MedChi
The Maryland State Medical Society, commonly known as MedChi, a shortened form of the state medical society's full and ancient historic name: "The Medical and Chirurgical Faculty of the State of Maryland" is the Maryland state-level affiliate of the national body of the American Medical Association, founded 1847. Its purpose is to represent the interests of physicians and protect the citizens in the state of Maryland from unscrupulous and untrained practitioners holding themselves out as health care providers.[1] "MedChi" has offices in Baltimore and Annapolis, the state capital.
History
MedChi was founded in January 1799, in Annapolis by 101 leaders of the medical profession in Maryland. The physicians who started the organization represented most of Maryland's counties.[2] The Maryland General Assembly approved a petition for a charter for an incorporated society of physicians in Maryland to be known as "The Medical and Chirurgical Faculty of the State of Maryland". ("Chirurgical" was the common spelling of surgical at the time of the 18th Century.) The society became the seventh of its kind established in the country. MedChi is composed of 24 component medical societies, plus international medical graduates, residents, and medical students sections.[1] MedChi's governing body is known as the "House of Delegates" and elects the MedChi president each year. The president of the Society must be a Maryland physician.[3]
Staff
Current MedChi staff includes:
- Gene M. Ransom III - CEO
- Tyler C. Cymet, D.O. president
- Debra Sciabarrasi - chief of staff
- Stephen H. Johnson - general counsel, director of Law & Advocacy Division
Notable past presidents
- Richard Sprigg Steuart: (president 1848-49, 1850–51), founder of the Maryland Hospital for the Insane, now known as Spring Grove Hospital Center, near Catonsville, Maryland.
- William H. Welch: (president 1891-92), first dean of the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore.
- Sir William Osler: (president 1896-97), first physician-in-chief at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, described as the "Father of Modern Medicine".
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 http://www.medchi.org
- ↑ Acts of the Maryland General Assembly 1799
- ↑ MedChirurgical Faculty bylaws as amended
References
- Md Med J. 1985 Sep;34(9):900-12. "Supporting Maryland physicians: the Med-Chi staff". Lehman E. PMID 3903416
- The Medical Annals of Maryland. 1799-1899. Prepared for the centennial of the medical and chirurgical faculty. by William Cordell, Eugene Fauntleroy (1843–1913).
External links
|