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Clinical Privileges:
Tough Issues and Solutions
Audio Conference
Recorded July 26, 2005

Faculty: Linda Haddad and Monica Hanslovan

Do any of these situations sound familiar?

  • Leapfrog standards say that critical care should be provided by intensivists. At your hospital, surgeons, internists and others follow their own patients in the ICU. If you require them to consult with the intensivists, or to turn those patients over to the intensivists, have you restricted or revoked their clinical privileges?
  • Now that your hospitalist program is thriving, many family practitioners on your staff no longer come to the hospital. But, they still want clinical privileges. Can the family practitioners be granted clinical privileges when they have no hospital practice to assess?
  • A great internist is returning from a three-year absence now that her youngest child is in pre-school. She kept up with CME during those three years, but did not care for patients. Does she qualify for clinical privileges?
  • It's 6:50 am. The cath lab calls to ask if Dr. Smith has privileges to perform the new wild and wonderful procedure that he has scheduled for 7:15 am.
  • The person who is most proficient in the use of the hospital's newly acquired surgical equipment is the sales rep. The orthopedist wants the rep in the OR when he uses it the first time. Must you grant clinical privileges to the sales rep? Can you?

Clinical privileges questions are among the stickiest of all credentialing issues. Besides the traditional requirement that an applicant demonstrate training and current clinical competence in the area in which clinical privileges are requested, there are new issues.

  • How do you handle clinical privileges that cross specialty lines or the clinical privileges that come with new medical technology?
  • Can your privileging keep up with technology?
  • When is something so new or different that it requires its own clinical privilege before it can legally be performed on a patient in the hospital?
  • What should you do when privileges in demand are part of the radiology (or another group's) exclusive contract?
  • How do you know when a request is for new privileges, as opposed to merely an extension of existing privileges?

These are just some of the topics that are addressed in HortySpringer's audio CD.

Audio CD: $225

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