Physicians, even those holding permanent board certificates, could face increased requirements when renewing their state medical licenses under a draft model policy currently being evaluated by the Federation of State Medical Boards.
Under the draft policy, relicensure would become more comprehensive and would require that physicians demonstrate continuing skills and knowledge in their area of practice. As proposed, the maintenance-of-licensure process would closely mirror the requirements that the American Board of Medical Specialties has in place for maintenance of certification. The draft policy is a model that state medical boards could use, but individual states would determine whether or how it would be implemented.
Over the last 5 years, the Federation of State Medical Boards (FSMB) has been considering how individual state boards could change these policies to ensure that licensees are competent. Earlier this year, the organization's house of delegates approved guiding principles for developing maintenance-of-licensure processes, and called for additional research on the effect that the new requirements would have on state medical boards and licensed physicians.
Once that research is complete, the draft maintenance-of-licensure policy would likely be considered by the FSMB's house of delegates at their meeting next May, said Carol Clothier, vice president of strategic planning and physician competency initiatives for the FSMB.
“Nobody wants to create more work for physicians,” she said.
The idea is to try to take advantage of activities that physicians already are doing to demonstrate their competence, and to use those to satisfy state licensure requirements, she said.
For their part, state medical boards are feeling pressure from the public to ensure that physicians are competent in light of rapidly changing science and technology. And the current requirements, which vary but generally include some continuing medical education, don't match up with public expectations of the oversight of physicians, she said.
If the maintenance-of-licensure policy is accepted by the FSMB's house of delegates, it still would be a model policy only, Ms. Clothier said. It would be up to individual states and territories to decide if they wanted to adopt, revise, or ignore the model policy. And that decision and its timing are likely to vary widely, based on the politics involved in each state, she said.
“I think it's just inevitable that this will probably happen,” said Dr. Larry R. Faulkner, executive vice president and CEO of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology (ABPN).
The current state licensing requirements, which mainly involve completing a certain number of hours of continuing medical education, are unlikely to stand up to public scrutiny, said Dr. Faulkner, and that will likely drive this process. But when and how fast these changes occur is unknown. Much could depend on whether there is a case of negligence on the part of a physician that draws significant media attention and drives states to beef up requirements for relicensure. The important thing is to keep any possible maintenance-of-licensure process from being onerous. The states should develop something that promotes quality, but doesn't impose an undue burden on physicians in terms of time and money, Dr. Faulkner said.
The best way to ensure that any maintenance-of-licensure process does not impose new burdens on physicians is to align it with the existing maintenance-of-certification requirements, said Dr. Ralph F. Jozefowicz, a neurology director for ABPN and a professor of neurology and medicine at the University of Rochester (N.Y.) However, each state would still have to create a general maintenance-of-licensure process for physicians who are not board certified.
Neurologists with lifetime board certification could choose to either follow this more general relicensure route or participate in ABPN's maintenance-of-certification process. Dr. Jozefowicz, who holds a lifetime certificate, said he has taken the recertification exam and gone through the other maintenance-of-certification modules and found the experience to be “very educational and rather pleasant.”
Pursuing maintenance of certification may also be an attractive option for lifetime certificate holders in neurology because they can be tested in their area of expertise, not through a general exam that could include clinical questions on subjects they haven't studied in many years, like obstetrics and gynecology, Dr. Faulkner said.
Dr. Myles Abbott, a pediatrician in Berkeley and Orinda, Calif., who holds a time-limited certificate from the American Board of Pediatrics, said he is skeptical that the states will act quickly enough to affect many permanent certificate holders who may be considering retirement in the next several years. And because this process will play out in state legislatures for the most part, it's possible that some states could end up issuing “grandfather” exceptions for those physicians who hold permanent certificates from their boards.