Word: ama
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Great Britain deserted an old tradition when it established National Health Insurance in 1948; today the heritage of health is respected by citizens and more doctors than would please the AMA. The British program of health insurance has not been completely successful, of course. Its shortcomings have provided bomb-shells for the AMA and should serve as lessons for more constructive planners...
...Compulsory health insurance would present similar problems in the United States, unless increased numbers of nurses, dentists, and doctors could meet the new demand. Even under the current voluntary health insurance program, the nation will be short 15,000 doctors by 1960; yet the Eisenhower health program-because of AMA insistence-will train only nurses, supplying none of the $50,000,000 needed each year to counteract the doctor shortage...
...learned men have a special influence on both public and Congressional opinion, and unfortunately, as Raymond Rich stated upon resigning as public relations counsel for the AMA, the organization has allowed its influence "to become identified with the economic interests of the doctors." The respect the Association has won by its distinguished membership has allowed representatives to tell Congress and the country that it "believes in working for the best health of the nation," while opposing new programs that would make it possible for more people to obtain proper medical care...
...excluded as "poor risks" has won the Association's opposition as "socialistic" or "unworkable." In 1932 Dr. Morris Fishbein, then editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association, stated that voluntary health insurance was "socialism and communism, inciting to revolution." Characteristically, today the AMA supports the voluntary health insurance pools it called "medical soviets" twenty years ago, and resists significant improvements on them. It has entered an active campaign to prevent Federal assistance in medical school construction, so that increased facilities for physicians' education have been stricken from the President's health bill. The Association has never proposed...
Even opponents of AMA policy have unfortunately tolerated the doctors economic lobbying as part of the American tradition, although the influence of the lobbying rests on professional claims to special knowledge about health problems. It is precisely this familiarity with needless suffering and illness that should make the members of the AMA try to keep America's health service ahead of public demand rather than behind it. The American Medical Association should indeed criticize the Eisenhower health proposals--not because they re the "entering wedge of socialized medicine" (as the AMA called them last year) but because they are inadequate...