National Physicians Alliance

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
National Physicians Alliance
Motto Committed to Advancing the Core Values of the Medical Profession: Service, Integrity, and Advocacy
Formation 2005
Type 501c(3)
Headquarters Washington DC
Location United States United States
Membership 20,000 physicians
President Cheryl Bettigole, MD, MPH
Key people Jean Silver-Isenstadt, MD, Ph.D., Executive Director
Website npalliance.org

The National Physicians Alliance (NPA) is a national, multi-specialty medical organization founded in 2005. The organization's mission statement reads: "The National Physicians Alliance creates research and education programs that promote health and foster active engagement of physicians with their communities to achieve high quality, affordable health care for all. The NPA offers a professional home to physicians across medical specialties who share a commitment to professional integrity and health justice."

The NPA was founded by former leaders of the American Medical Student Association as an alternative to traditional trade associations that primarily serve the economic interests of physicians rather than advocating first and foremost on behalf of patients and public health. In order to avoid conflicts of interest, the NPA does not accept funding from pharmaceutical or medical device companies.

NPA's guiding principles focus on health and wellness, avoiding conflicts of interest that might affect medical decisions,[1] collaborative and team-based care, and addressing social determinants of health.

Currently, there are four issues that are claimed to be the focus of NPA's work

  1. Integrity and Trust in Medicine
  2. Equitable, Affordable Health Care for All
  3. Patient Safety and Systems Improvement
  4. Civic Engagement

Several of NPA's campaigns also focus on gun violence prevention. NPA also conceived and piloted the "Choosing Wisely" concept with a grant from the ABIM Foundation and the support of Consumer Reports. The concept encourages patients to choose care that is supported by evidence, not duplicative of other tests or procedures already received, free from harm, and truly necessary.[2] The "Choosing Wisely" Campaign won a "Foremother Award" from the National Research Center for Women and Families.[3] Their "Good Stewardship" campaign on eliminating the top 5 unnecessary medical treatments led to an articles in the Journal of the American Medical Association.[4][5]

A 501c(3) organization based in Washington DC, the NPA has a membership of approximately 20,000 physicians. Members must have graduated with an M.D. or D.O. degree from a professional school accredited by the LCME or the AOA's COCA; or hold a license to practice medicine within the United States.

The current president of the NPA is Cheryl Bettigole, MD, MPH, a family physician. The Executive Director is Jean Silver-Isenstadt, MD, PhD. Dr. Silver-Isenstadt served on the Pew Charitable Trusts "Expert Task Force on Conflicts of Interest in Medicine."[6] The current NPA Senior Policy Advisor is Valerie Arkoosh, who appeared on All In with Chris Hayes to talk about the Affordable Care Act.[7]

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.