Insights from the team building the credentialing platform that medical professionals actually want to use.
Most clinicians store credentialing documents in five or six places at once and can't find any of them when a hospital asks. Here's a clear, durable system that holds up at the next renewal, locum start, and audit.
An expired medical license stops you from practicing the day it lapses, voids billing, and triggers Board reinstatement fees, audits, and possible disciplinary action. Here's exactly what happens and how to stop it.
Hospital credentialing at a new facility takes 60 to 120 days on average. Here's what each phase actually involves, where the delays come from, and how to compress the timeline.
Hospitals own the privileging file. State boards own the license. CAQH owns the application. Your employer owns the LMS. Here's what providers actually own — and the gap that costs them at every transition.
North Carolina activated its IMLC pathway in January 2026, bringing the compact to 43 states. Here's what physicians need to know about applying, the LOQ window, and what the compact still doesn't solve.
Every document EM providers need for hospital privileges, payer enrollment, and DEA registration — organized by when to act on each one.
The DEA's telemedicine prescribing rules are still evolving in 2026. Here's where the extensions stand, what EM providers can and can't prescribe remotely, and what to have in place.
A side-by-side look at Modio, Medallion, Symplr, and Caliber — which credentialing platform is actually built for individual providers, not employers?
Every credential a new EM resident or graduate needs to start practicing — the order to apply, realistic timelines, and how to avoid a first-day gap.
CMS now requires Medicare enrollment within 30 days of a new ED start. What changed, what to have ready, and how to avoid the revenue gap.
47-page applications, faxed documents, and 60-day waits. Credentialing has not changed in 20 years. Here is why, and what we are doing about it.