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Philadelphia County Medical Society

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Philadelphia County Medical Society
NamePhiladelphia County Medical Society
Formation1796
TypeProfessional association
HeadquartersPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania
Region servedPhiladelphia County
MembershipPhysicians, medical students, residents
Leader titlePresident

Philadelphia County Medical Society The Philadelphia County Medical Society is a professional association headquartered in Philadelphia. Founded in the late 18th century, it has interacted with institutions such as University of Pennsylvania, Jefferson Medical College, and Pennsylvania Hospital while participating in civic life alongside entities like City Council of Philadelphia, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Philadelphia Museum of Art. The society has engaged contemporaneously with organizations including American Medical Association, Pennsylvania Medical Society, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, and Temple University Hospital.

History

The society's origins trace to the post-Revolutionary era when members of medical practice associated with figures from University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Benjamin Rush, and counterparts from College of Physicians of Philadelphia sought formal organization. Early decades saw involvement with institutions such as Pennsylvania General Assembly, Pennsylvania Hospital, Blockley Almshouse, and connections to events like the Yellow fever epidemics in Philadelphia and responses coordinated with Philadelphian civic leaders and Merchants' Exchange Building stakeholders. In the 19th century the society intersected with developments at Jefferson Medical College, the rise of specialty hospitals such as Pennsylvania Hospital for the Insane, and reforms influenced by actors in Abolitionism in the United States and public health debates linked to Morris Animal Refuge efforts. During the 20th century the society engaged with public initiatives involving Great Depression relief, wartime medical mobilization related to World War I and World War II, and mid-century collaborations with National Institutes of Health projects, while later interacting with Medicare (United States) and Medicaid. Contemporary history includes partnerships and disputes involving City of Philadelphia administrations, Office of the Mayor of Philadelphia, and healthcare systems such as Penn Medicine and Einstein Healthcare Network.

Organization and governance

The society's governance structure mirrors models found in organizations like American Medical Association, with an elected board akin to boards at Pennsylvania Medical Society and committees comparable to those at Philadelphia Bar Association and American College of Physicians. Leadership roles include positions similar to those of presidents at American Academy of Pediatrics, treasurers analogous to counterparts in American Osteopathic Association, and secretaries reflecting practices used by Association of American Medical Colleges. Governance meetings have been held in venues related to University of Pennsylvania, Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University, and municipal sites such as Philadelphia City Hall. The society has adopted bylaws influenced by standards set by National Board of Medical Examiners and collaborates with regulatory entities like the Pennsylvania Department of State and professional regulators analogous to Medical Board of California for licensure discourse.

Membership and qualifications

Membership traditionally includes physicians educated at institutions such as Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Sidney Kimmel Medical College, Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University, and graduates from programs affiliated with Drexel University College of Medicine. Categories parallel those at American Medical Association and include active members, student members from Thomas Jefferson University, and resident members from programs tied to Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and Penn Presbyterian Medical Center. Qualifications reference standards comparable to the Federation of State Medical Boards recommendations and credentialing procedures used by American Board of Internal Medicine, American Board of Surgery, and specialty boards such as American Board of Pediatrics and American Board of Family Medicine. Membership processes have interacted with academic registrars at University of the Sciences and clinical training directors at Einstein Medical Center Philadelphia.

Activities and programs

The society conducts continuing medical education similar to programs at Mayo Clinic and Cleveland Clinic, hosts case conferences resembling those at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, and organizes community outreach aligned with initiatives from Philadelphia Department of Public Health and United Way of Greater Philadelphia and Southern New Jersey. Programs have included ethics forums reflecting discourse in Hastings Center publications, disaster preparedness collaborations modeled after Federal Emergency Management Agency protocols, and vaccine campaigns with ties to efforts by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Pennsylvania Department of Health. The society organizes lectures featuring speakers from National Academy of Medicine, grand rounds comparable to offerings at Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, and mentoring activities similar to programs at Student National Medical Association.

Publications and communications

The society maintains newsletters and bulletins analogous to periodicals from American Medical Association and distributes practice advisories paralleling releases by Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Communications channels include email lists used by organizations like Association of American Physicians and Surgeons and social media outreach similar to that at Johns Hopkins Medicine. The society's publications have referenced research originating from institutions such as Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, and Drexel University College of Medicine, and have coordinated statements with bodies like Pennsylvania Medical Society and advocacy groups such as Physicians for Human Rights.

Advocacy and public policy

Advocacy work has aligned with policy campaigns resembling efforts by American Medical Association and American Academy of Family Physicians, addressing issues related to reimbursement frameworks under Medicare (United States), licensing matters interacting with the Pennsylvania Department of State, and public health policy in conjunction with Philadelphia Department of Public Health and Pennsylvania Department of Health. The society has engaged in coalitions with organizations including Greater Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce, Philadelphia Council for College and Career Success, and legal partners analogous to Public Citizens to influence municipal and state legislation. Policy positions have touched on topics debated before bodies like the United States Congress, state panels at the Pennsylvania General Assembly, and regulatory forums such as hearings of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

Category:Medical associations based in the United States Category:Organizations based in Philadelphia