ACC
and ASE Release Statements
Supporting Accreditation/Certification
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| from
the September 2005 issue |
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As
a non-profit organization, the ICAEL is supported by sponsoring
organizations while operating independently of their activities.
Representatives from these organizations, physicians and sonographers,
serve on the ICAEL's Board of Directors. While sponsoring organization
status signifies each organization's support of the ICAEL program,
both the American College of Cardiology (ACC) and the American
Society of Echocardiography (ASE) recently released statements
emphasizing their stances on accreditation and certification.
Official
Statement From ASE
The
statement from the American
Society of Echocardiography (ASE) was released in the
form of proposed Local Coverage Determination (LCD) language),
specifically related to laboratory accreditation and physician
and sonographer qualifications for transthoracic echocardiography:
"The
accuracy of a transthoracic echocardiogram depends on the
knowledge, skill, and experience of both the individual performing
the study and the physician interpreting the study. For this
reason, a transthoracic echocardiogram must:
a)
be performed in a laboratory that is accredited in transthoracic
echocardiography by the Intersocietal Commission for the Accreditation
of Echocardiography Laboratories and interpreted by a physician
who is subject to the quality assurance program established
by that laboratory; or
b)
meet all of the following requirements:
(i)
performed by a physician with Level II training in transthoracic
echocardiography, or the equivalent, as defined by the American
College of Cardiology / American Heart Association / American
College of Physicians Task Force on Clinical Competence
in Echocardiography, or by an individual who is credentialed
as a Registered Diagnostic Cardiac Sonographer (RDCS) through
the American Registry of Diagnostic Medical Sonographers
or as a Registered Cardiac Sonographer (RCS) through the
Cardiovascular Credentialing International, working under
the general supervision of a physician who meets the qualifications
stated above; and
(ii)
interpreted by a physician who has Level II training in
transthoracic echocardiography, or the equivalent, as defined
by the American College of Cardiology / American Heart Association
/ American College of Physicians Task Force on Clinical
Competence in Echocardiography.
These
requirements shall become effective [two years from the date
of the notice]."
Official Statement From ACC
The
American College
of Cardiology (ACC) Statement on Accreditation/Certification,
adopted by the ACC Board of Trustees on March 5, 2005, reads
as follows:
"The
American College of Cardiology (ACC) is a leader in the promotion
of high quality cardiovascular care. The mission of the ACC
is to advocate for quality cardiovascular care through education,
research promotion, development and application of standards
and guidelines, and to influence health care policy.
To
improve health care quality, the ACC strongly supports participation
in physician certification and/or laboratory accreditation
programs developed by physicians and appropriate to the field
of practice. Certification and accreditation programs clearly
have a role in quality improvement by providing independent
evaluation and validation of performance of providers and
facilities.
To
achieve improved clinical performance and quality, the ACC
encourages all providers to implement and utilize quality
measurement and improvement tools, combined with outcomes
data monitoring in all settings. The ACC strongly encourages
adherence to ACC clinical practice guidelines and expert consensus
documents that translate evidence-based medicine into clinical
practice. The ACC also promotes the use of clinical competency
statements and adherence to Core Cardiology Training Symposium
(COCATS) recommendations where competency guidelines do not
exist. Accreditation/certification programs provide a convenient
means for meeting these criteria.
The
ACC encourages governments and payers to make accreditation/certification
programs mandatory conditions of participation. In implementing
such requirements, ACC encourages a gradual approach to ensure
a realistic timetable for compliance which minimizes economic
impact on current practitioners. Exceptions to mandates may
be necessary to ensure that patients have access to care in
underserved areas.
The
American College of Cardiology Foundation (ACCF) produces
the following quality improvement tools that can assist physicians
and other cardiovascular care providers to analyze their performance
and participate in a continuous quality improvement process:
- Guidelines
Applied in Practice (GAP), customizable tools to improve
adherence to evidence-based guidelines
- The
National Cardiovascular Data Registry (NCDR), which provides
participants with standardized data elements and definitions
and quarterly comparative reports on the safety and effectiveness
of cardiac catheterization (and soon, electrophysiology
and carotid stenting) procedures
- CathKIT,
a tool for use in improving the performance of cardiac catheterization
laboratories through self-assessment and evaluation to effectively
and efficiently improve quality and outcomes of care.
The
ACCF has also been a partner in developing Intersocietal Accreditation
Commission programs for vascular, nuclear, echocardiography,
and magnetic resonance imaging laboratories.
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