American College of Emergency Physicians
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The American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) is the first and largest professional organization of emergency medicine physicians in the United States. It is headquartered in Irving, Texas and operates an office in Washington, D.C.[1] As of 2013, ACEP has more than 31,000 physician members.
The college exists to support quality emergency medical care and the physicians who provide it. ACEP believes that “quality emergency care is a fundamental right and unobstructed access to emergency services should be available to all patients who perceive the need for emergency services.” Through continuing professional education, patient advocacy at all levels, public information and research, the purposes and objectives of ACEP, as stated in its bylaws, are:
- To establish guidelines for quality emergency medical care.
- To encourage and facilitate the postgraduate training and continuing medical education of emergency physicians.
- To encourage and facilitate training and education in emergency medicine for all medical students.
- To promote education in emergency care for all physicians.
- To promote education about emergency medicine for our patients and for the general public.
- To promote the development and coordination of quality emergency medical services and systems.
- To encourage emergency physicians to assume leadership roles in out-of-hospital care and disaster management.
- To evaluate the social and economic aspects of emergency medical care.
- To promote universally available and cost effective emergency medical care.
- To promote policy that preserves the integrity and independence of the practice of emergency medicine.
- To encourage and support basic and clinical research in emergency medicine.
- To encourage emergency physician representation within medical organizations and academic institutions.
Active membership in ACEP is available to physicians who have:
- completed an ACGME-approved emergency medicine residency
- completed an AOA-approved emergency medicine residency.
- been certified by any other emergency medicine certifying body recognized by ACEP
- been practicing as emergency physicians since before 2000 (a/k/a "Legacy" physicians)
Fellows use the designation FACEP ("Fellow of ACEP"). In order to earn this designation, an ACEP member must demonstrate at least three years of active involvement in emergency medicine as the physician's chief professional activity, exclusive of training, as well as multiple additional accomplishments in the areas of organizational leadership, education, research, and administration.
ACEP is not a board certification granting organization. Board certification in emergency medicine is administered in the United States by organizations such as the American Board of Emergency Medicine and the American Osteopathic Board of Emergency Medicine.
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History
ACEP was founded in 1968 by a group of physicians who shared a commitment to improving the quality of emergency care. The organization set out to educate and train physicians in emergency medicine to provide quality emergency care in the nation’s hospitals. In 1979, emergency medicine was officially recognized as a medical specialty, a milestone for ACEP and its members. Board certification granting organizations soon followed, and in 1980 the first certification exam was given. In 2000, ACEP changed its governing documents to make active or full-voting membership available only to residency-trained and board-certified emergency physicians. ACEP exists to promote quality emergency care and to that end provides support and services such as:
- The development of evidence-based clinical policies
- Funding emergency medicine research
- Providing public education on emergency care and disaster preparedness
- Legislative and regulatory advocacy efforts
- Providing continuing medical education (CME) in the form of educational conferences, textbooks, internet-based training, professional references and periodicals
- Publishing Annals of Emergency Medicine, a specialty peer-reviewed scientific journal, and the monthly ACEP News magazine.
Leadership
ACEP's Executive Director, Dean Wilkerson, oversees the daily administration of the College. The Board of Directors provides day-to-day management and direction to ACEP and serves as its policymaking body. Board members are elected by the ACEP Council and serve three-year terms, with a limit of two consecutive terms. The ACEP Board of Directors represents a wide variety of backgrounds and work experiences in emergency medicine. And with new members joining every year, there are different perspectives and personalities year in and year out. The ACEP Council consists of members representing ACEP’s 53 chartered chapters (50 states, Puerto Rico, the District of Columbia and Government Services), its 32 sections of membership, the Association of Academic Chairs in Emergency Medicine (AACEM), the Council of Emergency Medicine Residency Directors (CORD), the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine (SAEM) and the Emergency Medicine Residents' Association (EMRA). ACEP Committees provide important leadership to ACEP members, its Board and Council. Each Committee is appointed by the President to assist with activities for the year. ACEP has more than 30 committees and task forces working on issues such as ethics, emergency medicine practice, pediatric emergency care, disaster medicine and more.
Educational Conferences
ACEP Scientific Assembly
2013 October, 2013 14-17, Seattle, Washington
2014 October, 2014 27-30, Chicago, Illinois
2015 October, 2015 26-29, Boston, Massachusetts
2016 October, 2016 15-18, Las Vegas, Nevada
2017 October, 2017 30-Nov. 2, Washington, D.C.
ACEP Leadership and Advocacy Conference
2013 May 19–22, Washington, D.C.
Reimbursement Trends and Strategies in Emergency Medicine
2013 Feb. 3-5, San Diego, California
Advanced Procedure Coding for Emergency Medicine
2013 Feb. 6-7, San Diego, California
Advanced Pediatric Emergency Medicine Assembly
2013 March 12–14, Orlando, Florida
Emergency Department Directors Academy
2013 Phase 1: February 18–22, Dallas, Texas
2013 Phase 2: April 29-May 3, Dallas, Texas
ACEP Teaching Fellowship
2013 Session I: March 14–18, Dallas, Texas
2013 Session II: March 15–19, Dallas, Texas
ACEP Simulation-Based Immersive Medical Training (SIM)
2013 April 17–19, Evanston, Illinois
Publications
ACEP News
Each month, ACEP members receive innovative clinical articles, helpful emergency medicine practice ideas and in-depth articles on critical issues facing emergency medicine. Written by expert medical reporters who attend more than 500 medical meetings a year, ACEP News keeps you up to date.
Annals of Emergency Medicine
ACEP's official research publication, Annals of Emergency Medicine is by the Science Citation Index in the top 11 percent by citation frequency and top 11 percent by impact factor among more than 6,000 science and medical journals. Annals is the No. 1 journal among the 13 titles in the emergency medicine category of Thomson Scientific.
Sections of Membership
ACEP offers 32 sections of membership, which provides emergency physicians the opportunity to network with other experts in the diverse areas of emergency medicine. Members may choose one or more of ACEP's sections. They receive access to e-lists and online newsletters. Emergency medicine residents, medical students, and individuals in fellowship training programs are granted one free section membership. ACEP Sections include:
- Air Medical Transport
- American Association of Women EPs
- Careers in Emergency Medicine
- Cruise Ship & Maritime Medicine
- Critical Care Medicine
- Democratic Practice Group
- Disaster Medicine
- Dual Training
- Emergency Medicine Informatics
- Emergency Medicine Practice Management & Health Policy
- Emergency Medicine Research
- Emergency Medicine Workforce
- Telemedicine
- Emergency Ultrasound
- EMS-Prehospital Care
- Forensic Medicine
- Geriatric Emergency Medicine
- International Emergency Medicine
- Medical Humanities
- Observation Medicine
- Palliative Medicine
- Pediatric Emergency Medicine
- Quality Improvement & Patient Safety
- Rural Emergency Medicine
- Sports Medicine
- Tactical Emergency Medicine
- Toxicology
- Trauma & Injury Prevention
- Undersea and Hyperbaric Medicine
- Wellness
- Wilderness Medicine
- Young Physicians
See Also
References
- ^ "Contact Us". ACEP. Retrieved 15 Jul 2011.