The basic idea as far as I understand it is that a physician will get their training through medical school, but then the hospital they will take up residency in will still most likely want to watch their ability to perform to really decide what that physician will be allowed to do. So in the end physician credentialing is all about protecting a patient by not allowing a physician to perform something they aren't capable or qualified of performing.
Here's a great quote from TheFamilyMedicineDoctor.net that explains the basics of physician credentialing:
Credentialing physicians is the formal process of attestation and recognition of the current medical and technical competence as well as performance of a doctor by monitoring and evaluating his or her medical or clinical decision-making abilities. Furthermore, physician credentialing verifies medical education, certification, training, license, experience, malpractice, technical abilities, clinical judgment, and if any, adverse clinical occurrences through observation and investigation.Most hospitals will have some sort of software in place at their hospitals to keep track of what each physician has the credentials to do. If they don't have the credentials, someone else will have to do it!
My guess is that the reason hospitals are doing this is to cut down on the number of malpractice suits that they get each year from mistakes that are made by incompetent physicians. By putting a credentials system in place they have a better chance of not running into lawsuit problems.
What are your thoughts on this? Personally, I think it's a really good thing that hospitals have this in a place. It basically assures you as a patient that the physician that's helping you has passed a basic competency test to be able to perform the procedure.
Very informative thanks for sharing.
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