ABS MOC Presentation
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MAINTENANCE OF CERTIFICATION
Part IV
Practice Performance and Improvement
David L. Gillespie MD, FACS
Professor of Surgery
University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry
Rochester, NY
Maintenance of Certification
ongoing process
continuous improvement
Surgeons must demonstrate a program of
ongoing learning
professional assessment
self improvement
Facilitates maintaining expertise within specialty
The American Board of Surgery
Maintenance of Certification
patient centered initiative
demonstrate high degree of professionalism
improve patient care
address concerns of public about quality
will strengthen the value of Board certification
The American Board of Surgery
Maintenance of Certification
(“MOC”):
1) Demonstration of Current Professional Standing
• every 3 years, unrestricted License, privileges to practice,
letter of attestation
2) Demonstration of Lifelong Learning and Self
Assessment
• 50 CME credits per year, demonstrate self assessment
3) Demonstration of Cognitive Expertise
• recertification examination, once every TEN (10) years.
4) Evaluation and Improvement of Performance in
Practice
The American Board of Surgery
Maintenance of Certification
(“MOC”):
1) Demonstration of Current Professional Standing
• every 3 years, unrestricted License, privileges to practice,
letter of attestation
2) Demonstration of Lifelong Learning and Self
Assessment
• 50 CME credits per year, demonstrate self assessment
3) Demonstration of Cognitive Expertise
• recertification examination, once every TEN (10) years.
4) Evaluation and Improvement of Performance in
Practice
The American Board of Surgery
Maintenance of Certification
(“MOC”):
1) Demonstration of Current Professional Standing
• every 3 years, unrestricted License, privileges to practice,
letter of attestation
2) Demonstration of Lifelong Learning and Self
Assessment
• 50 CME credits per year, demonstrate self assessment
3) Demonstration of Cognitive Expertise
• recertification examination, once every TEN (10) years.
4) Evaluation and Improvement of Performance in
Practice
The American Board of Surgery
Maintenance of Certification
(“MOC”):
1) Demonstration of Current Professional Standing
• every 3 years, unrestricted License, privileges to
practice, letter of attestation
2) Demonstration of Lifelong Learning and Self
Assessment
• 50 CME credits per year, demonstrate self assessment
3) Demonstration of Cognitive Expertise
• recertification examination, once every TEN (10) years.
4) Evaluation / Improvement of Practice Performance
The American Board of Surgery
Part IV MOC
Practice Performance and Improvement
Verification required every three (3) years
involved in one or more assessment programs
focus on analysis of practice performance
quantitative assessment
Use info gained for performance improvement
The American Board of Surgery
Part IV MOC
Practice Performance and Improvement
Requirements are subject of active discussion
unclear what programs will qualify
by the ABS, ACS, SVS, SCVS
To show Performance Evaluation/Improvement
will be more than participation in M&M
The American Board of Surgery
Part IV MOC- Practice Performance
and Improvement –
Some examples which might apply include
participation in Quality Outcome projects such as
• National Surgical Quality Improvement Project (NSQIP),
• Surgical Care Improvement Project (SCIP)
practice databases such as those being developed
through
• the ACS web portal
• the SVS carotid database
The American Board of Surgery
Part IV MOC- Practice Performance
and Improvement –
Participation in NSQIP (National Surgery Quality
Improvement Program)
The American Board of Surgery
Part IV MOC- Practice Performance
and Improvement –
NSQIP (National Surgery Quality
Improvement Program)
Grew out of the National VA Surgical Risk Study 1991
now offered to all interested hospitals
2004 ACS began enrolling
• new private sector hospitals into the ACS NSQIP
The American Board of Surgery
Part IV MOC- Practice Performance
and Improvement –
NSQIP (National Surgery Quality Improvement Program)
The ACS NSQIP is available to all private sector hospitals that
• meet the minimum participation requirements,
• complete a hospital agreement,
• pay an annual fee of $35,000.
Many benefits by participating
• most importantly reduction of surgical morbidity and mortality
VA NSQIP will continue in parallel system
• will compare its results against the ACS NSQIP private sector data
The American Board of Surgery
Part IV MOC- Practice Performance
and Improvement –
Participation in SCIP (Surgical Care Improvement Project)
The American Board of Surgery
Part IV MOC- Practice Performance
and Improvement –
SCIP (Surgical Care Improvement Project)
A national quality partnership of organizations
improving surgical care by reducing surgical complications
Steering committee ACS, CMS, AHA, ASA, AORN, CDC, AHRQ
Goal: reduce preventable surgical M&M by 25 % by the 2010
Hospitals can join SCIP to collect and submit data
Hospitals that wish to sign up to participate in SCIP
• complete Hospital Letter of Participation and fax it
The American Board of Surgery
Part IV MOC- Practice Performance
and Improvement –
SCIP has four modules
Infection
• 7 Infection Prevention Process Measures
Venous Thromboembolus (VTE)
• 2 VTE Prevention Process Measures
Cardiac Prevention Module
• 1 Cardiovascular Prevention Measure
Respiratory
• Delayed implementation to use these measure in
expanding the ICU Core Measure Set
The American Board of Surgery
Part IV MOC- Practice Performance
and Improvement –
Some examples which might apply include
participation in Quality Outcome projects such as
• National Surgical Quality Improvement Project (NSQIP),
• Surgical Care Improvement Project (SCIP)
practice databases such as those being developed
through
• the ACS web portal
• the SVS carotid database.
The American Board of Surgery
Part IV MOC- Practice Performance
and Improvement –
ACS Practice Based Learning System (case log system)
The American Board of Surgery
Part IV MOC- Practice Performance
and Improvement –
ACS case log system
allows surgeons to track their cases and outcomes
convenient easy-to-use.
Can compare personal outcomes to others confidentially
opportunities for training from learning modules
The American Board of Surgery
Part IV MOC- Practice Performance
and Improvement –
ACS case log system
The American Board of Surgery has
• identified Practice Based Learning and Improvement as a core competency.
in the future the case logging system could support
• submission of case logs for maintenance of certification (MOC).
open only to members of the American College of Surgeons.
To register for the system you will need to log in to the ACS Web site.
The American Board of Surgery
Part IV MOC- Practice Performance
and Improvement –
SVS carotid database
The American Board of Surgery
Part IV MOC- Practice Performance
and Improvement –
SVS carotid database
ensures eligibility for CAS reimbursement.
• CMS require data collection on CAS for reimbursement
offers confidential benchmarking reports
• Site-specific CEA vs. CAS baseline risk factors and complications
over time in your facility.
to other institutions
by individual provider
"Real time" access to all your data for analysis.
The American Board of Surgery
Part IV MOC- Practice Performance
and Improvement –
SVS carotid database
Facility benefits
• available now
• easy-to-use
• cost-effective way to meet CMS regulations for CAS
• downloadable database
• Collection of ongoing follow-up
• Collects both stenting and open repair data for comparison.
• Real-time comparative reports.
one-time enrollment fee of $1,000
annual subscription fee of $3,000
The American Board of Surgery
Part IV MOC- Practice Performance
and Improvement –
The ABS is investigating other data systems
Personal
national,
regional,
hospital-specific
and is soliciting input
e-mail at [email protected]
The American Board of Surgery
The American Board of Surgery