Remove Compliance Remove Licensing Remove Malpractice Remove Regulatory Compliance
article thumbnail

Everything You Need to Know About Physician Credentialing

MedTrainer

Even after someone goes through all the schooling, passes their medical boards and obtains a license to practice, physician credentialing still stands between a provider and patients — no matter where they are in their career. Malpractice history. Legal and regulatory compliance. Board certification. Work history.

article thumbnail

Technology’s Role in the Development & Improvement of Drug Diversion Auditing Processes

HIT Consultant

Drug diversion can also pose risks to staff safety and regulatory compliance, as can be seen across all types of healthcare facilities and, across all clinical disciplines. Healthcare workers who divert for their own use risk addiction, overdose, death, loss of professional license, criminal prosecution, and civil malpractice suits.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

EU and US Regulatory Challenges Facing AI Health Care Innovator Firms

Bill of Health

Although the cross-sectoral AI legislation that is now introduced by the European Commission’s Digital Strategy aims to be integrated with existing sectoral legislation such as the MDR, the IVDR and the Machinery Directive, it is uncertain how overlapping regulatory compliance requirements for AI-driven medical devices will be managed in practice.

FDA 282
article thumbnail

What Is Provider Credentialing?

MedTrainer

It involves collecting and reviewing information such as education, training, licensure, certifications, work history, malpractice history, and references — all in pursuit of verifying that providers are who they say they are and qualified to deliver legitimate, safe, and ethical care. Why Is Provider Credentialing Important?