- Joined
- Dec 5, 2005
- Messages
- 16
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are there any benefits to joining amsa or any other similar organizations?
free netter for signing up for the creidt cardare there any benefits to joining amsa or any other similar organizations?
join the AMA instead!
Or not. I joined the AMA for the free JAMA, which goes unread week after week after week. Now I have to put up with their political mailings which only goes to show how politically impotent they are as an organization. They were unable to get malpractice reform legislation through an all republican government and sit by while "allied" health professionals continue to diminish the exclusive scope of practice of physicians in many states. Compared to the lobbying organizations of nurses and insurance companies, the AMA is a joke.
Join interest groups and national organizations that you are truly interested in. The rest is a waste of time.
The AMSA people at your school will tell you that you can cancel the credit card anytime-what they don't tell you is what will happen to your credit report.
1. opening a new account of any kind temporarily lowers your credit score.
2. having too many credit cards (more than 3) hurts your credit score.
3. having a credit card that you never use hurts your credit score.
4. having a card with a low credit limit hurts your credit score.
5. and finally, canceling a credit card hurts your credit even more than items 1-4. The shorter the amount of time the account was open, the worse it will be.
So it just depends on you-are you willing to have a lower credit score for the next seven years to get that netter's? This is pretty much why I will not join AMSA-if they actually worked in the best interest of students, the Netter's would be free and they'd be handing out pamphlets on why signing up for credit cards as a broke med student is a terrible idea.
DO NOT JOIN AMSA!!!! I will send you one of their bogus magazines and you will see. They do stand for anything my classmates and I do. The worst part is they don't care. They have a few radicals at the top and will run the money you gave them for their own goals.
Examples: New DO president wants to spread the word about DO's. AMSA is gung-ho about all hospitals/schools being pharm-free(no free samples for patients, no pens, no meals). The have groups and conferences promoting universal health care.
I paid dues for the free Netter and now I am kicking myself. $125 for dues and I should have bought the book for $40-60.
OTOH, it is by far and away the best credit card I have. Low interest and points program. And my limit is not that low.
I don't understand all the hate for AMSA on SDN. I agree with DoctorFunk in that AMA doesn't necessarily do crap either. For each and every organization, you typically get out what you put in, as well as how active your school's chapter may or may not be. Go to the org's website and research their issues and decide for yourself.
I'm a member of both AMSA and AMA.
Just because you don't agree with AMSA's stance doesn't mean that no one else does. Like I said before, check out the website and you can find out the topics and opinions. Sorry that you didn't think to do this before paying up. No one's fault but your own. BTW, dues are $65, not $125.
And what's your beef with DO's?
Or not. I joined the AMA for the free JAMA, which goes unread week after week after week. Now I have to put up with their political mailings which only goes to show how politically impotent they are as an organization. They were unable to get malpractice reform legislation through an all republican government and sit by while "allied" health professionals continue to diminish the exclusive scope of practice of physicians in many states. Compared to the lobbying organizations of nurses and insurance companies, the AMA is a joke.
But would you approve if the AMA did what they should, which is stop pretending to be "defending the patients" and start solely advocating for physician's interests (aka the precise opposite of AMSA)? You don't see the Trial Lawyers Association advocating for poor people to get better legal representation, you see them advocating for TRIAL LAWYERS INTERESTS. AMA needs to be split into separate medical ethics and physician advocacy organizations. The focus on stuff like smoking bans and banning fatty snacks doesn't just distract from lobbying for physicians interests, it actively pushes away physicians who don't share their (largely pro-government intervention, in a conservative profession) social stances, which is a good reason why less than half of doctors are members now after it used to be more like 70%.
But while the AMA may be ineffectual it's at least got its heart in the right place. I can't even talk about AMSA without feeling a diversity workshop coming on.
I was an ASMA member until I discovered they were communists.are there any benefits to joining amsa or any other similar organizations?
#3. Who told you that?3. having a credit card that you never use hurts your credit score.
4. having a card with a low credit limit hurts your credit score.