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.[9]
- 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 [7][8]. 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 [9].
The AMA also derives a significant portion of its income by selling physician prescribing data to pharmaceutical companies.[10] 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."[11] 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).[10] The World Health Organization ranked the USA healthcare system 37th ["The World Health Report 2000--Health Systems: Improving Performance,"].
See also
References
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.
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