(JUNE 6, 2024) Craig Sullivan, M.D., and his son, Larner alum Matt Sullivan, M.D., both clinical assistant professors of family medicine, and Anne Morris, M.D., associate professor of family medicine, were interviewed for a Vermont Public story on the shortage of primary care providers in Vermont.
Craig Sullivan, M.D. (left), and his son, Larner alum Matt Sullivan, M.D., both clinical assistant professors of family medicine, outside their family medicine practice in Northfield, Vermont (Photo: Lexi Krupp, Vermont Public)
(JUNE 6, 2024) Craig Sullivan, M.D., and his son, Larner alum Matt Sullivan, M.D., both clinical assistant professors of family medicine, and Anne Morris, M.D., associate professor and residency director of family medicine, were among those interviewed for a Vermont Public “Brave Little State” episode focusing on the shortage of primary care providers in Vermont.
“What is the state of primary care in Vermont?” “Where is it anticipated to go?” “Why is it so hard to find a primary care provider?” were just some of the questions the episode explored.
Wait times for primary care are long, and clinicians are maxed out. Brave Little State interviewed the father-son doctor duo about how times have changed and spoke with Morris—who runs the only family medicine residency program in Vermont; the UVM program graduates six doctors a year—about why we are where we are, where the future of primary care is headed, and what needs to change.
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Vermont Public “Brave Little State”