Credentialing for Managed Care


Book Description

Credentialing for Managed Care: Compliant Processes for Health Plan and Delegated Entities Amy M. Niehaus, CPMSM, CPCS, MBA New to managed care credentialing? Whether you work for a health plan or a hospital medical staff services department, this how-to guide answers all of your health plan credentialing and enrollment questions. Learn the regulatory and accreditation requirements related to managed care credentialing, including those from CMS, NCQA, and URAC. Author Amy M. Niehaus, CPMSM, CPCS, MBA, provides readers with the guidance to create a comprehensive and compliant credentialing program to support your health plan or to streamline your hospital's provider enrollment process through delegation. MSPs in all healthcare environments can benefit from understanding credentialing in the managed care world to support their organizational goals of compliance, operational efficiency, cost savings, and practitioner satisfaction. This book will help you: - Understand NCQA, URAC, and CMS requirements for health plans - Develop a comprehensive and compliant managed care credentialing program - Establish delegated credentialing agreements - Audit credentials files - Recognize how payer credentialing requirements impact other healthcare organizations - Streamline provider enrollment through delegation - Identify the differences between hospital and managed care credentialing - Evaluate whether a credentials verification organization is right for your organization About the author: Amy M. Niehaus, CPMSM, CPCS, MBA, is a consultant with The Greeley Company, an industry-leading healthcare consulting firm. She has over 25 years' experience in the medical services and credentialing profession. In her current role, she advises clients in the areas of accreditation, regulatory compliance, credentialing, process simplification and redesign, credentialing technology, and credentials verification organizations (CVO) development and delegation. Niehaus has worked in multiple environments throughout her career, including acute care hospitals, CVOs, and managed care organizations (MCO). She has been a member of the National Association Medical Staff Services (NAMSS) since 1991 and achieved her CPMSM certification in 1992 and her CPCS certification in 2002. Niehaus is a NAMSS instructor and previously served as chair of its MCO Task Force, as well as chair and member of the NAMSS Education Committee. She is a former president of the Missouri Association Medical Staff Services and its greater St. Louis area chapter. Niehaus holds a bachelor's degree from the University of Missouri and a master's degree in business administration from Maryville University in St. Louis. Niehaus has developed and presented various programs to local and national audiences on topics such as credentialing and privileging processes; Joint Commission, National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA), and URAC accreditation standards; and delegation.







The Credentialing Handbook


Book Description

The Credentialing Handbook provides comprehensive, plain-English guida nce to understand and master the provider credentialing process in any health care setting. With sample forms, checklists, flowcharts, and c orrespondence, this practical guide walks you through every aspect of effective credentialing, appointment, and recredentialing. You'll lear n: key steps in the credentialing process; about express credentialin g models; how to credential allied health practitioners; typical time frames and tracking systems; pros and cons of delegating credentialin g, plus more.




The Credentialing Guide


Book Description




Managed Care Credentialing


Book Description

The role of the MSP is expanding to include payer enrollment and delegated credentialing responsibilities for managed care organizations. Traditionally siloed, MSPs are now beginning to take on both responsibilities, which means they must learn the nuances of managed care credentialing as well as the regulatory and accreditation requirements of NCQA, CMS, and URAC. Managed Care Credentialing: Compliance Strategies for Health Plans, CVOs, and Delegated Entities provides the answers to MSPs' inevitable questions as they begin to manage the tasks of payer enrollment and delegated credentialing. Author Amy M. Niehaus guides readers through each payer's requirements, the differences between hospital and managed care credentialing, and how to help their organization establish delegated credentialing agreements and prepare for audits. As new and existing MSP responsibilities begin to collide, this resource also outlines ways MSPs can modify their current processes to reduce duplication of efforts and develop a comprehensive and compliant managed care credentialing program. Whether you are new to managed care credentialing or are taking on delegated credentialing responsibilities, this book will help you: Learn the regulatory and accreditation requirements related to managed care credentialing Streamline the provider enrollment process through delegation Meet your organizational goals of compliance, operational efficiency, cost savings, and practitioner satisfaction Identify the differences between hospital and managed care credentialing