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ONLINE EXCLUSIVE: Quick Response

From: The Hospitalist, May 2010

A veteran Chicago hospitalist who just completed his MOC in 2008 plans to recertify through the new FPHM pathway next year

by Jason Carris

Jitendra Dassani, MD, is a hospitalist who works for Advocate Medical Group at Illinois Masonic Hospital in Chicago. He passed the American Board of Internal Medicine’s (ABIM) traditional internal-medicine Maintenance of Certification (MOC) examination in 2008. According to current guidelines, he won’t have to recertify until 2018.

But Dr. Dassani is more than a veteran hospitalist. He’s practiced hospital-based medicine for well over a decade, and is planning on a long and prosperous HM career. In fact, he’s so dedicated to the field that he is planning to recertify through ABIM’s new Focused Practice in Hospital Medicine (FPHM) MOC next year—or, at the very latest, in 2012.

“I’ve been a hospitalist for 13 years, and I think it’s important to have something that can assess your knowledge and abilities as a hospitalist,” says Dr. Dassani, one of nearly 200 hospitalists who have signed up for the FPHM pathway. The first secure exam will be administered in October. “I took the general IM exam in 2008. That’s the traditional ABIM boards; I felt some of the questions were not related to my practice. That’s why I think the [FPHM] is really good and really important.”

He’s not alone. SHM and ABIM are anxious to see where this new MOC pathway goes. SHM leaders think the FPHM offers career validation and a customized MOC process to the 30,000 hospitalists practicing nationwide. ABIM is planning an extensive research effort to analyze a focused-practice MOC, using hospitalists as the test subjects.

One area in which the FPHM varies from the traditional MOC is its every-three-year requirement to complete practice-improvement modules (PIMs). Dr. Dassani likens the higher standard to the kind of continuing education and training programs other specialized fields require.

“I think it’s a good idea. It’s more work, but I support it,” he says. “Every time you get onto a plane, you hope the pilot is certified every six months, versus no one has evaluated the pilot in two years. Your safety is in his hands. Take that same analogy to medicine.

“You will have time,” he adds. “It’s 60 points over three years. One PIM is 40 points, so it’s not overwhelming.”—JC


This copy is for your personal, noncommercial use only. No part of this article can be reproduced without the written permission of the publisher. Order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients, or customers by contacting our reprints department at reprints@wiley.com. Copyright © 2009 Society of Hospital Medicine, administered by John Wiley & Sons Inc.

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The Hospitalist newsmagazine reports on issues and trends in hospital medicine. The Hospitalist reaches more than 25,000 hospitalists, physician assistants, nurse practitioners, residents, and medical administrators interested in the practice and business of hospital medicine.

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ISSN: 1553-085X