Provider Profile is a comprehensive digital record for each provider that consolidates all relevant credentialing data—including licenses, certifications, enrollments, documents, exclusions, verifications, and communication—in one unified location.
It’s designed to give credentialing teams instant visibility into a provider’s status, identify missing information, automate document requests and expiration alerts, and streamline the entire credentialing lifecycle.
Provider Profile - User Guide
FAQs
The Provider Profile dashboard is the most essential dashboard within MT Credentialing. It allows us to enable, view, and access all Provider Profiles. Provider Profiles house all credentialing related activities and documentation to be logged and performed within the MedTrainer platform.
If you wish to access a full list of all employees (Providers) with enabled profiles or profiles that can be enabled you will need to select mt | credentialing > provider profile.
Step 1: Log in at MedTrainer
Step 2: Select MT Credentialing > Provider Profile
Step 3: Go to the Active Profiles tab
Step 4: Find the Provider you wish to disable, then select the disable button
Step 5: Select the Accept button
A provider profile can be terminated via the Employee Center if the user is no longer employed at the organization or via the Provider Profile if the user is still employed but no longer requires the MT Credentialing functionality.
Step 1: Log in at MedTrainer
Step 2: Select MT Credentialing > Provider Profile
Step 3: Go to the Terminated tab
Step 4: Find the Provider you wish to download files for
Step 5: Select the download files button
On the MT Credentialing platform, provider visibility refers to the ability of administrators and authorized users to view and act on all relevant provider data in real time, from document statuses, application aging, verifications, exclusions, to enrollment progress. Through customizable dashboards and detailed reports, you gain a centralized view into provider activity across locations, specialties and payers, allowing you to monitor where each provider stands, identify bottlenecks, and intervene before issues impact revenue or compliance.
Here are two-three tip bullets to guide admins on how to enhance and leverage provider-visibility features in the system:
Set targeted filters & alerts — Use location, specialty, document status, or payer filters to create dynamic views of providers who have missing or expiring items. Then set follow-up alerts for “Expiring” statuses so you can proactively intervene before it affects credentialing or revenue.
Leverage dashboards for real-time oversight — Use customizable dashboards to display key provider metrics (enrollment age, document completeness, exclusions). Pin widgets you use frequently and rearrange your dashboard so the most urgent items show up first.
Share insights and collaborate across teams — Export filtered provider data or schedule reports so stakeholders (billing, HR, compliance) can stay aligned. Visibility isn’t just for credentialing; other teams benefit when provider status is transparent and actionable.
These actionable tips help turn provider-visibility into proactive management, rather than retrospective tracking.
Providers are added to the Employee Center so that their credentialing, training, policy acknowledgments, and compliance activities can be managed from a single source of truth. When a provider is registered in the Employee Center, the system can automatically trigger onboarding workflows, assign required courses and documents, and streamline data imports so administrators don’t have to maintain separate spreadsheets. By doing this, organizations ensure that provider profiles get created promptly and accurately, enabling credentialing teams to begin verifications, enrollments, and document requests without delay.
Exclusions Tab in Provider Profile.
What to do when you get a match?
When your organization receives an exclusion match in the MedTrainer Credentialing platform, you must act swiftly and follow documented steps to protect compliance, reimbursement and patient safety.
Review the match details — Open the provider’s exclusion profile and examine the affected database (e.g., Office of Inspector General-LEIE, System for Award Management) to verify the name, NPI, dates and nature of the exclusion.
Validate the provider identity — Confirm that the excluded individual’s demographic details (name, NPI, date of birth) align exactly with your provider’s record; in some cases fuzzy matches may appear that are not true exclusions.
Suspend billing and services — If the match is confirmed, immediately suspend the provider’s ability to treat patients under federal/state funded programs and halt claim submission until resolution or oversight direction is provided.
Document all actions — Record the match, your review steps, and subsequent actions in the provider’s profile and the Exclusions module logs; this creates an audit-ready trail of compliance.
Notify relevant stakeholders — Inform compliance, credentialing, billing and leadership teams as required by your organizational policy so they can address risk and prevent reimbursement penalties.
Monitor and follow up — Set a reminder to revisit the provider’s status, verify whether the exclusion has been lifted or when re-enrollment becomes permissible, and track appropriately.
Update and educate — Use the incident as an opportunity to review your exclusion-monitoring controls, make any needed adjustments in the Exclusions module settings or policies, and train your team on best practices.
By following these structured steps, you’ll ensure your exclusion process is consistent, defensible and aligned with regulatory requirements, safeguarding your organization and providers from unnecessary risk.
Dashboard Tab in Provider Profile.
The Provider Profile dashboard will show the overall status of verifications, enrollments, and documents that have been logged for the selected provider.
Information Tab in Provider Profile.
The Information tab will allow the administrator to log all information related to as a provider as well as give the administrator the ability to request that the provider fill out the information digitally through their MT Account and send it back for verification to the administrator.
Yes. In the Information Tab of the Provider's Profile, there is an button titled, Export Report, where the system will generate a report (PDF File) of the data given.
The National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB) is a confidential, federally-mandated clearinghouse created by Congress to enhance healthcare quality, protect the public, and reduce fraud and abuse in the U.S. health system. It collects reports from eligible entities such as hospitals, health plans and licensing boards that document medical malpractice payments, adverse licensure or privileges actions, exclusions from federal healthcare programs and other critical provider disciplinary events. Although individual practitioners can query their own records, general public access is restricted—only authorized healthcare organizations may query the NPDB to support credentialing, privileging, employment or licensing decisions.
Council for Affordable Quality Healthcare, Inc. (CAQH) is a non-profit organization that created a database for providers to store their credentialing information. It is the closest thing the healthcare industry has to a centralized place for providers to store the information needed for credentialing.
MedTrainer’s CAQH Import feature allows you to import provider information from CAQH in 30 seconds or less, saving time and effort by reducing the need for manual data entry.
Provider enrollments that take hours to fill out can NOW take minutes with MedTrainer’s CAQH Import feature.
Personal information
Professional IDs
Educational information
Professional training
Specialties
Hospital affiliations
Professional liability insurance
Employment history
Professional references
Disclosure and attestations
Professional licenses (not imported - coming soon).
DEA registration (not imported - coming soon).
NPI (not imported - coming soon).
No documents will be imported, only data fields.
The import replaces any information already in the associated fields in MedTrainer.
While MedTrainer’s direct CAQH integration automatically imports many standard provider fields, some data must still be manually entered or verified within your MedTrainer account. Typically, document files (such as the actual/scanned copy of the certificate or license) are not imported—only the field values (e.g., license number, expiration date) are pulled in. Additionally, custom fields you’ve created in MedTrainer (e.g., internal tracking attributes or organization-specific metadata) will not map automatically from CAQH and must be filled in manually by your team.
Step 1: Select MT | credentialing > select provider profile tab
Step 2: Select the provider's profile you wish to access
Step 3: Select the information tab then Third-Party logins tab on the left
Step 4: Enter the CAQH username & password
Step 5: Select save
Step 6: Select the Import from CAQH button on the top-right.
Dental Providers will not be supported because their information must be accessed in the ADA Portal.
How does one indicate the Provider is in Dental in the MedTrainer Platform?
Through the NUCC Grouping and Provider Type Field.
Step 1: Select MT | credentialing > select provider profile tab
Step 2: Select the provider's profile you wish to access
Step 3: Select the information tab, then the Personal information tab on the left
Step 4: In the data field, enter the information that pertains to the dental provider Provider Type field.
Step 5: Select the Specialty tab on the left
Step 6: In the data field, enter the information that pertains to the dental provider NUCC Grouping field.