About the American Association of Medical Assistants (AAMA)
The
American Association of Medical Assistants is an organization of professional
medical assistants. Organized and founded 1955 by the “Kansas Medical Assistants
Society”. The Kansas Medical Assistants Society initiated a gathering of medical
assistants from all over the country. Seventy-eight delegates from fifteen
States (Arkansas, California, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas,
Michigan, Missouri, Oklahoma, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Wisconsin and
Virginia) attended the assembly to consider
a formation of a national organization. The delegates voted and officially named
the organization “American Association of Medical Assistants”. A year later, 250
representatives from diverse
State attended the charter meeting of the American Association of Medical
Assistants. On the charter meeting of the American Association of Medical
Assistants, it elected an officiating committee and adopted formal constitution
and bylaws. American Association of Medical Assistants very
first
president was Maxine Williams. Maxine Williams was then awarded “Life Member
Award” on 1976 for her dedication on the organization. The American Association
of Medical Assistants then named a scholarship fund on her name. “The Maxine
Williams Scholarship Fund” aims in helping students continue their medical
assisting studies.
With
the increasing demand of medical assistants within
the
United States, the American Association of Medical Assistants keep
its members ahead of the newest
adjustments
in
the
health
care industry,
protects its members in their proper
to practice their field and helps them make their job a
lot more
easier.
The American Association of Medical Assistants has designed
a “Role Delineation Chart” which distinguishes all clinical, administrative and
general procedures medical assistants are trained for.
Perhaps
their most crucial
role is
to
supply
a "Certified Medical Assistant" certificate for those
who
meet certain
requirements. In
order to
be eligible for this certificate, medical assistants must
have graduated from programs certified either by the commission of Accreditation
of Allied Health
Education Programs or by the Accrediting Bureau of Health Education Schools.
When training from one
of these accredited medical assistant schools is combined with the successful
passing of the Certified Medical Assistants Certification Examination, the
medical assistant will become
a Certified Medical Assistant (AAMA)
An
additional
critical
role that the American Association of Medical Assistants plays is
to
organize lessons that offer
details
on the latest
info
in technologies,
in administrative practice and in management skills.
These meetings can
be
local, state-level and even national. Their overall purpose would
be to
assist CMAs in keeping up with the latest
technology,
protect their rights inside
the
workplace, and improve
their overall level of skill.
CMAs
are required to recertify each
five years. This might
be
carried
out
by taking several
workshops, however
it
can
also
be carried
out
by retaking the CMA examination, showing that the CMA has kept up with the
newest
info.