Will our grassroots effort succeed? Being pessimistic, I doubt it, at least not without the support from our professional societies.
I have urged our professional society to take a stand and help (see the letter below). Not showing in this email are suggestions such as working with alternative board certification entities, which was communicated in previous emails.
ABIM has scheduled an Internal Medicine Summit on Sunday, April 12, 2015. EVERY specialty society will be there. Doctors, please email your specialty leaders and tell them your opinion on MOC. It is time for all professional societies to act on behalf of their members, to say No to MOC, to stop the abuse, to break ABMS/ABIM's monopoly, to restore the sanity, and to fight to give us back the time with patients.
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Dear ASN,
I am sure at this point you have read the new report on how the ABIM has
been applying creative accounting and deceptive lobbying practices to coerce
additional funding by mandating physicians into the yet-to-be-proven-effective
MOC.   
I hope the outrage, frustration and helplessness of all physicians
in this situation will not be overlooked by the ASN and other societies. The
facts uncovered by the Newsweek editorial should put yet another nail in the
coffin of the ABIM, further eroding its credibility and trust with
physicians.  On this basis, it is
imprudent to continue working with ABIM on any MOC activity.  
Therefore, I would suggest that the ASN consider the following
actions:
- Stop
     any MOC program currently initiated by ABIM. 
 - It
      is a perfect example of “conflict of interest”:  the ABIM is a credentialing
      organization that is promoting more testing. As the editorial so
      eloquently describes, MOC is merely a fig leaf to conceal their spending
      extravaganzas, creative accounting tricks, and deplorable state of their
      finances. 
 - MOC
      has never been proven to be beneficial, even by ABIM’s own “study”. There
      is no difference in the care delivered by grandfathered physicians and
      those with time-limited certificates. At least 10 countries have better
      healthcare with better outcomes, lower costs, and, yes, no requirements
      for MOC.  Thus, there is no ground
      for mandating MOC in the name of “competency”,  and furthermore it is a waste of
      resources to continue to collect more data on the putative utility of
      MOC.   I would urge you to stop
      saying that “more data is needed” and recognize that no further studies
      are indicated. We must stop MOC NOW.
 - Distance
     the ASN from ABIM 
 - ABIM
      has become a corrupted organization that might be subject to further
      investigation. 
 - ABIM
      has been distancing itself from physicians. The fact that they state and
      they are “listening” while all comments left on their blog
      has been completely deleted says it all. They lied to physicians about
      its spending and its intentions behind MOC. As a result they have lost
      the respect and trust of rank-and-file physicians. 
 - ABIM
      should not be setting standards for quality, value, or professionalism.
      It is completely inappropriate that only the ABIM has set MOC as the
      single standard for physician competency, and appalling that the ABIM MOC
      program has turned physicians into easy targets as an explanation for our
      dysfunctional health care system. In a sense, ABIM, ACP, and the AMA have
      all failed physicians as our representatives.
 - ASN
     should take over the role of certifying and educating Nephrologists. 
 - Initial
      certification plus yearly high quality CME should be sufficient. 
 - ASN
      already has strong education programs available.
 - Patient
      care is the best all-around way of self-education and improvement
 - CME
      is a continuous process with wide varieties to meet physician needs. If
      the same CME works for physicians from other countries, the problem is
      not CME. There is absolutely no need to “create” a “continuous MOC”. 
 - Please work on removing mandatory MOC from every bill or law, the ACA, the Interstate medical licensure compact, HR 2, etc. The national and political encirclement of these legislative bodies by the ABIM is deplorable, and underscores the extents to which the organization has gone to protect its economic interests.
 
where is the summit to take place and is it open to the public (working physicians)????
ReplyDeleteNot much detail, probably not open to public. see here: asn.kdny.info/LlEZD.
ReplyDeleteExcellent letter. Thanks. K Murray Leisure, MD, Infect dis, Plymouth MA.
ReplyDeleteThank you. Hope every society can take action together.
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