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Home » Thyroid Cancer

 

Accreditation — Nonstandard Standards

By Melissa Young, MD | September 13, 2010

As an endocrinologist, the ultrasound is a very valuable tool. It helps me not only to determine the size of a thyroid nodule, but to monitor it over time, and to look for certain characteristics that would make me more suspicious of thyroid cancer. Not to mention that, quite honestly, it is one of the few reimbursable procedures I can do.

Some payers are now requiring that non-radiologists get certified or accredited. Otherwise, guess what — they won’t pay. Fortunately (or unfortunately, depending on your point of view), the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists anticipated this, and developed a program so that endocrinologists can get accredited. For a fee, of course.

It entails taking a written exam, providing documentation of the volume of ultrasounds and ultrasound guided biopsies performed, and submitting samples of studies and reports. The reports have very specific requirements. The manual spells out exactly what needs to be in the report — size, character, location, degree of vascularity. And not just thyroid nodules, but also abnormal lymph nodes and parathyroids.

I understand, you don’t want every Tom, Dick, and Harriet performing ultrasounds after taking a one-day course. You want someone to have enough experience and expertise to make sure the studies are reliable. Having said that, I receive plenty of ultrasound reports from radiologists — you know the people who spent four years of residency learning this and who do this every day — that would not meet the exacting standards that I am being asked to meet.

Hello? Where is the third dimension of the nodule? I can’t tell from their descriptions whether or not the nodules have suspicious characteristics. Microcalcifications? Increased vascularity? Hypoechoic? If these radiologists, who are, of course, certified or accredited or whatever the proper term is, are getting paid to read these studies (which by the way are performed by techs, not by the good docs themselves), then why am I being held to a higher standard?

And did I mention I get to recertify again in 10 years? Maybe by then I’ll retire, or hit the lottery. Hey, I can dream, can’t I?

 

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by Melissa Young | September 15, 2010 10:28 PM EDT

Exactly!  I just spent a lot of money and countless hours getting my submission ready so that I can get certified (cross fingers), but I keep getting these radiology reports that are substandard.  It didn't occur to me that OB's have the same problem.

by | September 15, 2010 7:46 AM EDT

Interesting.   I agree.    However, the thing I find most aggravating as an OB/GYN  is that the radiologists who perform any ob or gyn scans in the hospital do not even meet the ACR standards.  My office is accredited to do OB and GYN US by the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine (AIUM) and when patients "have to"get their US at the hospital they still want me to "read" it or look at the pictures.  I have started refusing to do this and now also make them sign a waiver  if they do an US at the hospital. (Especially for 18 to 20 week anatomy scans.) The radiologist is only as good as their tech and worse yet sometimes do not note what the tech shows them.  Example, a scan I saw in the hospital last week showing large bilateral renal cysts in a fetus.   Not even mentioned in the report.   Humm.  So why did they get paid for this and not me.  Quite frustrating.  Yet, I must maintain my recertification on a 3 yr cycle completing 30 hours of CME in US each cycle; and, of course, this costing quite a bit of money.  

by rabindra kitchener | September 14, 2010 9:19 AM EDT

robot neurologist by the  bedside is being tried to replace a specialist,

 

WE NEED A UNION AND NEED TO STOP BEING PARSIMONIOUS !!






 
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