Information about British Medical Association

Enlarge picture
The logo of the association.
The British Medical Association (BMA) is the trade union to which the vast majority of British doctors belong. It is based in Tavistock Square in central London. It owns the "British Medical Journal".

General information

The BMA was founded by Sir Charles Hastings in 1832 and, until 1856, was known as the Provincial Medical and Surgical Association. It has a complex representational structure which allows doctors to be represented both by the geographical area in which they work, and by the various craft committees. The craft committees comprise (in alphabetical order):
  • Central Consultants and Specialists Committee
  • General Practice Committee
  • Junior Doctors Committee
  • Medical Academic Staff Committee
  • Medical Ethics Committee
  • Medical Students Committee
  • Public Health Medicine and Community Health Committees.
  • Staff and Associate Specialists Committee
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BMA Headquarters in Tavistock Square, London.
The BMA has sole negotiating rights for national Terms and Conditions of Service for doctors working in the National Health Service (NHS).

The BMA also has a number of professional committees including the Board of Science, Medical Ethics Committee and International Committee. These undertake a range of activities including supporting public health initiatives such as a ban on smoking in public places, responding on behalf of doctors to consultations by national public bodies and the Government, and promoting the views and reputation of doctors in different arenas.

The BMA holds an Annual Representative Meeting (ARM) where delegates from throughout the country and across craft disciplines meet to set BMA policy for the forthcoming year. The last ARM was held in Torquay in June 2007 and the next will take place in Edinburgh in the summer of 2008.

The BMA Council is the highest political body within the BMA and nominally runs the organisation’s policy wing in accordance with ARM decisions (although each craft committee retains significant independent authority). The Council is elected directly by BMA members under rules designed to guarantee representation to each differing craft area. At each ARM the members of council elect a chairman and vice-chairman.

Until he announced his resignation on 20th May 2007, the chairman of council (subsequently referred to as “The Chairman of the BMA”) was Dr James Johnson, a consultant surgeon in vascular and general surgery in Cheshire. The vice chairman is Dr Sam Everington a GP from London. Both were re-elected for a further one year term in 2006. However, while Dr Everington was elected unopposed, Dr Johnson faced a challenge from Dr George Rae, a GP from Newcastle and Dr Sati Ariyanayagam, a consultant and freelance GP from the London area. Dr Johnson won the contest by 20 – 13 – 1. James Johnson resigned in May 2007 following a Letter written to The Times of London concerning the way that Junior Doctors were appointed to posts which caused discontent amongst the medical community. [1]

Hamish Meldrum was elected Chairman of the BMA at the Annual Representatives Meeting in Torquay on 27th June 2007. [2]

The BMA is not responsible for registering doctors for practice in the United Kingdom; this role is carried out by the General Medical Council. Membership of the BMA is voluntary.

The Hospital Consultants and Specialists Association (HCSA) is another professional body in the UK specifically designed for senior hospital doctors.

On the 7th of July 2005, one of the bombings on the London Transport system was on a Bus in Tavistock Square in central London, very close to the headquarters of the BMA. Doctors from within the building were some of the first to provide emergency medical assistance to those involved.

References

1. ^ [1]
2. ^ [2]

Medical Students Committee

This is one of the major craft committees of the British Medical Association. It is responsible for the dissemination of the views of medical students throughout the UK. It has representatives from every medical school and meets up (usually in London) four times a year to discuss the major issues affecting medical students at that time.

Each medical school has two centrally elected representatives - the Medical Student Committee Representative and the Intra-School Committee representative. The former works on national policy issues, and the latter works locally, at grassroot, to find out what the key issues are for medical students.

Some of the more recent issues tackled have been
  • Bullying in medical schools
  • Dyslexia guidance
  • Financial concerns for medical students (Top Up Fees Campaign)
  • Medical Applications for junior house officer jobs
  • Social equality and increasing participation in medical school
  • Changing medical education
  • Fitness to Practice issues
Some of the key documents they have produced are
  • Medicine in the 21st Century
  • Insiders Guide to Medical Schools
  • Medical School Charter
  • How to deal with bullying
MSC Officers
Officer2007-20082006-20072005-20062004-2005
ChairIan NobleEmily RigbyKirsty LloydLeigh Bissett

Deputy Chair (Education)John HallettMatthew MakLiv KnutzenJohann Malawana and Katie Fletcher

Deputy Chair (Welfare)David SamuelDavid SamuelHarnaik BajwaJon Beavers

Deputy Chair (Finance)Tom FoleyManil MalawanaAndrew PearsonAndy Currie

SMSC ChairTbcWill WatsonSabrina TalukdarAijaz Mohammad

WMSC ChairBrendan O'BrienBrendan O'Brien -Kate Drysdale

NIMSC ChairMartin McClatcheyDermon McGuckinDermot McGuckinDavid Rogers

Chair of ConferenceGerard MillenBala KarunakaranJon BeaversNeil Robinson

References

<references />
  • Cullen, Pamela V., "A Stranger in Blood: The Case Files on Dr John Bodkin Adams", London, Elliott & Thompson, 2006, ISBN 1-904027-19-9
  • "Promoting the Medical and Allied Sciences... A short history of science at the BMA", London, British Medical Association 1995 ISBN 0-7279-0939-8

External links

Tavistock Square is a square in Bloomsbury, London with a fine garden. It was developed in the 1820s by the builder Thomas Cubitt. The centre-piece of the gardens is a statue of Mahatma Gandhi, which was installed in 1968.
..... Click the link for more information.
London
Canary Wharf is the centre of London's modern office towers
London shown within England
Coordinates:
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Constituent country England
..... Click the link for more information.
British Medical Journal, or BMJ, is one of the most popular and widely-read peer-reviewed general medical journals in the world.[2] It is published by the BMJ Publishing Group Ltd (owned by the British Medical Association), whose other publications
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National Health Service (NHS) is the publicly funded health care system In the United Kingdom. Each of the four constituent countries of the UK (England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland) have their own NHS, each of which are run along the same lines but are managed
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The Times

Front page from a October 17, 2007 edition
Type Daily newspaper
Format Compact


Owner Times Newspapers Ltd
Editor Robert James Thomson
Founded 1785
Political allegiance Centre / Centre Right
Price £0.70 (Monday-Friday)
£1.
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The General Medical Council (the GMC) is the regulator of the medical profession in the United Kingdom. It licenses doctors to practise, and has the power to revoke the licence, or place restrictions, in cases of questions about a doctor's fitness to practise.
..... Click the link for more information.
HCSA

Hospital Consultants and Specialists Association
Founded 1944
Country United Kingdom
Affiliation TUC
Office location Basingstoke, Hampshire
Website www.hcsa.
..... Click the link for more information.
7 July 2005 London bombings

Ambulances at Russell Square following the bombings.
Location London, United Kingdom

Target(s) London Underground and a double-decker bus
Date 7 July 2005
..... Click the link for more information.
Tavistock Square is a square in Bloomsbury, London with a fine garden. It was developed in the 1820s by the builder Thomas Cubitt. The centre-piece of the gardens is a statue of Mahatma Gandhi, which was installed in 1968.
..... Click the link for more information.
London
Canary Wharf is the centre of London's modern office towers
London shown within England
Coordinates:
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Constituent country England
..... Click the link for more information.


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