AAO: Keep safety standards high in scope-of-practice expansions
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The American Academy of Ophthalmology agrees with a joint federal report’s recommendations on scope of practice, the organization announced in a press release.
The report, issued by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the U.S. Department of the Treasury and the U.S. Department of Labor, made several recommendations regarding cost savings and delivery of care.
It discusses scope-of-practice restrictions and recommends laws and regulations that allow for expanded scope of practice in order to allow competition and greater access to care but warns against expanding if health and safety concerns exist.
The AAO said it agrees with the recommendation, stating that scope-of-practice regulations “protect patients from harm during surgery by ensuring that only those with the necessary medical education and clinical training are authorized to perform surgical eye procedures.”
“Too often there is a rush to extend surgical privileges to those who lack the years of medical education and clinical training necessary for understanding and safely performing critical procedures,” AAO President Keith D. Carter, MD, PhD, said in the release. “It is critical, certainly in eye care, that should our states opt to expand scope of practice, that they eschew any dangerous softening of surgical standards and heed the recommendations in this report by preserving regulations that protect patients seeing surgery and complex medical care of eye disease.”