Reexamination/recertification: measurement of professional competence and relation to quality of medical care
R. A. Chase and F. D. Burg
Over the past half decade, there has been an increment in forces moving the
profession toward recertification and a decrement in the restraining
forces. The whole process will be catalyzed by available funding through
grants to implement continuing medical education, development of
performance-, and competency-based assessment measures and recertification.
Specialty boards serving relatively small numbers of candidates have
serious difficulty funding certification, to say nothing of
recertification. An adequate mechanism to implement recertification can
emerge only from the profession itself, working through the American Board
of Medical Specialties and specialty boards. The means to discharge this
responsibility should, at the outset, come from public and private sources.
Eventually the system may become self-supporting through evaluation and
certification fees. The public interest will be best served when there are
adequate mechanisms to assess continuing competence of all physicians. As a
minimum, there must be a system to guard against incompetence through
obsolescence of any of the practicing professionals.