Maintenance of Certification: AMA Adopts New MOC Principles

During last week’s 2014 AMA Interim Meeting in Dallas, AMA House of Delegates voted to update the AMA’s policy on maintenance of certification (MOC). The adopted policy outlines principles that emphasize the need for an evidence-based process that is evaluated regularly to ensure physician needs are being met and activities are relevant to clinical practice. Download AMA MOC Resolution The MOC principles will now include: MOC should be based on evidence and designed to identify performance gaps and unmet needs, providing direction and guidance for improvement in physician performance and delivery of care. The MOC process should be evaluated periodically to measure physician satisfaction, knowledge uptake, and intent to maintain or change practice. MOC should be used as a tool for continuous improvement. The MOC program should not be a mandated requirement for licensure, credentialing, payment, network participation or employment. Actively practicing physicians should be well-represented on specialty boards developing MOC. MOC activities and measurement should be relevant to clinical practice. The MOC process should not be cost-prohibitive or present barriers to patient care. The policy encourages specialty boards to investigate alternative approaches to MOC and directs the AMA to report annually on the MOC process.  One of the unadopted resolutions (Resolution 928) asked the AMA “strongly advocate for the cancellation of the current Maintenance of Certification...
Source: Policy and Medicine - Category: American Health Authors: Source Type: blogs