American College of Medical Toxicology
The American College of Medical Toxicology is a professional association of medical toxicologists that was founded in 1993. Its aim is to support quality medical care for persons exposed to potentially harmful chemicals (whether medications, drugs of abuse, workplace or environmental toxins, or bioterrorism agents), and to provide training and insight to the physicians who provide this care.
History
Timeline of the organization:
- 1974: American Board of Medical Toxicology (ABMT) established
- 1992: Medical Toxicology recognized by American Board of Medical Specialties
- 1993: ABMT goes out of business and is replaced by ACMT and the Subboard of Medical Toxicology. Subboard members include representatives appointed by the American Board of Emergency Medicine, American Board of Pediatrics, and the American Board of Preventive Medicine
- 1993: ACMT is incorporated as stand alone professional organization for physician toxicologists board certified in medical toxicology
- 1994: Subboard offers first certification examination in Medical Toxicology
- 2001: Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education accredits Medical Toxicology fellowship training programs
- 2002: First ACMT Annual Spring Conference
- 2003: ACMT/Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry Regional Consultation Network is established
- 2004: First of over 50 courses a Chemical Agents of Opportunity offered with sponsorship of the ATSDR
- 2004: First biannual ACMT Board Review Course offered
- 2005: Publication of the Journal of Medical Toxicology
- 2009: Establishment of the Medical Toxicology Foundation
Activities
The organization maintains the Toxicology Investigators Consortium database that catalogs HIPAA-compliant data regarding the clinical management of poisoned patients.[1]
Journal
The ACMT publishes the peer-reviewed medical journal Journal of Medical Toxicology.
References
- ↑ Wiegand, T; Wax, P; Smith, E; Hart, K; Brent, J (2013). "The Toxicology Investigators Consortium Case Registry--the 2012 experience". Journal of Medical Toxicology 9 (4): 380–404. doi:10.1007/s13181-013-0352-5. PMC 3846972. PMID 24178902.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, August 28, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.