| Literature DB >> 23882382 |
Dolores Buscemi1, Helen Wang, Michael Phy, Kenneth Nugent.
Abstract
The clinical practice of internal medicine continues to evolve with the addition of new information and new technology. Most internists in practice will have erosion of their knowledge after they complete training unless life-long learning occurs. The American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) began to issue time-limited certification in 1990 and asserts that the Maintenance of Certification (MOC) program promotes the professional development of internists. However, the available medical literature does not provide strong support for the assumption that internists with certification or recertification have better patient outcomes. This relationship between recertification and patient outcomes needs more study. In addition, the participation in the Maintenance of Certification program by internists with lifetime certifications has been low, and recertification by leaders in internal medicine has also been relatively low. Some physicians in practice have concerns about the relevance of the program and the cost. Our review suggests that the ABIM needs to review its current Maintenance of Certification program and make changes to enhance its clinical relevance and educational value. We suggest that professional development should be based on focused reviews of the current literature, which is immediately relevant to clinical practice, and that recertification could be based on completion of modules and more frequent, less onerous testing.Entities:
Keywords: certification; internal medicine; mortality; patient outcomes; recertification
Year: 2013 PMID: 23882382 PMCID: PMC3715151 DOI: 10.3402/jchimp.v2i4.19753
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Community Hosp Intern Med Perspect ISSN: 2000-9666
Studies with Outcomes/Board Certification
| Authors | Data source | Specialties studied | Quality measures | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chen et al. 2006 | Data from CCP and AMA Physician Master profile 101,251 Medicare patients | Internal medicine Cardiology Family medicine | Patients admitted with AMI: Admission ASA Discharge ASA Admission B-blocker Discharge B-blocker | Board-certified internists and cardiologists performed better than non-boarded; no difference in mortality |
| Kelly and Hellinger 1989 | National patient abstract data for 1977 | Board-certified IM/FM and non-board-certified | Mortality associated with acute MI | Board-certified internists had 3% fewer deaths in hospital |
| Norcini et al. 2002 | Patients with AMI 40,684 hospital admissions | Board-certified and non-board-certified internists, family practitioners, cardiologist | Mortality after acute MI | 15% reduction in mortality with board certified |
| Ramsey et al. 1989 | Internists who had completed training in the last 5–10 years | 185 board certified/74 non-board-certified internists | Management of specific diseases Preventive counseling Ratings by Professional Society Patient questionnaire Written exam | Certified internists had significantly higher exam scores. Rating of clinical skills by Prof Soc were significantly higher. No difference in patient satisfaction No difference in chronic disease management Modest difference in preventive counseling favoring certified |
| Pham et al. 2005 | 24,581 Medicare beneficiaries; claims data from 2001 | 3660 general internists and family practitioners | Delivery of preventive services to Medicare patients ≥ 65 | Board-certified physicians did better statistically at ordering HgbA1C, colon cancer screen, mammograms |
Percentage of members with non-time-limited certificates who have recertified
| Organization | Certified general medicine | Recertified general medicine | Certified subspecialty | Recertified subspecialty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ABIM | 30 | 6 (20) | 17 | 13 (76) |
| Task force | 17 | 3 (18) | 11 | 3 (27) |
| Annals editorial | 22 | 2 (9) | 5 | 1 (20) |
| ACP regents | 26 | 2 (8) | 7 | 0 (0) |
| ACP governors | 54 | 2 (4) | 18 | 0 (0) |
| ACGME | 12 | 0 (0) | 8 | 0 (0) |
| Total | 161 | 15 (9%) | 66 | 17 (25%) |