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They are 30 for 2 years, so we have have them beat somewhat although interestingly they can renew licenses if they are board certified and skirt the state-required CME that way.I am okay with them reforming their own education. But, I would rather physicians be involved to ensure standards are met.
My state medical board requires 20 hours of CME per year for physicians to remain licensed. Board certification requires 150 every 3 years, but you do not need certification to practice - only licensure.
This is not to say that APNs should not be required to do more - perhaps they should. I also think the physicians in my state should be require to do more. I am just saying that the minimum requirements for APNs and physicians are not that different.
Something that occurred to me earlier: you've previously said you're a surgeon, correct? I've found that specialists tend to utilize midlevels differently than us primary care folks do. Ortho from what I've seen uses them as post-op rounders and in-office fracture care - both fairly easy and narrow in scope. OB/GYN as primarily pap smear monkeys, cardiology/GI/hospitalists/Pulm as first-line inpatient consult (getting all the history together for when the MD shows up to speed things along). Compare that to primary care where we have a tendency to just let them do their own thing most of the time. Might explain why you and I have different thoughts about the issue