Question of the Week

QUESTION:

Our hospital has granted clinical privileges to practitioners who work primarily in outpatient facilities which are a part of the same health system as the hospital.  How do we conduct FPPE to confirm competence and OPPE for these practitioners when they have limited to no volume in the hospital, but the hospital wants them to retain their privileges in case it needs them to provide patient care services?

OUR ANSWER FROM HORTYSPRINGER ATTORNEY CHARLIE CHULACK:

During the COVID-19 pandemic, this is an important question because hospitals are scrambling for methods to cover the clinical needs of an influx of patients when there are community spikes in infections and hospitalizations.  Thus, they may want to have practitioners “at the ready” even though their primary practice location is not in a hospital.

Nonetheless, you do have some options when it comes to these “low volume practitioners.”  To use The Joint Commission terminology, for “focused professional practice evaluation” (or “FPPE”) to confirm competence and “ongoing professional practice evaluation” (or “OPPE”), the hospital can have the low volume practitioner provide one or more of the following types of information:  (1) information from their primary practice location, such as ongoing professional practice evaluation reports, a quality profile, and/or patient satisfaction surveys, (2) detailed reference requests from their primary practice location, (3) detailed peer evaluations from individuals who have directly observed or who are in a regular referral relationship with the practitioner, or (4) medical records of patients treated at the primary practice location so that the hospital may conduct an evaluation of the care provided.

If the low volume practitioner works almost exclusively in outpatient settings, the above information, if part of a general request, may not address their clinical skills in a hospital setting.  But, you can structure the requests so that the information received relates to the clinical privileges that the practitioner has in the hospital.  For example, while not completely analogous, if the primary practice location is an Urgent Care Center for a practitioner seeking or granted clinical privileges in emergency medicine, the information requested could target the performance of histories and physicals, the ordering and interpretation of diagnostic studies, the administration of medications, and the requesting of consultations/making of appropriate referrals.

For those hospitals that are accredited by The Joint Commission, keep in mind the FAQ issued on March 4, 2021, which provides as follows:  “When practitioner activity at the ‘local’ level is low or limited, supplemental data may be used from another CMS-certified organization where the practitioner holds the same privileges.  The use of supplemental data may NOT be used in lieu of a process to capture local data.”  Thus, The Joint Commission requires that at least some of the data used to confirm competence come from the hospital conducting the evaluation.  The Joint Commission gives hospitals significant flexibility in the type of information collected by the hospital for professional practice evaluation, so you can be creative.

We should mention that for health systems that have outpatient locations operating as departments of the hospital (i.e., as provider-based outpatient departments), then any FPPE or OPPE that was completed in that outpatient setting would be viewed as having occurred “in the hospital.”  In this case, The Joint Commission requirements would be satisfied based on what was done in the outpatient setting.

Another tool to deal with low volume practitioners is to grant an exception that permits them to remain subject to FPPE to confirm competence for the duration of the Practitioner’s appointment term for some or all clinical privileges.  This option may be used because of community need, coverage requirements, the rare nature of a given procedure or treatment, or other relevant factors.  We believe this is a reasonable interpretation of the relevant standards based on the needs of hospitals during the COVID-19 pandemic.