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20 Tips to Help You Survive Facing Peer Review for Your Hospital Clinical Privileges-Part 2 of 2

Pharmacy Law Blog

Make sure any written response is provided in a typewritten letter formal not via e-mail, text or YouTube posting or handwritten note. 12. In your written statement or response, if you use any abbreviations, spell them out completely the first time you use them and place the abbreviation after, in parentheses. Read the handwriting on the wall.

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20 Tips to Help You Survive Facing Peer Review for Your Hospital Clinical Privileges-Part 1 of 2

Pharmacy Law Blog

If you are a physician, nurse practitioner, psychologist, clinical pharmacist, oral surgeon, ophthalmologist, or other licensed health professional with clinical privileges in a hospital, chances are that one day you will be subject to a peer review action or investigation. It may be commenced because of complaints filed by hospital staff.

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Five steps to conduct an effective healthcare compliance investigation

YouCompli

This is the fifth article in Sharon Parsley, JD, MBA, CHC, CHRC’s monthly series on compliance officer effectiveness for the YouCompli blog. You have a report that merits investigation , and you have got the people in place to help you investigate. Basic, right? As always, these are nuanced steps. Many issues take time to evaluate.