Credentialing Turnaround Time: Best Strategies for Faster Approvals
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Verify provider data, ensure compliance
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19 Apr, 2024, 11 min read
Accurate provider data is the foundation of a well-functioning healthcare system. It ensures that patients can find the right providers, health plans can process claims efficiently, and regulatory requirements are met. However, maintaining up-to-date provider information is a persistent challenge, leading to administrative inefficiencies and potential care gaps. In this blog, we explore provider data accuracy, its importance, key challenges, and strategies for improvement.
Atlas Systems also asked health plan members which specific pieces of directory information had been wrong – and the clear winner was: Whether a doctor or practice is accepting new patients, which was found to be inaccurate 50% of the time.
Other sources of incorrect information include:
This blog explores the importance of provider data accuracy, common issues affecting data quality, and strategies to improve provider directory management.
Provider directory accuracy refers to the precision, completeness, and timeliness of data that appears in a health plan’s provider directory and reflects the provider’s actual, current status. This includes details such as provider names, credentials, specialties, locations, contact information, and network participation status. Accuracy, in this context, is not static; it depends on the data reflecting a provider’s current status at any given time.
Regulatory agencies, including CMS and state departments of insurance, set specific expectations for health plans to maintain this accuracy. CMS, for example, requires health plans to review and validate their directories at least every 90 days and document each outreach attempt. Many state-level mandates go further, enforcing stricter update cycles and requiring health plans to demonstrate provider attestation.
Responsibility does not shift based on who submits the data. Whether the source is a delegated entity, a credentialing vendor, or the provider group itself, the compliance burden remains with the health plan. Ensuring provider directory data accuracy is both a regulatory obligation and a patient safety issue, and increasingly, it is a reputational risk factor as well.
Maintaining provider directory accuracy directly influences how members navigate care, how plans avoid penalties, and how provider relationships are managed.
When directory data is accurate, it improves the entire ecosystem, from smoother claims processing to better access and fewer complaints.
Here are the core reasons accuracy matters:
Strengthens operational resilience: Accurate directories reduce friction across credentialing, contracting, and customer support teams.
When provider directories fail, the consequences ripple across every layer of healthcare, from member access and care continuity to regulatory compliance and member trust.
And the numbers tell a troubling story.
In our latest 2025 Member Experience Monitor, we surveyed over 1,500 insured adults across the U.S. to understand how directory errors affect real people. The findings are hard to ignore:
The report reveals how these experiences directly impact Star Ratings, grievance volume, and member retention.
These breakdowns are not isolated; they are systemic:
Trust declines: Members blame the plan when they cannot access care as expected
Compliance risks grow: CMS and state regulators continue to flag directory inaccuracies in audit findings
Operational costs increase: Each error leads to more calls, more escalations, and more appeals
Reputation suffers: Members share poor experiences publicly, influencing plan perception and renewal choices
Even with the best intentions, maintaining provider directory accuracy is difficult, and most of the issues stem from how fragmented and reactive the process tends to be.
Let’s break down the common contributors:
In most cases, it is not one big failure. It is a series of small gaps: uncoordinated, manual, and poorly tracked, that gradually erode the reliability of the data.
Compliance checks alone can’t fix directory accuracy. Health plans need to rethink provider data management from the ground up. The following strategies are grounded in current best practices and regulatory expectations, and designed to help payer organizations build sustainable, audit-ready, and patient-centric data ecosystems.
One of the most effective ways to reduce data conflicts is to move away from fragmented silos and toward a single, validated source of truth for provider data. This means:
This centralized approach not only reduces redundancy but also limits opportunities for human error and data drift.
Many inaccuracies stem from outdated, manually submitted rosters. Automating the ingestion and reconciliation of these files can eliminate delays and spot inconsistencies early:
Not all provider attributes carry equal operational risk. Instead of treating every update the same way, segment and prioritize data cleansing based on business impact:
Inaccurate provider data often arises from delays in updating critical fields across internal systems. This can be mitigated by enabling:
Governance cannot be an afterthought. It needs to be baked into the provider lifecycle management process:
While CMS mandates updates every 90 days, relying solely on this cadence may expose gaps. Progressive health plans are now:
Providers are more likely to submit timely, accurate data when they see how that data is used and when the process is simple:
As data complexity grows, manual validation will not scale. AI-driven approaches can reduce false positives and speed up decision-making:
These strategies are about building trust with your members, strengthening provider relationships, and avoiding costly fallout from compliance violations. Investing in this level of precision now will put your organization in a far better position to adapt to national directories, stricter audits, and rising member expectations in the years ahead.
Provider directories are becoming critical infrastructure for digital health access, care coordination, and payer transparency. As the industry moves toward more integrated ecosystems and consumer-driven expectations, directory accuracy will take on even greater strategic relevance.
Here is where the landscape is heading:
The takeaway is simple: future-ready directories are proactive, not reactive. They are a living interface between health plans, members, and care delivery.
Inaccurate provider directories erode trust, expose health plans to regulatory penalties, and delay care when patients need it most. Each missed update or mismatched record represents a breakdown in the system meant to protect both providers and patients.
At Atlas Systems, we treat provider directory accuracy as a mission-critical function, not a check-the-box task.
Why? Because we have seen the downstream impact of errors firsthand, from CMS audit failures to grievance spikes, to provider abrasion that slows onboarding and disrupts member care.
Here’s how we help solve it:
Our clients choose PRIME® because we go beyond remediation; we build systems that prevent errors in the first place. Whether it is improving first-touch data accuracy, reducing provider outreach burden, or building audit-ready logs, our approach is built for long-term sustainability.
If your organization is still relying on spreadsheets, quarterly audits, or manual reconciliation, now is the time to rethink that strategy. Talk to our experts to see how our provider data and compliance solutions can safeguard your directory, your members, and your reputation.
According to CMS guidelines, Medicare Advantage plans must review and update their provider directories at least once every 90 days.
If you notice incorrect provider information, such as outdated addresses, unavailable providers, or wrong network status, you should contact your health plan immediately. Health plans are required to investigate and correct the error, and failure to do so could result in regulatory action or member grievance escalation.
It depends. Federal and state regulations (including the No Surprises Act) offer some protections for patients when inaccurate directories cause out-of-network billing. However, plans may still be held accountable for directory errors that mislead members, especially if they affect network adequacy or access to care.
Yes. CMS enforces provider directory accuracy under Medicare Advantage rules, and several state insurance departments have specific mandates for timeliness, accessibility, and accuracy. Plans that fail to comply may face corrective action plans, star rating reductions, or financial penalties.