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American Academy of Pediatrics - Maintenance of Certification (MOC) -... virginiapediatrics.org | ABR Maintenance of Certification (MOC) theabr.org | Society for Clinical Pathology - Maintenance of Certification... ascp.org | Maintenance of Certification (MOC) Toolkit plasticsurgery.org |
Maintenance of Certification (MOC) is the process of keeping physician certification up-to-date through one of the 24 approved medical specialty boards of the American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS). The ABMS, a non-profit organization, is one entity overseeing physician certification in the United States. The Maintenance of Certification program provides an ongoing process that was designed to help physicians keep abreast of advances in their fields, develop better practice systems, and demonstrate a commitment to lifelong learning. Physicians need to have - and maintain - the clinical judgment and skills upon which high quality care depends.[citation needed]
[edit] Maintenance of Certification and the Medical CommunityMany major medical organizations have expressed support for the Maintenance of Certification program as a valuable means of facilitating physicians' continuous professional development and measuring physicians' continued competency, including the following:
[edit] Maintenance of Certification CompetenciesThe Maintenance of Certification program assesses the six general competencies identified through the ACGME Outcome Project and subsequently required in medical residency program evaluations:
[edit] Maintenance of Certification ComponentsMaintenance of Certification incorporates the ACGME competencies through four program elements:
[edit] Maintenance of Certification and Other StakeholdersIncreasingly, many health plans are implementing programs that recognize and reward physicians who are actively participating in Maintenance of Certification activities.[1] ABMS member boards are actively working with other health care organizations to advance quality initiatives and reduce measurement redundancy through recognition of physicians' Maintenance of Certification program participation. Hospitals and health systems are beginning to use Maintenance of Certification components to engage physicians in quality improvement. Studies suggest that board-certified physicians provide improved quality of patient care and better clinical outcomes than those physicians without board certification,[2] including a 15% reduction in mortality rate among heart attack patients treated by board-certified physicians.[3] Considering a recent meta-analysis that shows a decline in physician performance associated with the time elapsed since the physician's initial training,[4] it is essential for physicians to participate in programs such as Maintenance of Certification in order to keep current with medicine's expanding knowledge base and technical advances, and to apply this knowledge to quality improvement in their medical practice. Maintenance of Certification helps physicians and other health care stakeholders address the critical need to enhance patient safety and patient care quality.[5] Ironically and fairly hypocritically, many of the certifying boards, such as the American Board of Internal Medicine and the American Board of Pediatrics, have "grandfathered" physicians certified prior to circa 1990, ie there is no requirement for such physicians to recertify. These are, of course, the very physicians who have had substantial time elapse since their training and so, as implied above, are deliverers of inferior care. Astoundingly, many of the current members of both boards have chosen not to recertify themselves although this is recommended by the very boards of which they are members. [edit] See also
[edit] External links[edit] References
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