


|
|
|
|
|
Search
01/06/2022 Robert Kornfeld, DPM
Preparing Podiatric Medicine for its Future Role in Healthcare: A Half Century is Much Too Long
As a 1980 graduate of NYCPM, I can say it’s now been 41 years of the same old story - Podiatry lamenting its role and position in healthcare. Podiatrists feeling less than and instead of calling themselves podiatrists, they introduce themselves as foot and ankle surgeons and say they went to medical school. 41 years of podiatry as a “second class” profession. To be honest, I have NOT had a good experience being part of this profession.
I now avoid interacting on a professional level with other podiatrists. However, I have had a wonderful and rewarding career and at 67 years of age, have no plans to retire. I love what I do and how I practice. But I have found the overall mentality of most podiatrists to be negative and disappointed in their career choice. Many “hate” podiatry. Most have a long list of grievances. It’s too late for me to care any longer. To me, this profession has been on a long and steady course to crash and burn and die holding onto the DPM degree.
After 41 years of striving for parity which still has not come, it seems obvious that podiatry needs to become just another residency choice after completing MEDICAL school and receiving an MD degree. I can just ride out the remaining years I will have in practice. But my honest prediction is that Podiatry as an allied health profession is not going to survive. Nurses, PAs and technicians are being trained in general podiatry services and are already providing similar care.
This would not be an issue if podiatrists were MDs. I’m really tired of attending seminars where you have to click on your specialty to register and podiatry is not a choice, yet chiropractic, NP and PA is. We have been and will continue to be the overlooked profession because we do not market ourselves to the public to build value and reputation. The public STILL DOES NOT KNOW WHO WE ARE AND WHAT WE ARE TRAINED AND LICENSED TO DO. My frustrations with this profession are decades old. My disappointments as well. What are we holding onto? I say a sinking ship.
Robert Kornfeld, DPM, NY, NY
Other messages in this thread:
01/17/2022 Leonard A. Levy, DPM, MPH
Preparing Podiatric Medicine for its Future Role in Healthcare: A Half Century is Much Too Long (Richard Bloch))
Richard Bloch, Executive Director of the Maryland Podiatric Medical Association, disagrees with my statement that there should ”be an organized effort by our profession taking the National Board Examinations and/or acquiring a license comparable to other medical specialties (e.g., ophthalmology, ENT, etc.).” Furthermore, he describes podiatric physicians as being "generically licensed" and says that their specialization is by training, certification and/or self-designation. He also concludes that “podiatrists elect to specialize by attending podiatric medical school and that the profession should be proud of its distinction in that regard”.
Mr. Bloch claims that whether the doctor has taken a particular exam is not something a patient looks at in deciding which doctor to consult with but a recognition of that doctor’s specialty and reputation.
Indeed, I do want the public to recognize podiatrists as physicians specializing in diseases and disorders affecting the foot and ankle but due to their education and training which prepares them to succeed in an exam demonstrating their ability as being equal to other allopathic and osteopathic physicians. Paraphrasing the bard, a rose by any other name is still a rose. Podiatric physicians do not “treat feet and ankles.” They provide medical and surgical care of people who seek care for problems affecting that part of their body.
It must also be recognized that in the last two decades there have been major changes in the education of osteopathic and allopathic physicians. In addition to passing the USMLE, there also needs to be significant modification in the education and training of the podiatric physician. This is not a statement based simply on opinion and/or didactic knowledge but on experience I accumulated over the 16 years I served as Associate Dean for Research and Innovation at Nova Southeastern University (NSU)
Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine as well as serving on the Curriculum Committee of the College of Allopathic Medicine at NSU. I also was invited to and served on the National Board of Osteopathic Medical Examiners. This required passing a qualifying examination authorizing me to write questions for Part II of the osteopathic licensing board in public health and preventive medicine.
Leonard A. Levy, DPM, MPH, Ft. Lauderdale, FL
01/05/2022 Bryan C Markinson, DPM
Preparing Podiatric Medicine for its Future Role in Healthcare: A Half Century is Much Too Long
The ongoing USMLE discussion on PM News tends to embarrass me. Posts so far, giving thought to the past 50 years detailing buddy relationships with MDs, invitations to join professional MD/DO societies, faculty appointments in medical schools, task force generation, even teaching MD or DO students and residents, etc., are minimally interesting as historical and even present events. Disclosure: I also have enjoyed and appreciated much of the above in my four decades in the profession. However, these “achievements” (sic), no matter how they stroke the ego, never did, and do not now, intimate anything close to recognition (by organized MD/DO medicine) of the education and training of Doctors of Podiatric Medicine as like or equal in any way to that of MD and DO degree holders. It is also true that they do not intimate that the DPM degree is inferior to the MD or DO degree, just DIFFERENT. These things are true whether or not you are best friends with an orthopedic surgeon, or play golf with a neurosurgeon, or even if you operated on a member of their family. These “relationships” may indeed be advantageous to anyone’s individual sphere of practice, but to allow anecdotes like this to be presented in this forum as evidence of deserving a seat at the USMLE exam is, well, embarrassing.
Do we deserve parity? Of course, in many areas, we certainly do. We already have full parity in the malpractice arena, 100% parity. On the legislative front, for problems like insurance, inclusion or exclusion from care programs, equal pay for equal service, business arrangements, etc. certainly raise issues unfair to podiatry and are important to resolve, but they have nothing to do with USMLE exams and more to do with failed or inadequate legislative/lobbying efforts. I understand visceral reactions to unfairness. I agree that MD/DO practitioners have an unfair advantage in these areas that have more to do with political lobbying than any degree designation. I realize that those representing podiatry in the forefront of the legislative fights see firsthand what the MD/DO degree designation means for ease of formulating, changing, or blocking legislation in one’s favor. However, trying to cast a shadow of our education experience as something that it is not will never be the answer. That is what we are doing by perpetuating the illusion that we are close enough in our educational experience to the MD/DO experience to sit for the USMLE.
The letter Dr. Levy received from the USMLE 50 years ago, and the one the combined DPM/MD Task force recently received said the exact same thing and indeed provides the total answer for all podiatrists who hunger for parity but refuse to acknowledge the difference between the medical school and podiatry school experiences. Emphasis on “difference,” with no declaration of inferior, superior or equal.
The powers that be say calmly and simply, when a student completes a course of study at an accredited medical school, they can sit for the USMLE. That means a course of study that involves total patient care on an observed and challenged and examined basis, with rigid performance measures on a daily basis in the third and fourth years. It’s different than the “syllabus on paper” that podiatry keeps holding up as just missing a couple of courses and presto, we are the same. It is different than the day being over when podiatry clinic ends. Not inferior, DIFFERENT.
Richard Bloch, executive director of the Maryland PMA, seems to really get it……that podiatry has developed its identity and that the “profession should be proud of its distinction.” I could not agree more and have always felt this way.
The worst thing for podiatrists is to not value their own special and distinct skill set. Unfortunately this is a serious problem even at the student level, as our graduates continually and increasingly refer to their undergraduate years as “medical school” and not “podiatry school” or “podiatric medical school.”
Our residents who do a three-week rotation at a nationally prominent podiatric pathology laboratory actually record that experience on their curriculum vitae as “fellowship” or “mini-fellowship” training in dermatopathology. Outrageous, bordering on fraudulent. (To be fair, that laboratory does NOT encourage this in any way)
I cannot address anyone’s personal disappointment at their ultimate career choice, but I see and know and interact with former podiatry students and residents who love what they were trained to do and become amazingly talented practitioners who actually don’t have time or desire to dwell on why they can’t be something else.
If we want parity where we are truly disadvantaged as mentioned above having nothing to do with what exams we take, perhaps we should get better in our lobbying or public marketing abilities. Perhaps non-podiatrists may do a better job at spearheading these activities?
In any case, the podiatric college curriculum prepares the student to practice as a podiatrist.
If we pursue the USMLE route, podiatry colleges will have to retrofit and become medical schools. Our successful students who pass the USMLE should then have access to all other specialties of medicine. If any algorithm that develops excludes them from that choice, we will have a bigger problem than we have now. In any case, it is unlikely that enough will choose lower extremity medicine to keep the DPM viable either as a degree or as profession.
Bryan C Markinson, DPM, NY, NY
01/03/2022 Richard Bloch
Preparing Podiatric Medicine for its Future Role in Healthcare: A Half Century is Much Too Long (Leonard A. Levy, DPM, MPH)
Dr. Levy, I congratulate you on your career and efforts on behalf of podiatry. I am writing this letter as an individual, not on behalf of the Maryland Podiatric Medical Association in response to your article, “RE: Preparing Podiatric Medicine for its Future Role in Healthcare: A Half Century is Much Too Long” I have had the privilege of working as General Counsel to the Maryland Podiatric Medical Association since 1979 and also as Executive Director since 1991. I am proud to be associated with podiatry and have worked diligently to advance the profession, especially to expand its scope of practice legislatively, as well as recognition as the only non-MD/DO profession that is licensed to perform surgery. With the advent of the 4-4-3 model that is equal to the MD/DOs, podiatrists achieved “equality” in education and training. The issue of whether to obtain the same licensure as MD/DOs is a state by state decision. I disagree with your statement that there should …”be an organized effort by our profession taking the National Board Examinations and/or acquiring a license comparable to other medical specialties (e.g., ophthalmology, ENT, etc.).” In fact, M.D./D.O.’s are generically licensed. Their specialization is by training, certification and/or self-designation. Podiatrists elect to specialize by attending podiatric medical school. In my opinion, the profession should be proud of its distinction in that regard. Whether their doctor has taken a particular exam is not something a patient looks at in deciding which doctor to consult with. It is the recognition of that doctor’s specialty and reputation. It is not my role to determine the policies or goals of MPMA or the profession. However, I think putting these issues in the patient’s perspective will help clarify how the profession should approach the issues of “parity” and “equality”. Do you want the public to recognize podiatrists as specialists of the foot, ankle and lower leg for their education and training, or because they take an exam that somehow makes them equal to their allopathic and osteopathic colleagues? This issue is being debated at various levels within the profession and the APMA is in the process of collecting the views of numerous stakeholders. This discussion is especially important in light of the recent rejection by the NBME of podiatrists taking the USMLE. I hope that the profession can come together to speak in one voice on the direction it should go. Richard Bloch, Executive Director, Maryland Podiatric Medical Association
01/03/2022 Tilden H Sokoloff, MD, DPM
Preparing Podiatric Medicine for its Future Role in Healthcare: A Half Century is Much Too Long (Leonard A. Levy, DPM, MPH)
Leonard’s comments bring back a lot of history and factual information. I was part of that movement at the California College of Podiatric Medicine. I had just finished my two year residency at Highland Hospital in Oakland California under Henri DuVries and Pacific Coast Hospital in San Francisco. Leonard created the first two-year program in podiatric surgery leading to a Master of Science Degree in Surgery. I was Assistant Chairman of the Department of Podiatric Surgery and soon to be Chairman of that Department and Chairman of Graduate education including our surgical residency program.
John P. Hubbard, MD was President of the National Board of Medical Examiners and he wrote a very dismissive letter over 50 years ago and again we just saw a letter from the USMLE in the same tone. It not a matter of can we take the USMLE, we have many DPMs who have taken the exam and gone off into residency. It took being enrolled in a medical school to accomplish that even if it was for the shortest of time possible. There are many DPMs who are boarded in many specialty areas of medicine. Our educational model at many of our schools, is an old school model geared to train the students to go straight into practice after graduation. That is why we hear the responses that we can’t cut that podiatric medicine course, biomechanics course, surgery course to create space to add curricular hours to educate our students in the core medical model; with the necessary podiatric content. Osteopathy does this and includes osteopathic philosophy and osteopathic manual medicine courses also. (OMT) There is no need to teach students how to make an orthotic in circa 2021, we have great bio mechanics labs out there that make our appliances, surgery beyond biopsies, ingrown toenails should not be taught at the undergraduate level. Our students today go into a 3 year residency program and they will learn all the surgery they need to do in their PGY programs. Podiatric medicine and limb salvage fellowships are popping up at great institutions. We no longer have to teach “the go into practice model.” Dated and in my opinion irresponsible and PGY programs are required for licensure.
I know fiefdoms and powerful positions will go away but it is way beyond time to enhance our educational programs to satisfy parity within the MD, DO, DPM, DMD, MD specialties. Taking the same National Boards, call them what you wish is the most important first step. Let’s face the fact that podiatric medicine and surgery is a specialty and practiced as one. This is about the future podiatric physicians and Surgeons that will be a part of an evolving healthcare delivery model. Being part of the whole is much better for our institutions and education model and graduates than being on the sidelines.
Podiatric medicine and surgery, ophthalmology, dermatology, orthopedics etc. are all specialties of medicine and it’s time to make the necessary changes to join the bigger medical education and practice and scope model. Now this is a very polarized topic but there reaches a point where there needs to be stewardship. Jeff DeSantis, DPM, President of the APMA has put an action in place, some schools will help to develop this program and be good stewards of the future of Podiatric medical education and others will resist and fight like hell for the status quo. The answer in my mind is simple, the applicants, the future students of this great specialty will choose wisely with their goals and desires and tuition dollars. They will chose the schools that give them the best opportunities. Tilden H Sokoloff, MD, DPM, Ketchum , ID
12/22/2021 Leonard A. Levy, DPM, MPH
Preparing Podiatric Medicine for its Future Role in Healthcare: A Half Century is Much Too Long
More than 50 years ago, while I was serving as Dean and Vice President of Podiatric Medical and Curricular Affairs of the then California College of Podiatric Medicine, efforts were under way requesting that CCPM students be able to take Part I of the National Board of Medical Examiners (NBME). A formal request was made through a letter that I sent on May 26, 1971, to John P. Hubbard, MD, President and Director of the NBME.
Dr. Hubbard responded June 7, 1971, with a brief, perhaps dismissive letter which stated, “We appreciate your interest in the possibility of using the examinations of the National Board of Medical Examiners for your students. I must advise you, however, that admission to the examinations of the National Board of Medical Examiners is limited to students or graduates of approved medical schools in the United States or Canada. Thank you for sending me the informative material about your program.”
Slightly more than two weeks later (June 24, 1971), Eugene M. Farber, MD, Professor and Chairman of the Department of Dermatology at Stanford University School of Medicine, and a member of the Board of Trustees of CCPM, also sent a letter to Dr. Hubbard. Sometime before Dr. Farber also had invited me to serve on the dermatology faculty of Stanford (I was appointed as clinical associate professor of dermatology and spent Tuesday mornings at Stanford training dermatology residents, students at the medical school who elected clerkships in dermatology and was invited by the California Medical Association to give a presentation to members of the dermatology section. (I was invited to become a member of the American Academy of Dermatology and am now a Life Member).
Dr. Farber indicated in a letter to Dr. Hubbard that he had become acquainted with the curriculum of CCPM and had reviewed its basic science curriculum to “become familiar with the goals of this center.” He also indicated that it would be a great deal of benefit for Dr. Hubbard to visit CCPM at the college’s expense, in hope that the chairman would find some way to persuade the NBME to allow the students to take its examination. Slightly more than two weeks after receiving the letter from Dr. Farber.
Dr. Hubbard responded to him indicating that the availability of the NBME examinations to a college of podiatric medicine would involve new policies, was premature, and would need to come to the Executive Committee of the Board. He requested to receive more information regarding our proposal to take the NBME examination. An additional letter was sent by me to Dr. Hubbard which was prepared in collaboration with Dr. Farber. This was followed up by a letter from Dr. Hubbard indicating that the proposal was placed on the agenda of the Executive Committee which claimed that the Committee gave earnest consideration to the request but concluded that, “at the present time it was not advisable to depart from its policy of limiting admission to the examination to those who are students or graduates of US or Canadian medical schools”.
Fifty years have passed since this formal initiative and except for pockets of interest in the podiatric medical education community, there does not appear to be an organized effort by our profession taking the National Board Examinations and/or acquiring a license comparable to other medical specialties (e.g., ophthalmology, ENT, etc.). In that period, the curriculum of podiatric medical schools and the depth of graduate medical education that DPMs complete (i.e., residencies) has expanded enormously. Such an initiative by podiatric medical leadership needs to become part of the mission of the profession. This is not only for the benefit of the profession but is in the interest of the population that we serve.
While there have been pockets of interest by several groups in the podiatric medical education community addressing such efforts, the need for a major, formal strategic plan towards this end is long overdue. Healthcare in the United States is currently undergoing major changes in such areas as its delivery, scientific initiatives, and addressing major changes underway in the aging of the population, and the need to address major increases in the prevalence of chronic diseases such as type II diabetes. More than ever, podiatric medical practice including the organization of its educational process, and the need to become an integral part of mainstream medicine is desperately needed.
Initiatives by the profession toward these ends need to receive the highest priority so that the public can be better served. The profession has grown enormously in 50 years and is more than ready to accept the new role such changes have generated. It would be a major mistake for the profession not to engage in such efforts as its highest priority, preparing podiatric medicine for its future role in healthcare.
Dr. Levy is Professor Emeritus at Nova Southeastern University Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine after 16 years as Associate Dean for Research and Innovation and was a Fulbright Scholar in 2009.
|
| |
|
|
|