Los Angeles Times

OB-GYN testing conflict averted

Virtual certificat­ion exam option avoids the need to visit antiaborti­on Texas.

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Many OB-GYNs, including some who perform abortions, are celebratin­g a decision that allows them to avoid traveling to Texas for certifying board exams.

Some feared gathering en masse would make them vulnerable to violence. Others who are pregnant themselves worried about developing complicati­ons and being forced to seek care in a state with strict abortion limits.

The American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology exams are voluntary, but certificat­ion lends respect to doctors’ credential­s, indicating they graduated from an accredited medical school and passed written and oral competency exams. Some employers require the tests.

The Dallas-based board had held virtual exams during the pandemic but planned to have the upcoming fall oral exams in-person. The board announced a reversal last week, saying the exams would be virtual.

The decision was made “due to the increase in COVID-19 cases across the country and concerns regarding the U.S. Supreme Court opinion” last month that overturned the landmark Roe vs. Wade decision legalizing abortion, the board said.

The switch came after many OB-GYNs — including some taking the tests and others administer­ing the exams — objected to traveling to Texas.

“They’re scared. They have nothing to lose but their own personal safety,” said Dr. Jocelyn Fitzgerald, a Pennsylvan­ia OB-GYN who signed a petition against inperson exams.

The three-hour exams test skills, knowledge and ability to treat different conditions.

The examiners also review cases related to patients whom doctors have treated during the last year, the board website says.

Fitzgerald, who has taken board exams in person and virtually, said the setup for both is similar and she could see no advantage to an in-person exam.

The board did not return calls and emails requesting comment.

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