Maureen Reed, MD | |
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Born |
Redwood Falls, Minnesota |
April 10, 1953
Residence | Grant, Minnesota |
Alma mater |
University of Minnesota Minnesota Medical School |
Occupation | Physician |
Known for | Candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives |
Political party | Democratic-Farmer-Labor |
Spouse(s) | Jim Hart, MD |
Website | http://maureenreedforcongress.com/ |
Maureen Reed (born April 10, 1953) is a physician who was the chair of the Board of Regents of the University of Minnesota, Director of the Parks and Trails Council of Minnesota, and Medical Director and Vice-President of the not-for-profit health care provider HealthPartners. She initially announced that she would run as a Democrat in the sixth congressional district of Minnesota, USA in 2010, but withdrew.
Reed was born to a farming family that lost their farm in the Great Depression, and grew up in Redwood Falls, Minnesota, a small rural town in south-western Minnesota, where her mother Rose still lives. Her father worked at the local Ford dealership. She has one sister. She married Jim Hart, and they have lived in Grant, Minnesota since 1982.
Reed graduated from the University of Minnesota in 1975, from the University of Minnesota Medical School in 1979, and did part of her medical training at the VA hospital in Minneapolis, completing her residency in Internal Medicine at the University of Minnesota in 1982. For the next ten years she practiced internal medicine at the Aspen Medical Group, being Chief of Staff from 1988 until 1991. She served as president of Aspen Medical Group in 1992. In 1993, she was hired as the vice president and medical director of HealthPartners, a position she held until 2004. She also continued to practice internal medicine on a part-time basis at the Fremont Community Clinic in north Minneapolis, a clinic serving primarily uninsured and under-insured patients. During her tenure as vice president and medical director at HealthPartners (1993–2004), Reed created and implemented an outcomes-based payment approach (Outcomes Recognition Program) for primary care groups, specialty care groups and hospitals. She also led the team whose measurement efforts subsequently spawned the Minnesota Community Measurement. That same team converted HealthPartners from a paper to an electronic medical management system.
Throughout the 1980s and 1990s Reed traveled with her husband to East Africa to study and review rural public health projects. On one trip to Uganda, Maureen worked with local dairy farmers, developing a plan that allowed them to pool their resources, providing them with unprecedented access to health care.