for Practitioner Credentials
If there’s one thing healthcare organizations can count on, it’s changing regulations. Although credentialing and recredentialing standards were temporarily changed due to COVID, many regulations are returning to the former protocol. That’s why it’s important to understand primary source verification, methods of accessing primary sources, and how to get help with practitioner credentials verification if you need it.
For the medical staff services team at a hospital to properly verify a healthcare practitioner’s credentials, dozens of primary sources must be contacted directly, and those primary source organizations must then verify the credentials of the practitioner in question.
What Is Considered a Primary Source?
A primary source is any body, institution, or person who originally granted the credential that’s being verified. Because they have first-hand knowledge, these primary sources can confirm if the information claimed is accurate. Here are some examples:
- Medical schools verify completion of education.
- State licensing boards verify practitioner license type and status.
- An Office of Inspector General (OIG) search of the List of Excluded Individuals/Entities (LEIE) indicates if the licensee is excluded from participating in government-funded programs.
- The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Medicare and state Medicaid lists show practitioners who have opted out of those programs.
- The policy issuer for malpractice insurance verifies insurance coverage.
- Medical or dental councils verify the registration of their members and any other credential required by law, regulation, or hospital policy.
- And the list goes on.… For instance, Verisys checks more than 5,000 primary sources against its 10-million record database, FACIS®.
Government and Non-Government Sources
In addition to the sources listed above, the following practitioner information should also be obtained from these government primary sources:
-
- Sanctions by a State Medical Board
- National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB)
- Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) registration
- Controlled Dangerous Substance (CDS) registration
- Background checks
- Criminal history
- State board specialty certifications
- Military personnel records
The Joint Commission requires primary source verification for practitioners, but the following non-government sources may provide confirmation of the practitioner’s credentials as well. These can include:
-
- The American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS) verifies physician board certification with records for more than 940,000 physicians. Information obtained from ABMS meets the requirements of The Joint Commission (TJC) and other federal agencies to qualify as a primary source for verification.
- The American Medical Association (AMA) Physician Masterfile contains information about 1.4 million physicians, beginning with their entry into medical school and continuing with medical school graduation and post-graduate certification information. The Masterfile obtains records directly from medical schools.
- The American Osteopathic Association (AOA) Physician Database verifies pre-doctoral education accredited by the AOA Bureau of Professional Education, post-doctoral education approved by the AOA Council on Postdoctoral Training, and Osteopathic Specialty Board Certification.
- The American Academy of Physician Assistants (AAPA) Physician Profile Service serves as a primary source for verifying physician assistant education.
- The Federation of State Medical Boards (FSMB) Disciplinary Action Databank receives information from state medical boards and other government agencies to help organizations check for state and federal sanctions against providers.
- The Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates (ECFMG) is the main source of verification of a physician’s credentials from a foreign medical school.
Primary Source Verification Bottlenecks
It’s no wonder that it often takes 90 days or more to onboard and grant privileges to healthcare practitioners. Bottlenecks can pop up at every step along the way. Some examples of typical bottlenecks include:
-
- The Medical Staff Services Department. Your medical staff services team has a full plate with credentialing new members of its staff, monitoring current staff, and re-credentialing staff, among a host of other duties.
- The Primary Source Organizations. Some organizations compile and publish data monthly. Delivery of data ranges from a print-out sent by mail, a spreadsheet sent through email, a CSV download from a secure server, or an online searchable database.
- Unpublished Data. In the case where a primary source organization doesn’t publish data, the medical staff services team must contact that organization directly to request verification. There are cases where an institution may have since closed its doors and the document needing verification no longer exists.
With so many roadblocks delaying the process (and consequently delaying reimbursement) and with such a significant investment of time and resources required, many organizations are stretched to capacity as they struggle to meet the demands of credentialing requirements.
Credentials Verification Organizations to the Rescue?
As compliance requirements change to keep up with ever-evolving, accelerating fraud schemes and high expectations for quality care and outcomes, they place increasing demands on healthcare facilities. That’s why organizations hire Credentials Verification Organizations, known as CVOs, to manage the credentialing process.
CVOs perform credentialing duties which support your in-house department or as a third-party independent service partner. CVOs like Verisys follow guidelines set and enforced by the Utilization Review Accreditation Commission (URAC) and the National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA), which issues certifications and accreditations to approved CVOs. Having ISO 27001 certification assures data security, which means your practitioner data is safe and secure.
To complete credentialing on behalf of other organizations, CVOs must be equipped to manage large amounts of data, assure the accuracy of records matching, collect, aggregate, and house the data in a secure environment, and deliver the data securely and in a format that works with the credentialing software or platform used by the healthcare facility.
One thing is certain: Healthcare regulations will continue to change to safeguard both patients and healthcare facilities. Keeping up with changes in credentialing requirements can be challenging for hospitals and medical staff services. The good news is you don’t have to do it alone. Partnering with a CVO might be the answer to, “How do we stay on top of it all?”
Learn more about how Verisys technology can help your organization streamline its credentialing and eliminate frustrating roadblocks.
Written by Verisys
Verisys transforms provider data, workforce data, and relationship management. Healthcare, life science, and background screening organizations rely on our comprehensive solutions to discover their true potential. Visit verisys.com to learn how we turn problems into power.
- Secure, configurable, and proven solutions
- Accurate, compliant, and complete information
- NCQA, URAC, and ISO accreditations/certifications