By Niran Al-Agba and Meg Edison April 9, 2018
Maintenance of Certification (MOC) tests for doctors
like us might sound like a good idea at first glance. MOC requires us to take
frequent modules and tests to remain certified and keep our jobs.
But the truth is that these tests provide no value to
doctors or patients; in fact, they contribute to rising health care costs
because they take doctors’ precious time away from treating patients.
Recognizing the MOC burden, nearly 20 states have
introduced legislation to curb it, with Washington state passing a bill to
forbid it as a condition of licensure in late March. The rest should follow
suit.
MOC is a cash cow for the American Board of Medical
Specialties (ABMS) and its 24 specialty boards, which administer the exams.
According to its most recent tax filings, ABMS president Lois Margaret Nora
made nearly $700,000 in compensation from the organization in 2016. Thirteen
other executives made over $150,000 from the nonprofit in the same year. In
total, ABMS spent over $10 million on compensation, more than half its annual
revenues, which largely come from inflated testing fees. That’s good work if you
can get it.
But can doctors like us ever be under-educated, given
the complex and vital nature of our jobs? Of course not.
It’s true that doctors can never learn enough. That’s
why we are the most trained professionals in existence, studying for more than
10 years before becoming certified. We then complete 50 hours of continuing
medical education every year to maintain our state medical licenses and keep up
to date with the latest developments in our fields.
MOC is different. It is credentialization, not
education. The tests don’t mirror real-world scenarios. They provide no
educational value. A 2002 meta-analysis of 33 studies found no association
between MOC and positive clinical outcomes. Older doctors, grandfathered in and
exempt from MOC, are no less qualified than recent grads are. And two 2014
studies comparing MOC-required and MOC-grandfathered doctors showed no
performance differences.
Depending on specialty, doctors must complete monthly
modules, yearly tests, and complete board recertification every 10 years. No
wonder a 2016 Mayo Clinic survey found that 81% of doctors think MOC is a
burden.
Each year, millions of physician hours are spent on
MOC, time that could otherwise be devoted to patients. MOC requirements have
brought doctors to the point where they now spend roughly two-thirds of their
workday on paperwork. For physicians in rural practice, the nearest testing
center can be hundreds of miles away, meaning a whole day of lost time treating
patients.
Allowing doctors to be more productive by limiting MOC
would also help alleviate the growing physician shortage, which the Association
of American Medical Colleges predicts will grow to 95,000 by 2025. MOC
requirements contribute to this doctor shortfall, with studies suggesting some
doctors take early retirement to avoid them.
MOC is technically voluntary, but in practice it is
not. Requirements for MOC have been included in physician licensing, hospital
credentialing, and commercial insurance contracts. This means that doctors who
don’t participate can lose their licenses, credentials, and insurance
contracts.
State bills to reign in MOC generally prevent
hospitals and insurers from requiring it as a condition of employment, payment,
or license. In 2016, Oklahoma became the first state to succeed. Georgia,
Maryland, Missouri, North Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and as mentioned earlier,
Washington state have followed suit.
The ABMS won’t give up its slush fund without a fight.
It is engaging in a fearmongering campaign claiming doctors need MOC to be
qualified. It has retained a high-priced Chicago PR firm, to whom it gave close
to $450,000 in 2015.
State legislators looking for marginal—yet
effective—reforms to improve patient access to physicians should join the
growing number of states passing laws to eliminate MOC requirements as a
condition of physician employment. The only losers from such legislation would
be nonprofit administrators who are making millions off this scam.
Drs. Niran Al-Agba and Meg Edison are pediatricians in
Washington state and Michigan, respectively, and are advisory board members at
Practicing Physicians of America, a physician advocacy organization.
This article appeared in Fortune Online at http://fortune.com/2018/04/09/doctors-maintenance-certification-moc-health-care/
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