Monday, October 1, 2007

From the Headlines: Importance of Recertifying Physicians

An article printed September 20, 2007, in Modern Healthcare brings up the need for physicians to participate in Maintenance of Certification, citing "As medical science advances almost daily, lifetime certification no longer suffices to assure quality of care."

http://modernhealthcare.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070920/FREE/309210007/0/mostreadmonth

You might wonder what Maintenance of Certification is exactly. "It is a voluntary process, above and beyond licensure, designed to ensure that practicing physicians stay current in their specialties... (it) requires that physicians demonstrate—on an ongoing basis—the knowledge and skills that are needed to deliver excellent care."

The article goes on to explain that many of the country's largest insurance companies are embracing Maintenance of Certification, in part by offering higher plan reimbursements to physicians who opt to participate.

With the complexity of medicine today, this makes nothing but good sense to me. I would want to know that my physician was actively pursuing continuing education and doing everything possible to remain completely up-to-date regarding his/her specialty.

From a documentation standpoint, it is equally as important that other members of the healthcare team make a commitment to lifelong learning. Certified medical transcriptionists (CMT), for example, are required to submit proof of 30 continuing education credits every 3 years in order to maintain their credential. Credits must be spread out over 4 core and 2 complementary areas so that a CMT does not become "lopsided" in their education. With so much emphasis on the privacy and security issues surrounding medical documentation, a minimum of one-fifth of the required credits must be in the medicolegal arena. Another one-fifth must be directed to technology advancements in the industry and other issues directly affecting the workplace. The other core areas are clinical medicine and medical transcription tools.

Without continuing education, transcriptionists and other practitioners cannot exercise sound critical thinking as they perform their jobs. Anyone with the ability to affect patient care should not only be credentialed - but should be commited to ongoing learning.

1 comments:

My name is Ava George said...

I just heard on XM radio on my way in to giving my final (MD channel....hummm) physicians speaking on this issue. Some are for it, some against, most unsure of how much paperwork this will generate....Makes you say hummmm, how much quality assurance is enough? I say, it's about time physicians are held accountable by their profession and everyone else! Welcome to the quality assurance highway!