As the physician shortage continues
to grow and as baby boomers continue to consume an increasing
amount of health care services, some are predicting that AHPs
will become the critical lynchpin for access to health care.
But what is their role in an acute care setting?
Many hospitals and medical staffs
are still struggling with the rules that apply to AHPs in their
facilities. Existing policies often fall short of providing
meaningful guidance on the many issues pertaining to AHPs.
Join Susan Lapenta, Lauren Massucci
and LeeAnne Mitchell as they discuss a wide variety of issues
pertaining to AHPs and the policies that will help you prepare
for their growing presence in your facility, including:
What are AHPs licensed to do? What should
you allow them to do in your facility? Who decides? And
how?
Credentialing and
recredentialing – Does
your process satisfy the Joint Commission and the Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS)?
Clinical privileges
vs. scope of practice – A
difference without a distinction? Maybe not.
Ongoing and focused
professional practice evaluations – Are you including
AHPs in these Joint Commission required processes?
Making sense of Joint Commission standards
on competency evaluations.
What rules apply
to suspending privileges or investigating concerns about
AHPs? Hearing and appeal rights – Is a meeting
enough to address adverse actions or is more required?
The on-call dilemma – Can
AHPs help lighten this load?
Best practices
for supervision and collaboration – How
close is close enough?
National Practitioner Data Bank rules
pertaining to querying about and reporting adverse actions
relating to AHPs
Countersigning
orders and notes – Is
that sufficient supervision?