Dr. Clifford Hudis, CEO of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), shares ASCO’s approach to addressing the continuing saga of the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) Maintenance of Certification (MOC) program. Many oncologists have expressed angst about the MOC process, and ASCO, under Dr. Hudis’ leadership, approached the situation methodically, distributing a survey to its members to assess the problem and explore next steps. This must-listen interview marks the first time the results of this survey have been shared publicly.
Adding Context
To add context to the ABIM maintenance of certification saga and dilemma, up until 1990, the board certification for physicians was lifelong. “Of course, whenever you need to practice, you have to be licensed in the state to practice medicine or its subspecialties and you need to do CMEs. You need to maintain your license by engaging in lifelong learning,” said Dr. Nabhan. In 1990, ABIM changed that when they decided, unilaterally, that this ABIM certification is no longer lifelong. Physicians need to actually sit for the boards every 10 years. The idea, as noted by Dr. Nabhan was that they need to maintain their education because medicine really advances very fast. “And of course, by the way, to sit for the board examination every 10 years, you have to pay the ABIM a lot of money. Subsequent to that, they became two choices that if you need to maintain your certification, you can sit for the board examination every 10 years or you can be enrolled in LKA, which is Longitudinal Knowledge Assessment.”