NCQA’s Credentialing Standards Help Ensure Safety and Integrity of Practitioner Networks
Patients rely on health care organizations to maintain networks of qualified practitioners so they can get timely, equitable and culturally responsive care. Credentialing is an essential function that protects the safety of patients and collects vital information for practitioner directories to help patients choose one who meets their needs.
Credentialing is detailed review and verification of a health care practitioner’s qualifications and experience—license, medical education, history of sanctions, prior malpractice cases and other information—before they join a network. NCQA requires recredentialing every three years.
NCQA recently updated its credentialing product suite of programs, providing a framework for health care organizations to implement industry best practices for practitioner credentialing, ongoing monitoring and recredentialing.
Which Organizations Perform Credentialing?
Health care delivery systems and health insurance plans must credential practitioners before they can join a network. Commercial CVOs may perform aspects of the credentialing process—such as license verification or review of sanctions—and pass that information to the health system or health plan.
An organization might use a third party to perform some of its credentialing functions. If an NCQA-Accredited health plan or health system delegates these functions, it must provide oversight by reviewing a sample of the delegate’s credentialing files—a time consuming, labor-intensive process. But if the delegate has earned NCQA’s Credentialing Accreditation or Certification, the organization may choose to forgo an audit.
How Did NCQA Update Its Credentialing Standards?
After performing extensive research, including a public comment period, NCQA combined its existing programs into a single program for Credentialing Accreditation and Certification. All requirements in the credentialing suite align with credentialing standards in NCQA’s Health Plan Accreditation program.
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Organizations may pursue Accreditation, Certification or both. Credentialing Accreditation is for organizations with full oversight of the credentialing process, and a credentialing committee that has the authority to approve a practitioner for the network. Certification is for organizations that perform credentialing verification functions but do not have a credentialing committee. Certified organizations are often delegates of other health care organizations that maintain a network of practitioners.
Other changes to NCQA’s Credentialing standards:
Benefits of Accreditation/Certification
There are many reasons to consider participating in NCQA’s Credentialing Accreditation or Certification programs.
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