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Florida Medical Society Votes "NO CONFIDENCE" in AMA
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At a time where some state medical associations, such as Texas, seem to be ever growing in political power within the AMA, Medpagetoday.com REPORTS HERE that "the Florida Medical Association (FMA) has voted to send a "no confidence" letter to leaders of the American Medical Association (AMA) -- saying that the AMA leadership has 'failed to represent practicing physicians on the issue of healthcare reform.' ...the overwhelming sentiment was that the FMA members and leadership continue to have serious concerns about the effectiveness of the AMA and its ability to represent physicians' interests," the article reports.

The Florida Medical Doctors went on to say: "The FMA House of Delegates strongly believes that the American Medical Association has failed to represent practicing physicians on the issue of healthcare reform. The FMA has voted to express these grave concerns to the AMA by sending a letter conveying a vote of 'no confidence' in the current AMA leadership regarding this issue."  The Florida doctors, however, "decided not to stop sending its delegates to AMA meetings."

MedPageToday reports that "the Florida association's move is similar to one by the New Jersey delegation earlier this year....The New Jersey delegation introduced a resolution at the AMA House of Delegates meeting in Chicago in June calling for a "no confidence" vote, but eventually withdrew it."

The article reports, not surprisingly, that "other state medical societies contacted, including Texas and Illinois, said they were not planning to take any action against the AMA at this time."  Illinois is the headquarter's state for the AMA and Texas medical doctors represent some 20% of the AMA Board of Trustees.

The AMA did not comment upon Florida's "no confidence" vote, but rather responded that they were pleased that "the Florida Medical Association will remain part of the federation of medicine."
 
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U.S. government overpaid private insurance companies administering Medicare Advantage plans by as much as $3.1 billion in 2010, according to a new report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO).

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