Kopp Jason P, Ibáñez Beatriz, Jones Andrew T, Pei Xiaomei, Young Aaron, Arnhart Katie, Rizzo Anne G, Buyske Jo
American Board of Surgery, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Federation of State Medical Boards, Euless, Texas.
JAMA Surg. 2020 May 1;155(5):e200093. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2020.0093. Epub 2020 May 20.
Board certification is used as a marker of surgeon quality and professionalism. Although some research has linked certification in surgery to outcomes, more research is needed.
To measure associations between surgeons obtaining American Board of Surgery (ABS) certification and examination performance with receiving future severe disciplinary actions against their medical licenses.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Retrospective analysis of severe license action rates for surgeons who attempted ABS certification based on certification status and examination performance. Surgeons who attempted to become certified were classified as certified or failing to obtain certification. Additionally, groups were further categorized based on whether the surgeon had to repeat examinations and whether they ultimately passed. The study included surgeons who initially attempted certification between 1976 and 2017 (n = 44 290). Severe license actions from 1976 to 2018 were obtained from the Federation of State Medical Boards, and certification data were obtained from the ABS database. Data were analyzed between 1978 and 2008.
Severe license action rates were analyzed across certified surgeons and those failing to obtain certification, as well as across examination performance groups.
The final dataset included 36 197 men (81.7%) and 8093 women (18.3%). The incidence of severe license actions was significantly greater for surgeons who attempted and failed to obtain certification (incidence rate per 1000 person-years = 2.49; 95% CI, 2.13-2.85) than surgeons who were certified (incidence rate per 1000 person years = 0.77; 95% CI, 0.71-0.83). Adjusting for sex and international medical graduate status, the risk of receiving a severe license action across time was also significantly greater for surgeons who failed to obtain certification. Surgeons who progressed further in the certification examination sequence and had fewer repeated examinations had a lower incidence and less risk over time of receiving severe license actions.
Obtaining board certification was associated with a lower rate of receiving severe license actions from a state medical board. Passing examinations in the certification examination process on the first attempt was also associated with lower severe license action rates. This study provides supporting evidence that board certification is 1 marker of surgeon quality and professionalism.
委员会认证被用作外科医生质量和专业精神的标志。尽管一些研究已将外科领域的认证与手术结果联系起来,但仍需要更多研究。
衡量获得美国外科委员会(ABS)认证的外科医生及其考试成绩与未来针对其医疗执照采取的严重纪律处分之间的关联。
设计、设置和参与者:基于认证状态和考试成绩,对尝试获得ABS认证的外科医生的严重执照行动率进行回顾性分析。尝试获得认证的外科医生被分类为已获认证或未获得认证。此外,根据外科医生是否必须重考以及他们最终是否通过,将这些组进一步分类。该研究纳入了1976年至2017年首次尝试认证的外科医生(n = 44290)。1976年至2018年的严重执照行动数据来自州医学委员会联合会,认证数据来自ABS数据库。数据于1978年至2008年进行分析。
分析已获认证外科医生和未获得认证外科医生以及各考试成绩组的严重执照行动率。
最终数据集包括36197名男性(81.7%)和8093名女性(18.3%)。尝试但未获得认证的外科医生的严重执照行动发生率(每1000人年发生率 = 2.49;95%置信区间,2.13 - 2.85)显著高于已获认证的外科医生(每1000人年发生率 = 0.77;95%置信区间,0.71 - 0.83)。在对性别和国际医学毕业生身份进行调整后,未获得认证的外科医生在不同时间内受到严重执照行动的风险也显著更高。在认证考试序列中进展更远且重考次数较少的外科医生,其严重执照行动的发生率和随时间的风险较低。
获得委员会认证与州医学委员会采取严重执照行动的较低发生率相关。在认证考试过程中首次通过考试也与较低的严重执照行动率相关。本研究提供了支持性证据,表明委员会认证是外科医生质量和专业精神的一个标志。