Making the right hiring decisions for your company is critical to your business success. But getting it right isn’t easy.
We all know the negative consequences of making the wrong hire – it can lower your team’s morale, hinder productivity, and even impact customer relations. But did you know that the cost of replacing an experienced worker who doesn’t work out can cost 50 percent or more of that individual’s salary and these costs go up if the employee has specialized skills such as nursing
There are many things you can do to ensure you make informed decisions and hire quality employees and one of them is to use Background checks.
Reasons to Conduct a Background Check
A pre-employment background check can not only save you money in the long run, it can also protect your business. How? If your employees come into direct contact with your patients (for example, in a care capacity) and cause harm to a patient, your practice can be liable if that employee has a criminal record. A background check can also provide insight into an individual’s behavior, character, and integrity.
Which Types of Background Checks Can and Should You Conduct
There are several background checks that you can consider as you build a profile of a future employee. Not all of them, however, are appropriate or even possible for every company. For example, how you may employ the information gleaned during a criminal background check when making hiring decisions varies from state to state. Furthermore, any check on an individual’s credit score or military service requires consent.
Stay Within the Law by Working with a Screening Firm
Many private screening firms will offer complete background checks while helping you stay compliant with the law, although you should concentrate only on checks that pertain to the job at hand unless you need to know every little detail about your next employee and have the budget to pay the costs.
Healthcare Worker Screening The two most common healthcare worker screenings are required by the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA) and the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of the Inspector General. The AHCA rules include Level 2 Background Screening for Administrators, Financial Officers and employees with direct patient contact. The OIG screening requires a database search for persons excluded from participation in the Medicare or Medicaid programs due to fraudulent activity.
All Rehab Home Health employees are screened according to the rules and regulations set forth by the State and Federal government. If you or a loved one needs safe, reliable Home Care, please contact us at 855-FLA-NURSE