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American Medical Association

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia:

American Medical Association


Organization of U.S. physicians. It was founded in 1847 "to promote the science and art of medicine and the betterment of public health." It has about 250,000 members, about half of all practicing U.S. physicians. It disseminates information to its members and the public, operates as a lobbying group, and helps set medical education standards. Its publications include Journal of the American Medical Association, American Medical News, and journals on medical specialties.

For more information on American Medical Association, visit Britannica.com.

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Gale Encyclopedia of Public Health:

American Medical Association

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The American Medical Association (AMA) was founded in 1847 to "promote the art and science of medicine and the betterment of public health." Since its beginning, the AMA has been dedicated to improving health and well-being through both clinical and community strategies.

Before the discovery of antibiotics, physicians had few effective clinical tools. In its early years, the AMA directed policy recommendations toward implementing strategies related to emerging discoveries in sanitation and hygiene. For example, the AMA House of Delegates (HOD) recommended that each state develop a board of health and that medical schools include hygiene in curriculums. Physicians became crusaders for prevention in their communities. Dr. Henry I. Bowditch, the twenty-ninth president of the AMA, founded the Massachusetts State Board of Health in 1859— the first agency of its kind in the United States. In 1872, Bowditch was instrumental in starting the American Public Health Association (APHA).

During the twentieth century, biological and technological advances were used by both medical and public health practitioners to implement highly effective strategies for improving public health. It became possible to treat diseased individuals effectively within a clinical setting with less reliance on community interventions. By the mid-1950s, cancer and other chronic diseases had replaced infectious diseases as the main causes of mortality and morbidity, and during the latter half of the century it became clear to both medical and public health practitioners that personal behaviors such as tobacco use, violence, alcohol misuse, and unsafe sexual practices were responsible for most morbidity and premature mortality.

Although medicine and public health diverged through much of the twentieth century, changes in clinical and public health practice and financing led medicine and public health to form a new alliance in the mid-1900s. Today, the AMA provides leadership to organized medicine in public health areas such as preventive services for adolescents; tobacco control; prevention of alcohol use among youth; special care of the elderly—including health literacy; organ donation; training in end-of-life care; and both domestic and youth violence prevention. Together, the AMA and the APHA chair the Medicine/Public Health Initiative, a national program that uses the power of collaboration to improve health.

Structurally, the AMA functions as a federation. Representatives from medical societies in all states and many counties, from medical specialty organizations, and from federal health organizations (including branches of the military) comprise the AMA House of Delegates. The HOD reviews resolutions from these member organizations, decides on policy for the AMA, and provides direction for AMA programmatic efforts. Thus, the AMA both represents and is responsive to the "house of medicine." Because of this relationship, the AMA works to build consensus among both medical societies and specialty societies as it promotes its public health agenda. With almost 300,000 members, the AMA maintains a stewardship for ensuring both the standards of the profession and for promoting the health of the nation.

(SEE ALSO: American Public Health Association; Nongovernmental Organizations, United States)

— ARTHUR ELSTER



Gale Encyclopedia of US History:

American Medical Association

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American Medical Association (AMA) was founded on 7 May 1847 as a response to the growing demands for reforms in medical education and practice. Dr. Nathan S. Davis (1817–1904), a delegate from the New York State Medical Society who later came to be known as the "founding father of the AMA," convened a national conference of physicians to address reforms in medical education, medical ethics, and public health. On 7 May 1847 more than 250 physicians from more than forty medical societies and twenty-eight medical colleges assembled in the Great Hall of the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia and established the American Medical Association. A Committee on Medical Education was appointed, and minimum standards of medical education were established. The first national code of American medical ethics, the cornerstone of professional self-regulation, was adopted. Written by Dr. John Bell (1796–1872) and Dr. Isaac Hays (1796–1879) and published in 1847, the Code of Medical Ethics of the American Medical Association provided guidelines for the behavior of physicians with respect to patients, society, and other medical professionals.

Throughout the nineteenth century the AMA worked to expose fraudulent and unethical practitioners and to limit licensure to allopathic physicians. In 1883 the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) was established with Nathan Davis as the first editor. By 1901, JAMA was reporting a circulation of 22,049 copies per week, the largest of all medical journals in the world.

Membership, however, remained small, including only 10,000 of the 100,000 orthodox physicians. In 1901 the AMA underwent a major reorganization to become a more effective national body by providing proportional representation among state medical societies. The House of Delegates was established as the legislative body of the AMA. Each state society was allowed a specific number of delegates with voting rights. By 1906, membership in the AMA exceeded 50,000 physicians, and educational and licensing reforms began to take hold.

The newly established Council on Medical Education inspected 160 medical schools (1906–1907), and in 1910 the Flexner Report, Medical Education in the United States and Canada, was published. Funded by the Carnegie Foundation and supported by the AMA, the report exposed the poor conditions of many schools and recommended implementing rigorous standards of medical training. By 1923 the AMA had adopted standards for medical specialty training, and in 1927 the association published a list of hospitals approved for residency training.

By World War I, the AMA had become a powerful political lobby. Wary of governmental control, it fought proposals for national health insurance. The 1935 Social Security Act passed without compulsory health insurance due to AMA influence. Physician membership grew steadily to over 100,000 physicians by 1936. The AMA continued to fight government involvement in health care with a campaign against President Truman's initiatives in 1948. In 1961 the American Medical Political Action Committee (AMPAC) was formed to represent physicians' and patients' interests in health care legislation.

The AMA continued to work on numerous public health initiatives, including declaring alcoholism to be an illness (1956), recommending nationwide polio vaccinations (1960), and adopting a report on the hazards of cigarette smoking (1964). AMA membership exceeded 200,000 physicians by 1965. From 1966 to 1973, the AMA coordinated the Volunteer Physicians in Vietnam program and in 1978 supported state legislation mandating use of seat belts for infants and children.

In 1983, membership included 250,000 physicians. As AIDS became an epidemic in the 1980s, the AMA passed a resolution opposing acts of discrimination against AIDS patients (1986) and established the office of HIV/AIDS (1988).

By 1990, health maintenance organizations (HMOs) and other third-party payers were involved extensively in health care delivery. Health care reform had become a political priority. In 1994 and 1995 the AMA drafted two Patient Protection Acts, and in 1998 the AMA supported the Patient's Bill of Rights.

In 2001, AMA membership included 300,000 physicians. As new threats to the nation's health, such as bioterrorism, began to emerge in the twenty-first century, the AMA continued to rely on the principles in the AMA Code of Medical Ethics (revised 2001) and the democratic process of the AMA House of Delegates to guide its actions and policies to fulfill its mission as "physicians dedicated to the health of America."

Bibliography

Baker, Robert B., et al. The American Medical Ethics Revolution: How the AMA's Code of Ethics Has Transformed Physicians' Relationships to Patients, Professionals, and Society. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999.

Duffy, John. From Humors to Medical Science: A History of American Medicine. Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1993.

Starr, Paul. The Social Transformation of American Medicine: The Rise of a Sovereign Profession and the Making of a Vast Industry. New York: Basic Books, 1982.

Stevens, Rosemary. American Medicine and the Public Interest: A History of Specialization. Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press, 1998.

—Karen E. Geraghty

Columbia Encyclopedia:

American Medical Association

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American Medical Association (AMA), professional physicians' organization (founded 1847). Its goals are to protect the interests of American physicians, advance public health, and support the growth of medical science. The AMA investigates alleged cases of medical quackery, engages in medical research on drugs, foods, cosmetics, and other substances, and sponsors health education programs. The organization also approves in-hospital doctor training programs; it was largely responsible for the upgrading of American medical education in the early 20th cent. Other functions include monitoring professional ethics and supervising continuing medical education for physicians. In recent years, problems associated with the high cost of medical care and health insurance, as well as the ramifications of the AIDS crisis, have been extensively examined by the influential Journal of the American Medical Association. Another pressing issue has been complaints by many physicians about problems they have encountered in working for managed care organizations. AMA members have consistently voted to oppose a comprehensive system of national health insurance. Subdivisions of the AMA deal with such medical topics as maternal and child care, medical education, medicolegal problems, and mental health. There is also a section for each of the medical specialties. In 1999, the AMA had approximately 300,000 members.

Bibliography

See study by F. Campion (1984).


Mosby's Dental Dictionary:

American Medical Association

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n.pr
AMA

A nonprofit professional association of physicians in the United States, including all medical specialties. Its purpose is to assist its members in providing the highest professional and ethical medical care to the citizens of the United States and to serve as an advocate for the advancement of the profession.

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Wikipedia on Answers.com:

American Medical Association

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American Medical Association
Motto Helping Doctors Help Patients
Formation 1847
Type professional association
Headquarters Chicago, Illinois
Location United States United States
Membership 215,854 as of 2010[1]
Official languages English
President Peter W. Carmel
Key people President-elect Jeremy A. Lazarus
Chair Robert M. Wah

The American Medical Association (AMA), founded in 1847 and incorporated in 1897,[2] is the largest association of medical doctors (M.D. and D.O.) and medical students in the United States.

Contents

Scope and operations

The AMA's stated 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 lobby for legislation favorable to physicians and patients, and to raise money for medical education. The Association also publishes the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), which has the largest circulation of any weekly medical journal in the world.[3] The AMA also publishes a list of Physician Specialty Codes which are the standard method in the U.S. for identifying physician and practice specialties.

The AMA's political positions throughout its history, however, have often been controversial. In the 1930s, the AMA attempted to prohibit its members from working for the then-primitive health maintenance organizations that had sprung up during the Great Depression, which violated the Sherman Antitrust Act and resulted in a conviction ultimately affirmed by the US Supreme Court.[4] The AMA's vehement campaign against Medicare in the 1950s and 1960s included the Operation Coffee Cup supported by Ronald Reagan. Since the enactment of Medicare, the AMA reversed its position and now opposes any "cut to Medicare funding or shift [of] increased costs to beneficiaries at the expense of the quality or accessibility of care". The AMA also "strongly supports subsidization of prescription drugs for Medicare patients based on means testing".[citation needed] However, the AMA remains opposed to any single-payer health care plan that might enact a National Health Service in the United States, such as the United States National Health Care Act. In the 1990s, the organization was part of the coalition that defeated the health care reform advanced by Hillary and Bill Clinton.

The AMA has also supported 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 that have enacted reform. For example, in 2004, all neurosurgeons had relocated out of 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 have found that limiting pain and suffering costs has 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; suggesting that other market factors may have contributed to the decreases. Some economic studies have found that caps have historically had an uncertain effect on premium rates.[5] Nevertheless, the AMA believes the caps may alleviate what is often perceived as an excessively litigious environment for many doctors.[citation needed] A recent report by the AMA found that in a 12 month period, five percent of physicians had claims filed against them.[6]

Claims that the AMA generates $70 million in revenue through its stewardship of Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes appear to be a mischaracterization.[citation needed] The estimate is based on a distortion[citation needed] of the transparent financial information the AMA voluntarily offers in its Annual Report. The AMA has publicly reported this figure represents income from its complete line of books and products, which include more than 100 items, not just CPT.[7]

The AMA sponsors the Specialty Society Relative Value Scale Update Committee which is influential group of 29 physicians, mostly specialists, who help determine the value of different physician's labor in Medicare prices.

Charitable activities

  • The AMA Foundation provides approximately $1,000,000 annually in tuition assistance to financially needy students. This has to be seen on the background that in 2007, graduating medical students carried a mean debt load of $140,000 which rose to $220,000 after 4 yrs of negative amortization during residency[8] medical student debt has increased by 7% each successive year.[9]
  • Funds awareness projects about health literacy
  • Funds community service, community health, and healthcare education events held by local medical societies and student chapters
  • 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 project is a collaboration with the medical community to collect stethoscopes and the funds to buy them. The stethoscopes are then distributed to those in the global medical community who normally lack the resources to obtain the instruments. Thousands of stethoscopes have been sent to physicians and others in the medical community around the world who lack access to this medical instrument.[10]

Politics

The American Medical Association headquarters building in Chicago.

Throughout its history, the AMA has been actively involved in a variety of medical policy issues, from Medicare and HMOs to public health, and climate change.

  • 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 U.S. Supreme Court. American Medical Ass'n. v. United States, 317 U.S. 519 (1943).
  • The AMA's vehement campaign against Medicare in the 1950s and 1960s included the Operation Coffee Cup supported by Ronald Reagan. Before Medicare passed, according to Steven Schroeder, Wilbur Cohen inserted "usual, customary and reasonable" charges into the Social Security Act of 1965 "in an unsuccessful attempt to placate" the AMA.[11] 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 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 health care 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[when?] 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.[citation needed] Some economic studies have found that caps have historically had a dubious effect on premium rates.[5] 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 one's income, the greater your credit).
  • The AMA has made efforts to respond to health care disparities.
    • As such, the AMA created an advisory committee to assess the nature of disparities within different racial and ethnic groups.[12] 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.[13] 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 students.[14]
    • 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 are the restrictions on allowing foreign physicians to work in the U.S. after the September 11, 2001 attack, and may become more restrictive after the attempted terrorist bombings June 2007 in Britain, still under investigation, linked to foreign doctors.[15][16]
  • 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 co-payment if an employee goes to the retail clinic instead of the doctor's office, inferring that this practice might negatively affect quality of care.[17]
  • In 2008, the AMA issued a policy statement on global climate change declaring that they "support the findings of the latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report, which states that the Earth is undergoing adverse global climate change and that these changes will negatively affect public health." They also "support educating the medical community on the potential adverse public health effects of global climate change, including topics such as population displacement, flooding, infectious and vector-borne diseases, and healthy water supplies."[18]
  • In July 2008, the AMA focused its energy on blocking cuts to Medicare. Through advocacy efforts and communications campaigns, the AMA and all the specialty societies and state medical societies it comprises came out with a temporary victory. Despite a presidential veto, H.R. 6331, the “Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act of 2008”, passed with wide, bi-partisan majorities in both the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate.
  • The AMA has affirmed, through continual policy statement (policies H-460.957, H-460.974, H-460.964, and H-460.991 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.
  • The AMA's Office of Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse promotes temperance and lobbies for a reduction of alcoholic beverage advertising and an increase in alcoholic beverage taxes, among other activities.
  • The AMA supported the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act as a step toward providing coverage to all Americans and improving the nation’s health system.[19] See AMA news release at: http://www.ama-assn.org/ama/pub/health-system-reform/ama-supports-reform-passage.shtml
  • The AMA is completely against the death penalty and does not allow any of its members to partake in part of an execution process.[citation needed]

Criticisms

  • Critics of the American Medical Association, including economist Milton Friedman, have asserted that the organization acts as a guild and has attempted to increase physicians' wages and fees by influencing limitations on the supply of physicians and non-physician competition. In Free to Choose, Friedman said "the AMA has engaged in extensive litigation charging chiropractors and osteopathic physicians with the unlicensed practice of medicine, in an attempt to restrict them to as narrow an area as possible."[20]
  • Profession and Monopoly, a book published in 1975, is critical of the AMA for limiting the supply of physicians and inflating the cost of medical care in the United States. The book claims that physician supply is kept low by the AMA to ensure high pay for practicing physicians. It states that in the United States the number, curriculum, and size of medical schools are restricted by state licensing boards controlled by representatives of state medical societies associated with the AMA. The book is also critical of the ethical rules adopted by the AMA which restrict advertisement and other types of competition between professionals. It points out that advertising and bargaining can result in expulsion from the AMA and legal revocation of licenses. Restrictions against advertising that is not false or deceptive were dropped from the AMA Code of Medical Ethics in 1980 (AMA Ethical Policy E-5.02). The book also states that before 1912 the AMA included uniform fees for specific medical procedures in its official code of ethics. The AMA's influence on hospital regulation was also criticized in the book.[21]
  • The AMA and other industry groups predicted an over-supply of doctors, and worked to limit the number of new doctors. But recently, the AMA has changed its position, predicting a doctor shortage instead.[22]
  • It has been argued that the AMA's CPT monopoly has been created by the government and makes the organization subject to government influence; further, the restricted access to CPT codes may not be in the interest of its constituents.[23]

Membership

Published membership figures for the AMA include:

  • In 2002, it was reported that the AMA had 278,000 members, among whom were "less than 30% of American physicians."[24]
  • By 2007, the AMA had 238,977 members, of which 20.5% were medical students and 9% were residents.[25]
  • There were 215,854 members as of December 2010, of which 47,227 (21.9%) were medical students and 31,049 (14.4%) were residents or fellows. The total was a decrease from the 2009 membership of 228,150.[1] [26]
  • A 2011 article asserted that "somewhere in the neighborhood of 15% of practicing US doctors now belong to the AMA."[27] Membership total as of Dec 31, 2011 (including residents and students) was 217,490. [28]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Walker EP (2011 June 20). "AMA: once again fewer doctors choose AMA". MedPage Today. http://www.medpagetoday.com/MeetingCoverage/AMA/27147. Retrieved 2012 January 4. 
  2. ^ "AMA (AMA History) 1847 to 1899". American Medical Association. http://www.ama-assn.org/ama/pub/about-ama/our-history.shtml. Retrieved 2009-02-16. 
  3. ^ "About JAMA: JAMA website". http://jama.ama-assn.org/misc/aboutjama.dtl. 
  4. ^ American Medical Ass'n. v. United States, 317 U.S. 519 (1943)
  5. ^ a b Weiss Ratings News: Medical Malpractice Caps Fail to Prevent Premium Increases, According to Weiss Ratings Study
  6. ^ Medical Liability Claim Frequency: A 2007-2008 Snapshot of Physicians
  7. ^ http://www.ama-assn.org/ama1/pub/upload/mm/37/2009-annual-report.pdf
  8. ^ "House passes partial forgiveness for medical student loans". http://www.ama-assn.org/amednews/2008/03/10/gvsc0310.htm. 
  9. ^ "Medical Student Debt". http://www.ama-assn.org/ama/pub/about-ama/our-people/member-groups-sections/medical-student-section/advocacy-policy/medical-student-debt.shtml. Retrieved 2010-11-07. 
  10. ^ "Give a simple stethoscope, Make a world of difference". http://www.acponline.org/about_acp/chapters/ca/worldscopes.htm. Retrieved August 2009. 
  11. ^ Steven A. Schroeder (April 2011). "Personal reflections on the high cost of American medical care: Many causes but few politically sustainable solutions". Archives of Internal Medicine 171 (8): 722–727. doi:10.1001/archinternmed.2011.149. PMID 21518938. 
  12. ^ AMA (Public Health) Eliminating health disparities
  13. ^ AMA (GLBT) News release from the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association
  14. ^ AMA (GLBT) AMA policy regarding sexual orientation
  15. ^ "Shortage of doctors affects rural U.S.". http://www.boston.com/yourlife/health/diseases/articles/2007/07/22/shortage_of_doctors_affects_rural_us/. Retrieved 2007-07-22. [dead link]
  16. ^ "Short supply of foreign doctors". Archived from the original on 2007-09-29. http://web.archive.org/web/20070929121602/http://www.philly.com/philly/health_and_science/20070722_Why_foreign_doctors_are_in_shorter_supply.html. Retrieved 2007-07-22. 
  17. ^ "In-store clinics". http://health.usnews.com/usnews/health/articles/070720/20clinics.htm. Retrieved 2007-07-22. 
  18. ^ AMA policy statement on climate change
  19. ^ http://www.ama-assn.org/ama1/pub/upload/mm/399/hsr-3590-passage-support.pdf
  20. ^ Friedman, Milton; Rose D. Friedman (1990). Free to Choose: A Personal Statement. Mariner Books. pp. 240. ISBN 978-0156334600. 
  21. ^ Berlant, Jeffrey (1975). Profession and Monopoly: a study of medicine in the United States and Great Britain. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-02734-5. http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=1081816. 
  22. ^ Cauchon, Dennis (2005-03-02). "Medical miscalculation creates doctor shortage". USA Today. http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2005-03-02-doctor-shortage_x.htm. 
  23. ^ Scherz H. (2010-05-07). "Why the AMA wants to muzzle your doctor". Washington Post. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703961104575226323909364054.html. Retrieved 2010-05-10. 
  24. ^ Korcok M (2002 August 20). "As membership plummets, American Medical Association seeks answers". CMAJ 167 (4): 386. PMC 117867. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC117867/pdf/20020820s00036p386.pdf. Retrieved 2012 January 4. 
  25. ^ Peck P (2007 June 25). "AMA: after one-year increase, AMA membership declines again". MedPage Today. http://www.medpagetoday.com/MeetingCoverage/AMA/6006. Retrieved 2012 January 4. 
  26. ^ "DEMOGRAPHIC CHARACTERISTICS OF THE HOUSE OF DELEGATES AND AMA LEADERSHIP". http://www.ama-assn.org/assets/meeting/2011a/a11-clrpd-reports.pdf. 
  27. ^ Collier R (2011 August 9). "American Medical Association membership woes continue". CMAJ 183 (11): E713–E714. doi:10.1503/cmaj.109-3943. PMC 3153537. PMID 21746826. http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pmcentrez&artid=3153537. Retrieved 2012 January 4. 
  28. ^ "delegate allocation". http://www.ama-assn.org/resources/doc/hod/delegate-allocation.pdf. 

Further reading

  • Burrow, James G. AMA: Voice of American Medicine. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University 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.
  • Numbers, Ronald. Almost Persuaded: American Physicians and Compulsory Health Insurance, 1912–1920. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1978.
  • Poen, Monte. Harry S. Truman versus the Medical Lobby: The Genesis of Medicare. Columbia, MO: The University of Missouri Press, 1979.
  • Starr, Paul. The Social Transformation of American Medicine: The Rise of a Sovereign Profession and the Making of a Vast Industry. New York: Basic Books, 1982.

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