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{{Infobox Organization|name = American Medical Association|image = Logo(ama).png|image_border =|size =|caption =|map =|msize =|mcaption =|motto = Helping Doctors Help Patients|Mission Statement= to promotethe art and science of medicine and the betterment of public heath|formation = 1847|type = professional association|location = [United States and medical students in the [United States. The AMA's mission is to promote the art and science of medicine for the betterment of the public health, to advance the interests of physicians and their patients, to promote public health, to
lobbying for legislation favorable to physicians and patients, and to raise money for medical education. It also publishes the
Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), which has the largest circulation of any weekly medical journal in the world, nine medical specialty journals, and a weekly newspaper for physicians, the
American Medical News.
The affiliated
American Medical Association Alliance is an organization of physicians and their spouses that works to support family medicine and to build healthy communities. In 1996, the alliance launched the Stop America's Violence Everywhere (SAVE) program. The AMA Physician Specialty Codes are a standard in the U.S. for identifying physician and practice specialties.
History
. Architect: Kenzo Tange
- 1847, Nathan Smith Davis and others established the AMA at the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Davis wanted to "elevate the standard of medical education in the United States." It was considered "impractical, if not utopian" by some. The goals of the AMA were scientific advancement, standards for medical education, launching a program of medical ethics, and improved public health. 250 delegates from 28 states attended the founding meeting at the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Nathaniel Chapman was the first president of the AMA .
- 1847, Original code of Medical Ethics.
- 1848, the AMA notes the dangers of secretive remedies and patent medicine.
- 1858, the AMA established the Committee on Ethics.
- 1864-1865, Davis was president of the AMA during the American Civil War.
- 1873, AMA Judicial Council is founded.
- 1883, AMA begins publishing the Journal of the American Medical Association, now commonly referred to as JAMA.
- 1884, AMA supports experimentation on animals.
- 1897, AMA is corporation.
- 1898, AMA creates the Committee on Scientific Research to provide grants for medical research.
- 1899, AMA creates Committee on National Legislation to represent AMA's interests in US Government.
- 1902, AMA gets its first permanent headquarters in Chicago, Illinois.
- 1903, AMA publishes Principles of Medical Ethics.
- 1904, AMA establishes the Council on Medical Education to raise educational requirements for physicians .
- 1905, AMA creates the Council on Pharmacy and Chemistry to set standards for drug manufacturing and advertising. The Council also fought against quack patent medicines.
- 1912, the Federation of State Medical Boards is created. It accepts the AMA's rating of medical schools as authoritative.
- 1927, AMA Council on Medical Education and Hospitals publishes first list of hospitals approved for residency training.
- 1935, Social Security Act is approved.
- 1937, the 1937 Marijuana Tax Act is passed, which the AMA opposed; the AMA proposed marijuana be added to the Harrison Narcotics Tax Act.
- 1943, AMA opens an office in Washington DC.
- 1948, AMA hires conservative PR firm Whitaker & Baxter to defeat government-run universal healthcare coverage, which threatened doctors' salaries and looked certain to pass. Spending $4,000,000 ($37.5 million in 2006 dollars), the AMA manages to make its "socialized medicine" coinage stick, making government-run health care sound like a sinister communist plot.
- 1950, AMA starts a medical student section, called the Student American Medical Association (SAMA), initially as a pipeline into organized medicine. SAMA broke away from the AMA in the 1960s to become the independent, student-run, AMSA, the American Medical Student Association.
- 1952, House of Delegates adopts a council report condemning fee splitting in health care.
- 1957, AMA changes Principles of Medical Ethics.
- 1960, AMA states that a blood alcohol level of 0.1% should be accepted as evidence of alcohol intoxication.
- 1970, AMA encourages the Federal Aviation Administration to require all airlines to separate nonsmokers from smokers.
- 1974, AMA gives recommendations to insure adequate protection of individuals used in human medical experimentation.
- 1976, AMA creates Section on Medical Schools.
- 1980, AMA changes Principles of Medical Ethics second time, approved July 22. Physicians were permitted to advertise their charges, and to refer patients to chiropractor.
- 1982, AMA urges each state medical society to support laws to raise the legal drinking age to 21.
- 1987, in Wilk v. American Medical Association, U. S. District Court Judge Susan Getzendanner found that the AMA violated § 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U. S. C. § 1, by conducting an illegal boycott in restraint of trade directed at chiropractors (895 F.2d 352)
- 1988, AMA creates the Office of HIV/AIDS.
- 1995, AMA starts campaign for liability reform.
- 1999, AMA creates Physicians for Responsible Negotiations (PRN, a labor organization to represent doctors, allowing them to advocate on behalf of their patients.
- 2000, AMA supports Patients' Bill of Rights legislation in Congress.
- 2001, Shortly after September 11, 2001 attacks disaster, the AMA provides the government with a list of 3,500 volunteer doctors who were ready to help. The AMA educated U.S. patients and doctors about bioterrorism and disaster preparedness through public service announcements, and by posting updated information on its Web site.
- 2001, AMA changes Principles of Medical Ethics third time.
- 2005 AMA president Edward Hill, MD (US) becomes the first AMA president to address the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association saying "I know that GLMA members and :Category:LGBT physicians have been treated unfairly by the AMA in the past. There is simply no excuse for discriminatory actions or exclusions based on Sexual orientation and medicine or :Category:Transgender and medicine -- none."http://www.ama-assn.org/ama/pub/category/15741.html
- 2006, AMA introduces the Physician Data Restriction Program designed to provide physicians with the ability to "opt out" of having their prescribing data released to pharmacuetical representatives for marketing purposes. Program also provides physicians with a mechanism to lodge compliants against pharmauetical representatives who act in an unethical manner. http://www.ama-assn.org/ama1/pub/upload/mm/432/pdrp_brochure.pdf
- 2007, AMA launches Therapeutic Insights, a quarterly Continuing Medical Education (CME) e-newsletter. Addressing one major disease state per quarter, each e-newsletter presents a succinct clinical overview by experts on the selected disease state and treatment practices, integrated best practices and evidence-based guidelines, disease state demographic information, and current national and state level evidence-based pharmacotherapy dispensing data for each condition. http://www.ama-assn.org/ama1/pub/upload/mm/432/insights_brochure.pdf
- 2007, AMA introduces JAMA-français. JAMA-français is the online French-language edition of the Journal of the American Medical Association. While print editions of JAMA are published in over 20 languages, this is the first non-English edition to be published online. This online French edition will be published weekly, coinciding with the release of the English-language JAMA. JAMA-français will feature selected articles from JAMA, including the leading article, Patient Page, and Clinician's Corner. Additionally, French-speaking physicians will be challenged with JAMA's CME quiz. JAMA-français en ligne:
- June 2007, AMA amends its nondiscrimination policies to include transgender persons.
Charitable activities
- The AMA Foundation provides approximately $1,000,000 annually in tuition assistance to financially constrained students (who now graduate medical school with an average debt load of well over $100,000 each).
- Funds awareness projects about health literacy.
- Supports research funding for students and fellows around the U.S.
- Provides grants to community projects designed to encourage healthy lifestyles (of diet and exercise, good sleep habits, etc.)
- The Worldscopes program has a goal of providing over 100,000 stethoscopes to third world countries, donated by physicians and students.
Political positions
- For much of the twentieth century, the AMA opposed publicly-funded health care. When the 1937 Marijuana Tax Act was passed in the U.S., the AMA protested the law soon after, both on the grounds of actual disagreement with the law and the supporters' "lies" on the subject. Harry J. Anslinger (Bureau of Narcotics Commissioner) and others claimed the AMA had vocalized support when, in fact, the opposite was true.
- In the 1930s, the AMA attempted to prohibit its members from working for the primitive health maintenance organizations that sprung up during the Great Depression. The AMA's subsequent conviction for violating the Sherman Antitrust Act was affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United States. American Medical Ass'n. v. United States, .
- The AMA's vehement campaign against Medicare (United States) in the 1950s and 1960s included the Operation Coffee Cup supported by Ronald Reagan. Since the enactment of Medicare, the AMA stated that it "continues to oppose attempts to cut Medicare funding or shift increased costs to beneficiaries at the expense of the quality or accessibility of care" and "strongly supports subsidization of prescription drugs for Medicare patients based on means testing". The AMA also campaigns to raise Medicare payments to physicians, arguing that increases will protect seniors' access to health care. In the 1990s, it was part of the coalition that defeated the health care reform proposed by President of the United States Bill Clinton.
- The AMA has given high priority to supporting changes in medical malpractice law to limit damage awards, which, it contends, makes it difficult for patients to find appropriate medical care. In many states, high risk specialists have moved to other states with such limits. For example, in 2004, not a single neurosurgeon remained in the entire southern half of Illinois. The main legislative emphasis in multiple states has been to effect caps on the amount that patients can receive for pain and suffering. These costs for pain and suffering are only those that exceed the actual costs of healthcare and lost income. Multiple states found that limiting pain and suffering costs has actually dramatically slowed increases in the cost of medical malpractice insurance. Texas, having recently enacted such reforms, reported that all major malpractice insurers in 2005 were able to offer either no increase or a decrease in premiums to physicians. At the same time however, states without caps also experienced similar results; this suggests the cyclical nature of insurance markets may have actually been responsible. Some economic studies have found that caps have historically had a dubious effect on premium rates.http://www.weissratings.com/News/Ins_General/20030602pc.htm Nevertheless, the AMA believes the caps may alleviate what is often perceived as an excessively litigious environment for many doctors.
- Another top priority of the AMA is to lobby for change to the federal tax codes to allow the current health insurance system (based on employment) to be purchased by individuals. Such changes could possibly allow millions of currently uninsured Americans to be able to afford insurance through a series of refundable tax credits based on income (for example, the lower your income, the greater your credit).
- The AMA has made efforts to respond to health care disparities.
- As such the AMA created an Advisory committees to assess the nature of disparities within different racial and ethnic groupshttp://www.ama-assn.org/ama/pub/category/7639.html. One such committee focuses on the health of the Gay, Lesbian Bisexual and Transgender community. In 2005, the AMA president Edward Hill gave a keynote address to the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association at its annual conference.http://www.ama-assn.org/ama/pub/category/15741.html Since that time, the AMA has worked closely with GLMA to develop AMA policy towards better health care access for LGBT patients and better working environments for LGBT physicians and medical studentshttp://www.ama-assn.org/ama/pub/category/14754.html.
- The AMA responded to the government estimate that more than 35 million Americans live in underserved areas by stating it would take 16,000 doctors to immediately fill that need, and the gap is expected to widen due to rising population and aging work force. "And that will mostly be felt in rural America," said Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., adding, "We're facing a real crisis." Fueling the shortage crisis are the restrictions on allowing foreign physicians to work in the U.S. post the September 11, 2001 attack, and may become more restrictive after the attempted terrorist bombings June 2007 in Britain, still under investigation, linked to foreigndoctors.http://www.boston.com/yourlife/health/diseases/articles/2007/07/22/shortage_of_doctors_affects_rural_us/ Shortage of doctors affects rural U.S., retrieved 2007-07-22http://www.philly.com/philly/health_and_science/20070722_Why_foreign_doctors_are_in_shorter_supply.html Short supply of foreign doctors, retrieved 2007-07-22
- In June 2007, at its annual meeting, the AMA, discussed its opposition to a fast-spreading nationwide trend for medical clinics to open up in supermarkets and drugstores. The AMA identified at least two problems with in-store clinics: potential conflict of interest, and potential jeopardized quality of care. The AMA went on to rally state and federal agencies to investigate the relationship between the operating clinics and the pharmacy chains to decide if this practice should be prohibited or regulated. Dr. Peter Carmel, neurosurgeon and AMA board member asked, "If you own both sides of the operation, shouldn't people look at that?" The AMA also noted some employers reduce or waive the copayment if an employee goes to the retail clinic instead of the doctor's office, inferring that this practice might negatively effect quality of care.
http://health.usnews.com/usnews/health/articles/070720/20clinics.htm In-store clinics, retrieved 2007-07-22
- The AMA has affirmed, through continual policy statement (policies H-460.957,H-460.974,H-460.964,H-460.991, and resolution 506-2007 for example), its support for appropriate and compassionate use of animals in biomedical research programs, and its opposition to the actions of other groups that impede such research, such as some actions from animal rights groups, and its opposition to legislation that unduly restricts such research.
Criticisms
Critics of the American Medical Association, including economist
Milton Friedman, have asserted that the organization acts as a government-sanctioned
guild and has attempted to increase physicians' wages and fees limit by influencing limitations on the supply of physicians and non-physician competition . They assert that these actions not only have inflated the cost of healthcare in the United States but also have caused a decline in the quality of healthcare .
The AMA also derives a significant portion of its income by selling physician prescribing data to pharmaceutical companies. It continues to do this despite physician outcry, claiming approximately 33 million in revenue in 2005 from this practice. However, the AMA does allow physicians to "opt-out" of having their information shared through the Physician Data Restriction Program (PDRP).
Physician membership in the group has decreased to ~33% of practicing physicians, "roughly 244,500 of the estimated 850,000 physicians practising in the USA. Membership numbers would be even lower, critics point out, if only physicians paying full dues were counted." When asked about this, Jeremy Lazarus, MD, a speaker in the AMA House of Delegates, stated that membership was stable, avoiding commenting on the low overall numbers (2005 AMSA annual meeting, AMA vs. PNHP healthcare debate, Arlington, Va.). The AMA represents approximatetly 90% of the nations physicians through its House of Delegates. The AMA's The House of Delegates is the principal policy-making body of the American Medical Association. According to Article VI of the AMA Constitution:The legislative and policy-making body of the Association is the House of Delegates, composed of elected representatives and others from fifty state medical societies, US regions, Guam, the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico and over one hundred national medical speciality societies.
The AMA supports market-based changes versus a single-payer option and was a major opponent of medicare in the 1960s. All other developed countries offer universal healthcare and boast equivalent or better health care systems as well as outcomes, including life expectancy, maternal mortality, infant mortality and much lower costs per capita (PNHP website). The World Health Organization ranked the USA healthcare system 37th World Health Report 2000--Health Systems: Improving Performance,".
See also
References
- Friedman, Milton & Rose (1979). Free to Choose. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. ISBN 0-15-133481-1.
- Thomas Woods Bring Back the Guild System? Ludwig von Mises Institute.
- Jones, Henry (2005). How Medical Boards Nationalized Health Care. Ludwig von Mises Institute.
- http://www.worldchiropracticalliance.org/tcj/1987/oct/oct1987a.htm
Further reading
- Burrow, James G. AMA: Voice of American Medicine. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1963.
- Campion, Frank. The AMA and U.S. Health Policy Since 1940. Chicago: Chicago Review Press, 1984.
- Fishbein, Morris. History of the American Medical Association, 1847-1947. Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders, 1947.
External links
- AMA home page
- AMA Political Contributions (Opensecrets.org)
- AMA Archives
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A voluntary association of physicians in the United States which sets standards for the medical profession and advocates on behalf of physicians and patients.
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