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  • 10/5/2016

    1

    Update from NCCPA

    Denni J. Woodmansee, MS, PA-CChair, NCCPA Board of Directors

    Presentation Outline

    About NCCPA

    The Certification Maintenance Process Focus on Recent Changes to CME Requirements

    The Latest on Potential Changes to PANRE

    A Brief Overview of NCCPA

  • 10/5/2016

    2

    About NCCPA

    Only national certifying body for PAs

    Certifying PAs since 1975

    Passionate about PAs and the patients you serve

    Promote qualifications and roles of certified PAs to various audiences (physicians, employers, state medical boards, public, etc.)

    Engage in significant communications/PR efforts on your behalf: www.PAsDoThat.net

    Our Current Board of Directors

    10 PAs, 6 physicians and 2 public members, including nominees from...

    American Academies of:

    Family Physicians

    Pediatrics

    Physician Assistants

    American College of Physicians

    American Medical Association

    American Osteopathic Association

    Association of American Medical Colleges

    Federation of State Medical Boards

    PA Education Association

    US Department of Veterans Affairs

    But thats only part of the story

    PA Involvement with NCCPA Adds Up!

    77 PA item writers serve on item writing committees, writing questions that appear on PANCE, PANRE and the CAQ exams

    In 2015, NCCPA hosted 34 PA team meetings to develop and validate exam questions, set passing standards

    59 PAs spent three days with us working to identify content that represents core medical knowledge

    15 PAs serve on promotion and publicity councils, supporting our efforts to generate story ideas and press coverage for the profession

    .

  • 10/5/2016

    3

    PA Involvement with NCCPA Adds Up!

    72 PAs served on 2015 Practice Analysis workgroups, helping identify the knowledge, skills and abilities that were included on that survey

    Approximately 16,000 PAs responded to the Practice Analysis survey

    Nearly 100,000 PAs have completed the PA Professional Profile

    In 2015, 29 PAs participated in a 3-day focus group to talk about PANRE

    More than 30,000 participated in survey of all certified PAs about proposed new PANRE model

    PAs Do That!Help us tell others about the great work you do!

    Share What You Do In Practice!

  • 10/5/2016

    4

    Certification Maintenance Process

    Certification Maintenance Process

    100 CME credits every two years

    50 Category 1 credits

    Self-assessment CME and PI-CME are now optional

    PANRE every 10 years

    Reasons for the Latest Changes

    NCCPA heard the concerns from PAs about the burdens of the certification maintenance process

    Conducted an in-depth review of existing SA/PI activities with particular emphasis on the gaps in availability of practice-relevant options for so many PAs

    Found inadequate coverage of self-assessment in 31 specialty areas and of PI-CME in 13 specialty areas.

    That means we ran the risk of PAs pursuing CME activities with little or no relevance for them just to meet this NCCPA requirement never what we intended.

  • 10/5/2016

    5

    Reasons for the Latest Changes

    Based upon those findings, the NCCPA Board voted to make changes:

    SA and PI-CME are no longer required now optional

    SA and PI activities are valuable, so NCCPA will begin awarding additional credit weighting SA and PI-CME more heavily than regular Category 1 CME

    Some Specifics

    All approved self-assessment CME activities will be awarded 50% bonus credits by NCCPA

    In each 2-year CME cycle, the first 20 PI-CME credits logged will be doubled

    The weighting will be applied by NCCPA and will be retroactive

    You will see these changes on your certification dashboard later this year

    Weighting will apply to all PAs who complete (or have completed) SA/PI activities whether on the 6-year cycle or the 10-year cycle

  • 10/5/2016

    6

    What Is Self-Assessment (SA)?

    Self-assessment is the process of conducting a systematic review of ones own performance, knowledge base or skill set for the purpose of improving future performance, expanding knowledge, or honing skills.

    2012 study concluded that more than 20% of core information guiding clinical practice is changed within one year based on new evidence or guidelines.

    What Is Performance Improvement (PI) CME?

    PI-CME is a process of active learning and the application of learning to improve your practice and ultimately to enhance patient care

    What is Performance Improvement (PI) CME?

    A traditional, approved PI-CME activity includes three stages for which you can earn CME credit:

    Stage A - Identify evidence-based measure and assess practice (5 PI-CME credits)

    Stage B - Intervention(s) (5 PI-CME credits)

    Stage C - Re-measure; document improvement (5 PI-CME credits)

    Completing all 3 stages (bonus of 5 PI-CME credits)

  • 10/5/2016

    7

    Finding Self-Assessment and PI-CME Activities

    Currently over 200 Self-Assessment and over 50 PI-CME activities in many different specialty areas (with more under review)

    Prices range from FREE to $400 depending on the sponsor and the number of credits offered. Ongoing efforts to ensure lowest cost possible

  • 10/5/2016

    8

    More on PI-CME

    Can be done in partnership with PAs, physicians, and others in your practice

    Most board-certified physicians also have this requirement

    What are the options for identifying a PI-CME activity for me?

    1. A traditional PI CME activity (like METRIC or EQIPP)

    2. An activity or project that has been developed by an employer or institution and approved by AAPA (e.g. Cleveland Clinic, MD Anderson) -- could also be a QI activity that a PA is already doing

    3. An activity or project that has been developed by an individual PA or group of PAs and approved by AAPA

    Hospital and Health System Quality Improvement

    Allows PAs to organize QI activities in their own practice settings, or formalize their involvement in existing QI projects and receive PI-CME credits

    Requires official involvement with organizations QI Department

    Define project goals and quality measures used

    Define team and resources

    Define criteria for meaningful participation

    Submit data package in specified format

    Separate application type on AAPA CME application site institutional fee is $250, no charge to individual PAs

  • 10/5/2016

    9

    AAPAs PI Builder

    Allows an individual PA to customize her/his own PI-CME module by selecting clinical measures from a library

    Process facilitated online

    3 options for participation

    Option 1: Choose measures from a measure library

    Option 2: Submit your own measures for approval

    Option 3: Document your involvement in a completed QI project

    $75 for AAPA members, $150 for non-members

    PI-CME on Patient Safety

    Johns Hopkins-developed online certificate course

    Approved for 20 PI-CME Category 1 credits

    Can be completed by PAs in any specialty or practice area

    Can also be completed by PAs who are not in clinical practice at all

    Given the recent NCCPA BOD action, completing this activity would count for 40 Category 1 credits

    Latest on Potential Changes to PANRE

  • 10/5/2016

    10

    NCCPAs Responsibility

    It is critical to NCCPAs mission to provide a certification/recertification program that is:

    meaningful and relevant provides assurance for patients, employers, state

    licensing boards, and others regarding PAs knowledge and skills

    To do this, NCCPA must continuously monitor and evolve the certification process because things change:

    advances in technology rapid changes in medicine changes in the PA profession

    2016 NCCPA. All rights reserved.

    Why Consider Changes to PANRE?

    PA practice has changed (more than 70% practicing in specialties other than primary care)

    Are we still most effectively fulfilling our obligation to the public with the current format for PANRE?

    PAs have asked for change

    Desire to be tested on content relevant to their current role

    Questions about the difficulty of PANRE

    Cost and time required to prepare for todays PANRE

    Key Messages from the Public Comment Period

    PAs are very concerned about maintaining their ability to change specialties and do not want to see that threatened

    PAs are very concerned about the cost and time required to maintain certification (CME and exam requirements)

    If they must take an exam, PAs would prefer one that is more relevant to their practice than todays PANRE

    Exams matter to the public and to state medical boards (other stakeholders not yet surveyed)

  • 10/5/2016

    11

    Challenges for NCCPA

    Maintain the generalist nature of the PA-C

    Protect PAs flexibility to change specialties (seen by most PAs as a very important aspect of the profession)

    Improve the relevance and value of the exam by addressing its content and its educational value

    Should facilitate lifelong learning

    Maintain the integrity and appropriate rigor of the process

    Validity in the eyes of external stakeholders to the certification process

    Our Response Thus Far

    Analyzed the availability and cost of self-assessment and PI-CME, found the options lacking, and eliminated those requirements

    Launched an effort to define core medical knowledge so we can increase PANREs focus on assessing core knowledge that is foundational to all PA practice

    To strengthen our position that the PA-C should continue to be viewed as and relied on as a generalist credential: We are considering a core medical knowledge exam

    as the capstone event of the 10-year cycle. We are exploring other ways to integrate practice-

    related elements into the process

    .

    The Current Controversy

    Some are arguing for the elimination of the recertification exam, saying it has no real value

    In fact, evidence shows that recertifying by exam

    Supports knowledge retention

    Illuminates areas of knowledge deficiency that many are unable to self-identify

    Improves practice to a greater degree than CME alone

    Matters to the public and other stakeholders

    Represents the high standards of the PA profession that have contributed to the professionssuccess for > 40 years

  • 10/5/2016

    12

    Consider the Consequences

    No one likes exams, but if there was no PANRE, how would state licensing boards, employers, insurers, payers and patients view that lowering of standards?

    Would the profession be more credible or less credible?

    Would PAs do a better or worse job at keeping up to date on medical knowledge?

    Would it be easier or harder for PAs to change specialties?

    Would our malpractice insurance rates be lower or higher?

    Would the fight for full practice authority be easier or harder?

    Would patients be safer or less safe?

    For More Information

    Read NCCPA News, our monthly e-newsletter

    Visit our website --- specifically:

    https://www.nccpa.net/panre-model

    Bibliography of references:

    http://www.nccpa.net/Uploads/docs/TheEvidenceBase.pdf

    Thank You!Questions?

    www.nccpa.net