RT Journal A1 Daniels RJ, Carson LD T1 ACademic medical centers—organizational integration and discipline through contractual and firm models JF JAMA JO JAMA YR 2011 FD November 2 VO 306 IS 17 SP 1912 OP 1913 DO 10.1001/jama.2011.1606 UL http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jama.2011.1606 AB Over the last several decades, substantial literature has developed regarding the roles, functions, and resources of—as well as the challenges facing—the academic medical center (AMC). Yet with some notable exceptions, little of the discussion surrounding the AMC has been informed by organizational theory, leaving underexamined how various organizational structures and approaches may reduce or exacerbate tensions among the AMC's divergent stakeholders. Far from a purely theoretical inquiry, the exploration of how AMC organizational structures affect allocation of resources and sharing of risk as well as institutional abilities to respond to external and internal changes has profound implications for how these bastions in the landscape of modern health care can best achieve their scientific, financial, educational, and societal goals.