Tobbell, Dominique A.Hunt, Vincent2012-02-012012-02-012010-02-09https://hdl.handle.net/11299/120146Vincent Hunt attended St. John’s University in Collegeville, MN, for his undergraduate degree. He received his MD from the University of Minnesota in 1960. He interned at Bethesda Hospital in St. Paul and then practiced medicine in the rural community of Red Lake Falls, MN. In 1969, he returned to the UMN for his residency in family medicine as part of the new Family Practice and Community Health residency program. Following this residency program, Dr. Hunt worked at Hennepin County Medical Center. In 1971, he became the director of Family Medicine at St. Paul-Ramsey Hospital. In 1986, he became the chair of the Department of Family Medicine at Brown University Medical School.Vincent Hunt begins by discussing his background, including his education and why he became a physician. He discusses his experiences working as a physician in a rural area (Red Lake Falls, MN); as a medical student in the late 1950s; as an intern at Bethesda Hospital; and as a resident at the UMN. He discusses curriculum changes in the late 1950s, the University of Minnesota’s Comprehensive Clinic, comprehensive clinic programs at other universities, lobbying the state Legislature, the Department of Family Practice, Minnesota Academy of General Practice and Herb Huffington, the Rural Physician Associate program and the Rural Medical Care program, relations between the Schools in the health sciences, the heath sciences reorganization in 1970, and relations between the Medical School and the Mayo Clinic. He talks about the UMN Medical School faculty, Owen Wagensteen, Richard Magraw, Ben Fuller, Robert Howard, and Edward Ciriacy. He discusses medical ethics, his decision to enter general practice, nurses in Red Lake Falls, the introduction of Medicare and Medicaid, family practice as a specialty, rural medicine, tensions between academic physicians and private practitioners, the attempt to establish a second medical school in the Twin Cities in the 1960s, the relationship between family practice and internal medicine, general practice, and the comprehensive health insurance plan.en-USAcademic Health CenterHealth sciencesMedical SchoolDepartment of Family Practice and Community HealthRural health careMinnesota legislaturePrivate practiceUndergraduate medical educationGraduate medical education1950s1960s1970sInterview with Vincent HuntOral History