AMA to ensure future physicians receive health care economics training

| 5 Min Read

SAN DIEGO — The American Medical Association (AMA) today adopted new policy expanding its efforts aimed at ensuring all medical students and residents receive training in health care economics. Building on the AMA’s ongoing work to transform the way future physicians are trained to deliver care within modern health systems, the new policy encourages medical schools and residency programs to include basic content related to the structure and financing of the current health care system in their curricula.

Specifically, the AMA calls on medical schools and residency programs to incorporate content on the organization of health care delivery, modes of practice, practice settings, cost effective use of diagnostic and treatment services, practice management, risk management, and quality assurance. The policy also calls on these programs to ensure that medical students and residents are presented with content related to the environment and economics of medical practice in fee-for-service, managed care and other financing systems at an educationally appropriate time during their training.

Full press release available when you sign in

Sign in to the AMA website to get the full version of this press release. 

AMA membership has its advantages

  • Be a part of the nation's largest physician organization
  • Play a role in shaping the future of health care
  • Enjoy exclusive perks and savings

Not a member? Become a member now.

 

FEATURED STORIES

Figures and large health care icons

Geisinger CMO works to cut friction and lift care

| 7 Min Read
Judge's gavel in movement with a virtual text

Don’t open door to more frivolous medical liability lawsuits

| 5 Min Read
Client at a spa appointment

36 states lack regulatory oversight of med spas

| 6 Min Read
Physician points at tablet

After the survey: Turning physician well-being results into change

| 15 Min Read