CAPCE, National Registry team up for improved recertification process

September 30, 2024
CAPCE, National Registry team up for improved recertification process

(Columbus, Ohio)  The Commission on Accreditation for Pre-Hospital Continuation Education (CAPCE) and the National Registry of Emergency Medical Technicians (National Registry) today announced an improvement to the CAPCE Import Tool that will save clinicians time and increase accuracy when submitting continuing education courses to the National Registry during the recertification process, beginning October 1, 2024.

When a clinician imports a CAPCE-approved course into their National Registry transcript, the system will now automatically assign the course to the appropriate National Continued Competency Program (NCCP) domain(s) – airway, cardiology, trauma, medical, or operations. Depending on the number of credits needed in each domain, the web tool can also assign remaining credits to other domains and NCCP components in a top-down order. This ensures the credits are efficiently and effectively assigned for the clinician.

This will make the National Recertification process much easier and quicker for clinicians by automatically assigning the CAPCE-approved course to the needed domain and removing any guesswork,” said Bill Seifarth, chief executive officer of the National Registry. “This is one of the features clinicians have asked for the most, and we are happy to work with CAPCE to deliver it.” 

 

By mapping CAPCE courses to the appropriate NCCP domains, we have eliminated one of the biggest hurdles in the National Registry recertification process,” said Jay Scott, executive director of CAPCE. “We made big advancements in 2018 with the automatic import of courses to the National Registry and this takes us to the next level in assisting EMS clinicians. Collectively, we hope this upgrade in the data sharing process between CAPCE and NREMT makes the recertification process easier and more efficient.” 

Clinicians will be happy to note this new capability will work with one, two, or multiple CAPCE courses. The clinician will simply select the appropriate course or courses from their transcript and the web tool will then automatically assign them to the appropriate NCCP domain, as needed. 

Clinicians may manually override or edit the automatic course assignment, if needed. However, tests between CAPCE and the National Registry have shown that the feature likely will not be needed in most cases.  

As noted, the new feature will go live on October 1, 2024, the beginning of the next recertification cycle for EMTs, AEMTs, and Paramedics. The new feature is just one of several enhancements made to improve the recertification process. More information on the developments will be made available on the National Registry’s website and social media channels. 

Media Contacts:
Shane Cartmill for the National Registry
Public Relations and Media Manager    
scartmill@nremt.org
and
Aubree Barnes for CAPCE
Marketing Manager    
aubree@capce.org

 

About the National Registry of Emergency Medical Technicians 

The National Registry, established in 1970 as a non-profit organization, is the Nation’s Emergency Medical Services Certification organization. The National Registry is accredited by the National Commission for Certifying Agencies (NCCA), the accreditation body of the Institute for Credentialing Excellence. The National Registry maintains NCCA accreditation for each of the four certification programs: Emergency Medical Responder (NREMR), Emergency Medical Technician (NREMT), Advanced Emergency Medical Technician (NRAEMT), and Paramedic (NRP). Credentialing protects the public, assures consumers that professionals have met standards of practice, advances the EMS profession, and establishes standards of professional knowledge, skills, and practice. Additional information is available at NREMT.org and LinkedInFacebookInstagramYouTubeRedditTikTok, and X