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THE MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST AND THE DOCTOR

Robert B. Robins, M.D.
JAMA. 1959;170(5):626-627. doi:10.1001/jama.1959.63010050023021.
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ABSTRACT

As a practicing physician I have an interest in the work of medical technologists and the other professional and technical personnel who assist me and my colleagues in daily practice. I know from experience how important their services are to the teamwork necessary for modern medical care.

As a member of the Board of Trustees of the American Medical Association I also have an interest from the organizational point of view. The A. M. A. has an important committee now studying all phases of the problem of promoting cooperation and rapport between the medical profession and persons in the so-called paramedical areas. That committee, in a progress report at the Clinical Meeting in Minneapolis last December, described this as "one of the most complex problems on the American medical scene today." The committee pointed out that more than 60 groups are functioning in the ancillary or paramedical areas.

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