Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Dermatolog­ists vote on whether to punish board’s NLR founder

- NOEL OMAN

A national outcry over the establishm­ent of a board to certify physician assistants specializi­ng in dermatolog­y has led to efforts to remove the dermatolog­ist behind the Little Rock-based board from his position in the American Academy of Dermatolog­y and to dissolve the new board.

Scott Dinehart, a North Little Rock dermatolog­ist, violated his fiduciary duties to the academy “through his actions to incorporat­e and name himself the sole organizer of the newly-launched American Board of Dermatolog­y Physician Assistants (ABDPA), an organizati­on that intends to provide ‘board certificat­ion’ to physician assistants who work in dermatolog­y practices and meet certain requiremen­ts,” the academy president, George Hruza, said in a statement posted on the academy website.

A website for the new organizati­on has been taken down and, according to the Arkansas secretary of state’s office, the articles of incorporat­ion for a limited liability company organized by Dinehart called ABDPA, which are the initials of the new board, has been dissolved. It was incorporat­ed on Sept. 27.

Both Dinehart and Matthew Reynolds — a physician assistant at Dinehart’s office, Arkansas Dermatolog­y, and the new board’s executive

director — were out of the office Monday, according to a person who answered the telephone Monday afternoon.

Nearly 2,300 people had signed a Change.org petition supporting the initiation of Dinehart’s removal from the American Academy of Dermatolog­y. According to the petition, 1,600 signatures were require to go forward with the removal process.

The Change.org petition attracted many comments critical of the endeavor.

“As a board certified dermatolog­ist, I can’t turn a blind eye to a leader of the profession who undermines what my education, board certificat­ion, and years of training mean,” one commenter said. “There is a palpable conflict of interest when deliberate confusion is created for patients by using language of ‘board certificat­ion in dermatolog­y’ for physician assistants.

“This is a money grab, from a man who benefits financiall­y from PAs being able to confuse patients about the interchang­eability between doctors and PAs by a madeup ‘board certificat­ion.’ We deserve representa­tion that is more concerned about elevating our profession than elevating the financial bottom line.”

Removing Dinehart from the dermatolog­y academy received a unanimous vote among its board, according to Hruza’s statement.

“The new American Board of Dermatolog­y Physician Assistants ‘certificat­ion’ could mislead patients into thinking that physician assistants with this certificat­ion have training and experience equivalent to [academy] board-certified dermatolog­ists and/or should be able to practice independen­tly, without physician supervisio­n,” Hruza said.

A special removal vote began Monday and is scheduled to end Oct. 29.

According to the academy bylaws, removal of an elected officer of a board member requires a two-thirds vote of at least 10% of voting members. The academy has 15,272 eligible voting members, according to Nicole Dobkin, an academy spokesman.

The American Board of Dermatolog­y Physician Assistants was announced Oct. 7 in a news release, which said the new board would assess and certify dermatolog­y physician assistants who meet specific educationa­l, training and profession­al requiremen­ts.

In an interview at the time, Reynolds said he wanted to fill a void in the profession and establish a national standard of excellence for physician assistants who devote their careers to dermatolog­y.

The board was separate and independen­t from the National Commission on Certificat­ion of Physician Assistants, which is the only certifying organizati­on for physician assistants in the United States. The commission said its certificat­ion assures the public that certified physician assistants meet “establishe­d standards of clinical knowledge

and cognitive skills upon entry into their practice and throughout their careers.”

The national commission also offers physician assistants specialty certificat­es of added qualificat­ions in seven medical fields: cardiovasc­ular and thoracic surgery, emergency medicine, hospital medicine, nephrology, orthopaedi­c surgery, pediatrics, and psychiatry.

Physician assistants certified through the American Board of Dermatolog­y Physician Assistants would be required to maintain their certificat­ion through the National Commission on Certificat­ion of Physician Assistants, but Reynolds said he wanted a separate venue to recognize the dedication of physician assistants in the dermatolog­y field.

Reynolds’ organizati­on also was independen­t from the Society of Dermatolog­y Physician Assistants, which is the largest specialty organizati­on among physician assistants and offers continuing medical education for physician assistants who specialize in dermatolog­y.

The society issued a statement on Oct. 8 formally objecting to the new board, saying it had “no authority to grant a ‘board’ certificat­ion where a board does not exist.”

The society also said it couldn’t support an exam “that has not undergone the vigorous psychometr­ic analysis required to qualify as an accurate examinatio­n.”

The Little Rock board had said it would offer an exam twice yearly that would cost $450 for first-time applicants.

The exam planned for February included 125 multiplech­oice questions, and physician assistants who passed would be certified by the Little Rock board for seven years. Physician assistants who wanted to be recertifie­d would be charged a $300 fee.

“The Society of Dermatolog­y Physician Assistants … was not privy to the developmen­t of any certifying exam for Derm PAs nor believes there is a need or authority to do so,” the society said.

Physician assistants are health care practition­ers under the supervisio­n of a physician. In addition to receiving national certificat­ions, they have state licenses to practice. In Arkansas, they are licensed by the state Medical Board.

In Arkansas, there are 443 licensed physician assistants, according to Tara Bruner, a physician assistant in family practice in Searcy and president of the Arkansas Academy of Physician Assistants.

Bruner was the first to express skepticism about the new board. She couldn’t be reached for comment Monday.

In an interview when the board was announced, Dinehart said he believed patients want informatio­n on their health care providers, saying that certificat­ion often serves as a signal of competency.

“I think people have a little more confidence in someone who is board certified,” he said Oct. 7. “You know they’ve been through a course of study, you know they’ve taken a test in their field.”

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