Advice and answers from the Cortina Health Team

Why Choose a Board-Certified Dermatologist?

Source: The American Board of Dermatology

Updated 8 months ago

Certification by the American Board of Dermatology affirms that a dermatologist has met high standards – set by their peers -- of knowledge, experience, and lifelong learning that are essential for providing all patients with excellent care for skin, hair, and nails.

Being “certified” is not the same as being “licensed.” Medical licensure sets the minimum competence requirements to diagnose and treat patients and is not specialty specific. All physicians in the United States must be licensed to practice medicine by licensing boards in each state they see patients.

Certification is specific to specialties and subspecialties and attests to an individual’s advanced knowledge, training, and skills in a particular area of medicine. While a license is required to practice medicine, board certification is a voluntary process.

ABD Certified Dermatologists have:

  • Completed three or more years of an accredited residency program in dermatology.
  • Passed exams demonstrating their dermatology knowledge and their ability to apply that knowledge to treat patients.
  • Made a commitment to stay current on the latest dermatology advances by participating in continuing certification activities and assessments throughout their careers. *

Once they have earned ABD board certification, dermatologists continue a program of life-long learning through the ABD that includes keeping up to date on breakthroughs in dermatology, learning about best practices in their field, and taking periodic assessments to assure their patients, their colleagues, and themselves that they continue to meet high standards of knowledge and expertise.

Some dermatologists focus their practice on specific areas. Physicians who have completed their three years of general dermatology training may continue for an additional year to specialize in pediatric dermatology, in an area focused on skin cancers -- micrographic surgery and dermatologic oncology, or in dermatopathology.

Source: The American Board of Dermatology