AMA Physician Masterfile
The American Medical Association Physician Professional Data includes current and historical data on all physicians, including AMA members and nonmembers, and graduates of foreign medical schools who reside in the United States and who have met the educational and credentialing requirements necessary for recognition as physicians. A Masterfile record is created and ME number assigned when entering medical school or through the ECFMG. For medical students, there are two primary methods to create the initial record - the Student Outreach Program and the annual freshman matriculation file received from the Association of American Medical Colleges.
The Physician Professional Data spans from undergraduate medical education through practice and comprise databases of
- 125 LCME-accredited medical schools
- 7,900 ACGME-accredited graduate medical education programs
- 1,600 teaching institutions; 820,000 physicians; and 19,000 medical group practices.
Student outreach: steps for record creation
The Student Outreach Program creates affiliate student records in a database specifically designed to support AMA membership recruitment activities. The record includes:- student membership application is received
- information is entered into the Student Outreach Database using the student supplied SSN as the initial unique identifier
- SOD data loaded into the AMA Masterfile with status of "unverified"
- # student affiliate membership status is assigned
- # payment is processed
- # record with corresponding ME number is created.
- primary source notification of enrollment in an LCME-accredited program received through the AAMC freshman matriculation file.
- student affiliate records stored in the Masterfile are matched to AAMC records.
- matched record now contains both an ME number and SSN and has been verified by the primary source. # affiliate status is removed and a permanent unique record on the Masterfile is established.
The AMA Masterfile has been in use since 1906.
Uses
The data are shared with other organizations and agencies who credential physicians and are used to identify individuals who attempt to fraudulently assume the credentials of deceased physicians.The AMA also charges data mining companies such as IQVIA a fee for access to the Physician Professional Data, which they then use to identify physicians within prescription data purchased from pharmacies. This enriched, prescriber-identified prescription data is then sold to pharmaceutical companies that use it to monitor marketing effectiveness.
United States medical students and physicians
An AMA Physician Professional Data record is established when individuals enter medical schools accredited by the Liaison Committee on Medical Education, or in the case of international medical graduates, upon entry into ACGME-accredited programs. When creating a record, the database is first checked to see if the person has a record using legal last name, legal first name, date of birth, school code, and state of residence to identify unique student entities when creating physician records.Each AMA Physician Professional Data record includes
- physician's name
- medical school
- year of graduation
- gender
- birthplace
- birthdate
- Medical Education Number
- Additional data added from primary data sources or from surveying the physicians directly as the physicians' training and career develop
- * residency training
- * state licensure
- * board certification
- * geographical location
- * address
- * type of practice
- * present employment,
- * practice specialty