Mission
The
Mission of MedChi (pronounced med-kī), The Maryland
State Medical Society, is to serve as Maryland's foremost advocate and
resource for physicians, their patients and the public health.
History
In January 1799, in Annapolis, with 101 leaders of the medical profession representing most of Maryland's counties
present, the Maryland Legislature approved a petition for a charter for an
incorporated society of physicians in Maryland to be known as the Medical and Chirurgical Faculty of
the State of Maryland. (Chirurgical was the common
spelling of surgical at the time.)
As
written in the society's incorporation, this special act of the
Maryland Legislature was intended to "prevent the citizens
(of Maryland) from risking their lives in the hands of ignorant
practitioners or pretenders to the healing art." The society
became the seventh of its kind in the country.
Directed
by its charter, the first meeting was held in Annapolis on the first
Monday in June, 1799.
For the society's bicentennial year in
1999, after decades of infrequent debate about the subject, it was finally
decided to change the society's
name to its commonly-known trade name, MedChi, The Maryland State Medical
Society.
Some
of the notable achievements in MedChi's formative years were the
initiation and creation of a Maryland medical college in 1807, which
grew into the University of Maryland School
of Medicine. A medical library was established in 1830.
The library grew rapidly under the guidance of Maryland
medical luminaries and bibliophiles.
MedChi members
established the Baltimore
College of Dental Surgery (a school of the University of Maryland) in
1839, the first institution of its kind in the world,
and in 1857, working with pharmacists, created a college of
pharmacy. After years of lobbying the state legislature, a
state board of health was created in 1874 and a board of
medical examiners was created to license physicians in 1892.
Today, MedChi is one of the most progressive medical societies in the nation
representing about 6,500 physicians statewide practicing in more than 50 medical
specialties. MedChi is composed of 24 component medical societies,
plus a medical students' and residents' section. MedChi is a
component of the American Medical
Association.
Center for a Healthy Maryland
Smoke Free
Maryland
Coalition for Skin
Cancer Prevention in Maryland
Domestic Violence Coalition provides
leadership within the health care community to promote a proactive and
effective response to domestic violence through screening, identification,
education, intervention and treatment of domestic violence victims.
Law & Advocacy Division
The Division ensures that members are kept informed of legal and
regulatory changes affecting the practice of medicine and spearheads
advocacy efforts. Read more about the Law
& Advocacy Division.