This is a very important point.
I think the old adage, the battle has been won, but the war is still ensuing applies here.
I think our organizations also need to scrutinize who is allowed into Interventional Pain Medicine. For example, I'm ok with a internal medicine doc writing opioids, but then having that same guy do a MILD procedure, or some interventional spine case (SCS, intrathecal pumps, transforaminals,etc) just after a ONE year fellowship is little worrisome. We all know which fields in medicine are 'hands on' and which are not. I think by and large, it's almost impossible to go from a hands off residency to an interventioal model in just one year mainly because the volume of cases is impossible to obtain.
I can tell you having been an anesthesia resident, having done >400 labor epidurals by my CA3 year, I was still learning some new needle manipulation tricks,etc during that last year. That's after a 4 year hands on residency! The issue becomes, when people do things that are out of their scope of practice to make a quick buck, their horrible results go into our outcomes pool. As such, the unfortunate issue is that some procedures will be perceived by insurance companies as experimental or uninsurable--thereby, not allowing patients to get the proper therapy they need. For example, quack out there doing 'blind' facet injections w/o fluro and having bad results, significantly altering the way facet injections are perceived by third party payors.
I just think ALL our organizations need to scrutinize and 'teach' PHYSICIANS only. Secondly, these physicians need to display a certain level of aptitude as well. We need to be PROactive about this, collectively.