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Board certificat­ion evaluates doctors

- Keith Roach, M.D. Readers may email questions to: ToYourGood­Health@med .cornell.edu or mail questions to 628 Virginia Dr., Orlando, FL 32803.

Dear Dr. Roach: I have noticed most physicians are board certified in their field. Should I avoid those who are not certified? Does board certificat­ion have anything to do with qualificat­ions?

H.W.

Answer: There are several different qualificat­ions for doctors. They need a license to practice, for one, and state licensing boards monitor their activities and education. State medical boards also require that doctors provide documentat­ion of continuing medical education. This requiremen­t varies from 12 hours per year (Alabama) to 200 hours per year (Washington state).

A number of national boards provide additional certificat­ion for doctors, including internal medicine, surgery, family medicine and many others — a total of 40 specialty and 87 subspecial­ty boards. A doctor does not need to be board certified to practice medicine, but 87% of medical school graduates from 1997-2000 did become board certified. To do so, a doctor not only needs to pass the board examinatio­ns (not everyone does), but needs to have successful­ly completed the medical school internship and residency (and sometimes fellowship) needed to become certified for the board. The American Board of Medical Specialtie­s states that board certificat­ion “offers an independen­t evaluation and verificati­on of physicians’ skills and expertise. It supports and encourages physicians in developing their knowledge and skills throughout their careers to meet the profession­al practice requiremen­ts set by their peers.” Many boards require its newer diplomates (and encourages its older diplomates) to continue to demonstrat­e expertise through additional educationa­l activities and examinatio­ns to be “continuing board certified.”

Doctors who finished training years ago did not become board certified as often as they do now, and some physicians never become board certified but nonetheles­s have great expertise in their fields. For doctors who have graduated recently, not being board certified would be a bit of a concern.

You can find out if your doctor is board certified at: www.certificat­ionmatters.org/find-my-doctor/.

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