Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA.
Columbia University, New York, NY, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2010 Oct;71(7):1341-1348. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2010.06.035. Epub 2010 Aug 10.
Scholars and commentators alike have long used 'organized medicine' as shorthand for the American Medical Association (AMA). However, organized medicine has increasingly shown signs of fragmentation into specialty societies over the last two decades. While the AMA remains the largest association of physicians, and wields a great deal of influence in political circles, its use as a proxy for organized medicine may warrant reevaluation due to the changing political organization of medicine. We developed a unique database of specialty medical society appearances before all Congressional committees by combining records from Lexis-Nexis Congressional and the Policy Agendas database. Descriptive statistics were used to evaluate the participation of specialty societies by committee and by hearing type. The Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) was used to measure whether specialty societies develop niche roles with specific committees, and the Chi-Square Goodness of Fit test was used to study the distribution of specialty society testimonies in health hearings more formally. We found that although the AMA participates in Congressional hearings at a higher rate than any other individual medical specialty society, it accounts for a decreasing percentage of all specialty society appearances over time. In addition, specialty societies have developed niche and monopoly roles in health policymaking as well as relationships with particular congressional committees over time. We conclude that the increasing participation of specialty medical societies in the policymaking process is important because medical societies do not testify solely to promote the economic self-interest of their members. Specialization in medicine has segmented lobbying roles, such that specialty societies have a different focus than the AMA. Thus, 'organized medicine' and the AMA are no longer synonymous.
学者和评论员长期以来一直将“有组织的医学”作为美国医学协会(AMA)的简称。然而,在过去的二十年中,有组织的医学已经越来越显示出分裂成专业协会的迹象。虽然 AMA 仍然是最大的医师协会,并在政治圈中拥有很大的影响力,但由于医学的政治组织不断变化,将其作为有组织的医学的代表可能需要重新评估。我们通过将 Lexis-Nexis Congressional 和政策议程数据库中的记录结合起来,开发了一个独特的专业医学协会在所有国会委员会面前的露面数据库。我们使用描述性统计来评估委员会和听证类型的专业协会参与情况。赫芬达尔-赫希曼指数(HHI)用于衡量专业协会是否与特定委员会形成利基角色,卡方拟合优度检验用于更正式地研究健康听证会上专业协会证词的分布。我们发现,尽管 AMA 参与国会听证会的比例高于任何其他个体医学专业协会,但随着时间的推移,它在所有专业协会出现的比例呈下降趋势。此外,专业协会在卫生决策制定方面以及与特定国会委员会的关系方面已经形成了利基和垄断角色。我们得出结论,专业医学协会越来越多地参与决策过程很重要,因为医学协会不仅仅是为了促进其成员的经济自身利益而作证。医学专业化已经将游说角色分割开来,以至于专业协会与 AMA 的关注点不同。因此,“有组织的医学”和 AMA 不再是同义词。