Doctors for America
Doctors for America is a 501(c)(3) national, multi-specialty organization of physicians and medical students in the United States with a stated goal of improving affordable health care access. The movement, which was created by the Obama campaign,[1] was started in 2008 as "Doctors for Obama" and rapidly grew to 10,000 members within a few months.[2] It was founded by Alice Chen, Vivek Murthy, and Mandy Cohen.[3]
Formation
2008
- United States
27,000+ advocates
Angie Bakke
Advocacy[edit]
The "four policy pillars" of the organization are expanding health insurance to all Americans; ensuring high-quality 21st-century care; expanding access to care; and improving practice environments for physicians in order to help them focus on improving patient care. The organization partnered with the American Academy of Family Physicians, the American Medical Student Association, the American College of Physicians, the American Osteopathic Association, and other organizations to promote health reform legislation in Congress to issue a July 30, 2009 open letter to all members of Congress publicly announcing their support for health reform legislation.[5]
Beyond healthcare, Doctors for America has advocated for gun control, including an assault weapons ban.[6] The group called gun violence a “public health epidemic.”[7] Doctors for America has endorsed defunding the police to reallocate the money toward social workers through the People’s Response Act.[8] The group also co-authored a report advising jails to release inmates during the pandemic.[9]
Some commentators stated that this large coalition of doctors (the organizations collectively represented nearly 450,000) provided an important counterweight to the American Medical Association's organization's initial opposition to health reform in 2009;[10] later AMA statements supported health reform in principle.[11][12]
Doctors for America also organized a website, Voices of Physicians (www.voicesofphysicians.org), which allowed physicians to publicize their frustrations with the current health system and their recommendations for improvement,[13] and organized house meetings of physicians across the country to talk about health reform,[14] and interactive web talks with figures such as Jacob Hacker and Howard Dean,[15] and participated in White House meetings on health reform.[16]