Every clinical hire your organization makes carries a question that verification is supposed to answer: did this person actually do what they say they did, in the role they claim to have held? Get that wrong, and the consequences reach well beyond a bad hire.
Large hospital systems process thousands of employment verifications each year. Each one confirms that a candidate truly held the position, credentials, and responsibilities they claim. When clinical staff are involved, the accuracy of that confirmation carries real consequences for patient outcomes.
At the same time, procurement teams are navigating a different reality. Verification costs have risen significantly, particularly pass-through fees from large centralized employment databases. For health systems processing high volumes, those increases can represent hundreds of thousands of dollars annually, and that pressure is forcing difficult budget conversations across the industry.
Understandably, many organizations are exploring alternatives that promise to be faster, cheaper, and more automated. One of the most talked-about options today is payroll-connected employment verification, including solutions powered through platforms like Argyle. These tools appear to solve the cost problem, and for a narrow set of use cases, they do. The challenge is that healthcare hiring rarely fits neatly into that narrow set.
Why Payroll-Connected Solutions Are Gaining Attention
The appeal is easy to understand. Instead of relying solely on large third-party employment databases, payroll-connected platforms attempt to pull employment data directly from the candidate’s payroll provider. The theoretical workflow is straightforward: an employer orders a verification, the candidate logs into their current or former payroll account, and the system returns historical employment data quickly, often at a lower cost than traditional database access.
For organizations frustrated by rising pass-through fees, this sounds like an elegant solution to a persistent problem.
Where the Model Breaks Down in Practice
Real-world execution tells a different story, and several challenges emerge consistently across organizations that have adopted this approach.
- Success is largely limited to current employment. Payroll-connected verification works best when a candidate is confirming their current employer. Credentials are fresh, password resets are manageable, and data is readily accessible. Healthcare hiring, though, rarely involves only current employment. Hospitals need a full work history, often spanning multiple employers across many years.
- Past employment verification has low completion rates. When candidates attempt to verify prior employers through payroll platforms, they frequently run into barriers. They may not remember which payroll provider their former employer used, or they may have registered with a work email address they no longer have access to. Password resets often depend on those same inaccessible accounts, creating a dead end that no amount of candidate prompting will solve.
When candidates cannot complete the login process, the background screening provider typically falls back to a traditional third-party database to obtain the verification. This means the original cost problem is not fully solved, turnaround time increases, and the workflow becomes fragmented.
The Hidden Cost: Paying for Both Models
Here is the scenario most organizations underestimate. A candidate worked for three prior employers, and all three outsource employment records to a major centralized verification provider. Under a payroll-connected model, the candidate may successfully log into their current employer’s payroll system, but fail to access records for the two prior roles. The background screening partner then falls back to the legacy database for those verifications, and the pass-through fee applies.
The result is that your organization still pays the legacy fee, has added a new workflow layer, extended turnaround time, and introduced friction into the candidate experience. In many cases, organizations end up paying for both models without realizing meaningful savings on either.
A Critical Gap: Missing Job Titles in Healthcare Verification
In healthcare, employment verification is not simply about confirming dates of service. It is about confirming role specificity. Was the candidate a registered nurse, a certified medical assistant, an environmental services technician, or a billing coordinator? These distinctions matter for credentialing, scope-of-practice compliance, and patient safety.
Payroll-connected solutions often reliably return dates of employment and compensation data. What they do not consistently return are clear, structured job titles. For healthcare employers, that gap is significant. A report that confirms a candidate worked at a hospital without clearly verifying the position held does not meet clinical credentialing requirements and cannot reliably support safe hiring decisions. In regulated environments where position history must align with licensure and certifications, this limitation carries real compliance risk.
The Candidate Experience Reality
These platforms are often marketed as modern and streamlined, but candidate feedback frequently describes a more frustrating experience. Common reactions include confusion about which payroll system to select, frustration over forgotten passwords, and discomfort with the idea of logging into financial accounts during a hiring process.
For nurses, allied health professionals, and clinical staff who are already navigating credentialing paperwork, onboarding requirements, and licensure verification, adding another unfamiliar step creates friction at a critical moment in the hiring journey. Rather than accelerating time-to-hire, the process can delay it. Rather than enhancing the candidate experience, it can erode it.
Turnaround Time and Operational Impact
Extended turnaround times are another unintended consequence. When candidates struggle to complete payroll logins, reminders must be sent, support teams intervene, hiring managers wait, and background screening partners pivot to fallback methods. For large health systems managing thousands of hires annually, these incremental delays compound quickly and affect workforce planning across the organization.
When Payroll-Connected Solutions Do Make Sense
These tools are not inherently flawed, and they can be appropriate in the right context. Payroll-connected verification works well for confirming current employment, verifying recent employers where candidates have active payroll access, and supporting low-complexity hiring environments. The limitations become significant when the goal is robust, multi-employer employment verification at the volume and specificity that healthcare hiring requires.
What Healthcare Organizations Should Ask Before Switching
Before moving away from traditional verification models, procurement and HR leaders should pressure-test any proposed alternative against these questions:
- Who carries the burden? If the process relies on candidates remembering login credentials for former employers, your completion rates will reflect that dependency.
- What is the real fallback rate? Ask your vendor how often the workflow defaults back to a legacy database, and get that number in writing.
- Are past employment verifications actually completing? A high overall completion rate can mask poor performance on prior employer verifications, which are the ones healthcare hiring most depends on.
- Are job titles being captured in a structured, usable format? Dates and compensation data alone do not satisfy clinical credentialing requirements.
- What is the true cost per completed verification? Calculate it after accounting for manual intervention, fallback database fees, and candidate drop-off, not before.
- Does the data support safe, compliant hiring decisions? This is the question everything else feeds into.
Look Beyond the Price Tag
The pressure to reduce verification costs is real, and rising pass-through fees have forced difficult budget conversations across healthcare systems nationwide. Cost reduction is a legitimate goal, and procurement teams are right to pursue it. A solution that produces low success rates for past employment, increases turnaround time, frustrates candidates, and fails to consistently confirm job titles does not meaningfully solve the underlying problem, regardless of what it saves on individual transactions.
Employment verification in healthcare is ultimately about protecting patients, maintaining compliance, and ensuring the integrity of your workforce. Before adopting a faster, cheaper alternative, healthcare organizations should evaluate whether the solution truly delivers reliable, complete, and candidate-friendly verification at the scale their operations require. In hiring, just as in patient care, shortcuts that overlook the full picture tend to cost more in the long run.
Talk to UBS About Your Employment Verification Strategy
If your organization is weighing verification alternatives or looking to better manage rising pass-through costs without compromising data quality, our team can help you work through the tradeoffs. We work with healthcare systems of all sizes to build screening programs that meet compliance requirements, protect candidate experience, and deliver results you can stand behind.
Contact UBS today to speak with a verification specialist and learn more about our healthcare screening solutions.
