In healthcare and healthcare staffing, everyone is chasing the same outcome: get qualified clinicians in place quickly, safely, and compliantly. The race to fill open roles has never felt more urgent, and the pressure on margins has never been heavier.
Somewhere inside that race, there’s a friction point that rarely makes it onto a dashboard but quietly costs real money. It slows time-to-fill, frustrates clinicians before they ever step on site, and chips away at drop-off rates that most organizations can’t fully explain.
That friction point is the background screening experience.
At Universal Background Screening, one of the most consistent things we’ve heard over 20+ years of working with healthcare providers and staffing firms is that candidates don’t want to think about background screening. They want to get to work. Every extra step, every duplicated form, every portal login for a credential they’ve already submitted once before, erodes their confidence in your process and sometimes their interest in the role altogether.
That’s the core idea behind a principle we’ve built our healthcare screening programs around: for candidates, no experience is the best experience.
This isn’t about cutting corners on compliance or quality, but rather designing background screening so effectively, and integrating it so cleanly into the broader hiring journey, that most candidates barely notice it’s happening at all.
Thin Margins Don’t Leave Room for Friction
Healthcare staffing operates on some of the thinnest margins in the entire workforce solutions space. Staffing firms are constantly navigating pressure from both directions: clinicians expect fast, clear experiences, and the healthcare systems they staff expect rigorous compliance with no shortcuts.
Background screening sits squarely at that intersection, and every unnecessary step in the process has a real cost. Repeated data entry, duplicated credential checks, and disconnected portal experiences delay start dates, increase candidate drop-off, add overhead for recruiters and credentialing teams, and shape how candidates feel about your brand from day one.
In a market where travel nurses and clinicians have genuine choices about where to take assignments, a clunky screening experience isn’t just an inconvenience. Today, it can be a competitive disadvantage that most organizations haven’t fully priced into their thinking.
What “No Experience” Actually Means
When we use the phrase “no experience is the best experience,” we’re describing a design philosophy, not a workaround.
The goal is to minimize unnecessary candidate effort, remove redundant touchpoints, and orchestrate as much of the process as possible in the background. For candidates, this means not being asked to re-enter the same information into multiple systems, not being required to redo health screenings that are still valid, and not bouncing between disconnected portals with no clear sense of what’s next or why.
For recruiters and credentialing teams, it means fewer confused emails and phone calls from candidates, more predictable time-to-clear windows, and a process they can trust to run without constant manual intervention.
The lever here is connecting the tools already in place (not adding more tools) and rebuilding workflows around where data actually lives, rather than around manual movement.
The Friction Points That Keep Showing Up
When you map the candidate journey at most healthcare staffing firms, the same pressure points appear regardless of the organization’s size or technology stack.
Redundant data entry is the most common problem. Candidates retype the same personal information, employment history, and license details across an ATS, an onboarding portal, a background screening platform, and an occupational health system. Nothing in that chain is checking whether the data already exists somewhere downstream.
Duplicated clinical checks are the most expensive. A nurse completes a physical, a TB test, and titer panels for one assignment and then gets asked to redo all of it a few weeks later for a new contract, even when the results are still fully valid. That’s wasted spend for everyone involved and a genuine frustration for the clinician who has been through it before.
Disconnected technology compounds both of those problems. When systems don’t communicate with each other, candidates experience onboarding as a series of separate, unrelated processes rather than a single coherent journey. And when that journey feels repetitive and poorly explained, candidates don’t just feel annoyed. They start questioning whether your organization is organized enough to be worth the trouble.
None of this is inevitable. These are design problems, and they have design solutions.
Moving from One Big Report to Credential-by-Credential Fulfillment
Traditional background screening was built around a single comprehensive report per candidate: criminal records, employment verification, education checks, license verifications, and occupational health results all bundled into one deliverable.
That model worked reasonably well for static, permanent hiring. It breaks down in healthcare staffing, where nurses move from assignment to assignment, often with the same agency, and where many credentials have clearly defined validity windows of six to twelve months.
Ordering a new physical or TB test for a candidate who completed one eight weeks ago isn’t a compliance requirement. It’s waste.
This is why credential-centric design is so central to how UBS approaches healthcare screening. Rather than treating the background check as a single, indivisible artifact, we work at the individual credential level. Each item, whether it’s a criminal check, a license verification, a titer result, or a drug screen, can be requested, completed, stored, and reused independently.
When a credential is still valid, it gets surfaced for reuse rather than reordered. When a candidate has a genuine gap, only that gap gets filled. For candidates, this translates to fewer unnecessary tests and forms. For staffing firms and their hospital partners, it means protected margins and faster time-to-fill across every assignment cycle, not just the first one.
Integration Is Where the Experience Actually Gets Built
A connected candidate experience only holds together when the systems supporting it are genuinely integrated. This is where most screening relationships fall apart, not because the technology doesn’t exist, but because the integrations weren’t built with healthcare staffing workflows in mind.
UBS approaches this with an API-first architecture developed specifically for the complexity of this space. Candidate and order data flow automatically between client systems and UBS with no manual re-keying. Statuses and results update in real time. Credentials are transmitted as discrete data objects, so client systems can track exactly what exists, what’s approaching expiration, and what’s still needed for a given clinician or assignment.
UBS is HR-XML certified and integrated with dozens of leading ATS and HRIS platforms, including healthcare-specific providers like symplr and LaborEdge. These aren’t off-the-shelf connections adapted for healthcare after the fact. They’re built around how healthcare recruiting and credentialing teams actually operate, including the VMS environments, blended staffing models, and managed service arrangements that are standard in enterprise healthcare systems.
For candidates, the practical result is that the background check becomes one step in a single onboarding flow rather than a separate process they have to navigate on their own. They apply, they receive communications from your brand, they complete what’s actually needed, and everything else moves in the background.
Speed and Compliance Belong Together
Healthcare organizations are accountable to regulators, accrediting bodies, hospital risk teams, and ultimately to patients. The idea of making screening feel invisible raises a reasonable question: can a fast, low-friction experience actually coexist with the compliance standards healthcare demands?
Our experience over two-plus decades says yes, but it requires that automation is paired with genuine quality controls and human review where it counts.
UBS uses automation and data providers extensively to retrieve criminal and verification data across thousands of jurisdictions. For any order containing potentially reportable criminal information, every result is reviewed by a person before it goes to a client. Our professional staff are trained in Joint Commission requirements for background checks and credential verifications, and our workflows guide recruiters through compliance requirements rather than leaving them to interpret complex state and federal regulations on their own.
The goal is a screening experience that feels fast and simple on the surface while still meeting the extremely high bar that healthcare compliance requires. Those two things can coexist. They just require the right architecture underneath.
How AI Fits Into This
AI is reshaping a lot of the workforce solutions ecosystem, and background screening is no exception. At UBS, we’re using AI to automate internal workflows so data moves faster and processing decisions are supported more efficiently. We’re using it to clean and structure complex records, particularly in cases where raw criminal or verification data arrives in inconsistent formats. We’re using it to help clients interpret results more quickly and focus on what actually requires attention.
All of this operates within a human-assisted framework. AI handles the optimization; people remain in control where judgment and nuance matter, which in healthcare is most places.
For candidates, the benefit is mostly invisible: faster processing, fewer errors, and less back-and-forth. In other words, more of that “no experience” feeling without any reduction in accuracy or compliance.
A Few Questions Worth Sitting With
If you lead a healthcare staffing firm or a provider organization, the candidate experience inside your background screening program is worth an honest look, not just from a satisfaction standpoint but from a margin and efficiency standpoint.
- How many times does a typical candidate re-enter the same information across your systems?
- Are valid credentials being systematically reused across assignments, or are TB tests and physicals getting reordered out of habit?
- Does your background check feel like one continuous journey, or like a separate and disconnected process sitting between candidates and their start dates?
- Are your recruiters guided by embedded compliance rules, or are they expected to know and apply complex regulations on their own?
If those questions surface duplication, confusion, or delays you hadn’t fully quantified, that’s worth taking seriously. The opportunity isn’t just a better candidate experience. It’s measurable improvement in speed, cost, and risk across your workforce programs.
Why This Work Matters to Us
More then half of UBS revenue comes from healthcare and healthcare staffing. This isn’t a vertical we’ve moved into recently or serve at arm’s length. It’s where we’ve spent the better part of two-plus decades building real expertise, forming long-term partnerships, and learning what actually holds up at scale.
That experience has reinforced a few things we believe firmly. Speed-to-hire, compliance, and candidate experience are not competing priorities in this space. They depend on each other. Credential-centric, API-driven design is the only sustainable way to scale across high-volume, multi-assignment programs. And the best candidate journey is one that feels simple, predictable, and nearly invisible from the candidate’s point of view.
“No experience is the best experience” is the standard we design toward, because when background screening stops being a source of friction, it becomes what it always should have been: a reliable, quiet engine powering safer, faster, and more efficient hiring across healthcare.
To learn more about UBS healthcare and staffing solutions, contact us today.
