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East Tennessee State University James H. Quillen College of Medicine

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24: 328:. The act, as passed, required that the new schools be "located in proximity to, and operated in conjunction with, Veterans' Administration medical facilities." In Tennessee, Senator Nave called for consideration of legislation to establish a medical school at ETSU in the Senate on February 14, 1974 which was approved. Four days later, the bill failed to pass in the House. Representatives Robinson and Good used their political influence, and the measure was passed on second attempt on February 28. The bill was presented to Governor 371: 304: 207:'s "America's Best Graduate Schools," the James H. Quillen College of Medicine at East Tennessee State University is ranked sixth in the nation for excellence in rural medicine education. For several consecutive years, ETSU has been ranked within the top 10 schools in the country for rural medicine. Additionally, Quillen College of Medicine at East Tennessee State University was recognized in the 2011 edition of 224: 211:'s "America's Best Graduate Schools" for ranking 20th in the nation for family medicine education. Quillen has also been recognized by the American Academy of Family Physicians as one of the top 10 schools in the nation for producing family physicians. ETSU was also ranked in the top 25% of medical schools for primary care education by U.S. News & World Report. 319:
of California introduced a companion bill. Known as the Teague-Cranston Act, the proposal called for the creation of five new medical schools in five states to meet the needs of the medically underserved areas of the country. Congressman Quillen claimed to have introduced an amendment, which required
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A study published in the June 15, 2010 edition of Annals of Internal Medicine by a professor of health policy, Fitzhugh Mullan, ranked East Tennessee State University's James H. Quillen College of Medicine as the top school in the nation for producing primary care physicians and 12th among U.S.
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of Memphis, who vetoed it as expected. Motions to override the veto were made by Senator Nave and Representative Robinson in their respective houses. The Senate overrode with an 18–13 vote on March 6, and the House followed suit on March 12, 1974.
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issued a letter of reasonable assurance that the new medical school would be accredited. The first class of 24 students (out of 255 applicants) enrolled in September 1978. Full accreditation was granted when that first class graduated in 1982.
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The next step was qualifying for the federal funds under the Teague-Cranston Act, with Quillen working with the State Board of Regents Chancellor Roy Nicks and President Culp on the application, which was approved by the
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that any university to be considered for acceptance into this pilot program must be on government property contiguous and adjacent to a VA hospital, as East Tennessee State University was adjacent to the
200:, who led the fight to open a second public medical school in Tennessee. The school was originally named the ETSU Quillen-Dishner College of Medicine, but Dr. Paul Dishner's name was removed in 1989. 158: 289:, newspaper publisher Carl Jones, State Senator Marshall Nave, State Representative Gwen Fleming, Johnson City Physician Charles Ed Allen, and State Representative Bob Good. 281:
In 1968, Dr. D.P. Culp was appointed president of ETSU, and his stated major goal was to establish a medical school. Other early supporters included U.S. representative
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governor Winfield Dunn for his opposition, and when Dunn ran for a second term in 1986, Quillen saw that Dunn's Republican support in
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concluded that it was not cost effective to have a medical school in Northeast Tennessee. This study was supported by the
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The political fight for the school continued to reverberate through Tennessee politics. Quillen never forgave former
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of Texas introduced a bill to create five medical schools in conjunction with established VA hospitals. Senator
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Mullan, Fitzhugh; Chen, Candice; Patterson, Stephen; Kolsky, Gretchen; Michael, Spagnola (15 June 2010).
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on July 11, 1974. On June 30, 1977, Dr. Culp's last day in office as the President of ETSU, the
238: 447: 45: 442: 425: 437: 82: 324:. The bill passed without a dissenting vote in October 1972, and was signed by President 303: 354: 174: 525: 611: 361: 329: 325: 316: 286: 282: 197: 223: 312: 403: 593: 580: 300:. Shortly afterward, a new process for starting the school became available. 185:. It is one of two public medical schools in Tennessee, the other being the 124: 451: 139: 302: 222: 558:
A University's Story 1911-1980: East Tennessee State University
426:"The Social Mission of Medical Education: Ranking the Schools" 570: 156: 149: 22: 145: 135: 109: 101: 91: 81: 71: 59: 51: 41: 33: 243:James H. Quillen Veterans Affairs Medical Center 560:, East Tennessee State University Press, 1991. 534:version 2.0, 2011. Retrieved: 9 August 2011. 531:Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture 215:medical schools on a “social mission” scale. 191:University of Tennessee Health Science Center 8: 16: 187:University of Tennessee College of Medicine 15: 441: 364:then won the election by a large margin. 443:10.7326/0003-4819-152-12-201006150-00009 380:Main lawn of the Mountain Home VA campus 391: 343:Liaison Committee on Medical Education 520: 518: 294:Tennessee Higher Education Commission 7: 171:James H. Quillen College of Medicine 37:Chances are we've touched your life. 17:James H. Quillen College of Medicine 259:Rural Primary Care Training Sites: 237:Bristol Regional Medical Center in 14: 252:Holston Valley Medical Center in 571:ETSU Quillen College of Medicine 369: 311:In April 1971, U.S. Congressman 269:Johnson County Health Center in 623:East Tennessee State University 179:East Tennessee State University 66:East Tennessee State University 1: 196:It was named for Congressman 618:Medical schools in Tennessee 209:U.S. News & World Report 205:U.S. News & World Report 526:Quillen College of Medicine 430:Annals of Internal Medicine 263:Hawkins County Hospital in 246:Johnson City Medical Center 644: 298:Tennessee Board of Regents 322:Mountain Home VA Hospital 155: 21: 556:Frank B. Williams, Jr., 524:Frank B. Williams, Jr., 628:Johnson City, Tennessee 339:Veterans Administration 203:In the 2011 edition of 183:Johnson City, Tennessee 308: 228: 181:, which is located in 162: 28: 306: 232:Affiliated Hospitals 226: 160: 26: 292:A 1971 study by the 87:Dr. Bill Block, M.D. 590: /  227:Stanton-Gerber Hall 18: 512:Williams, pp 253-4 309: 249:Woodridge Hospital 229: 163: 61:Parent institution 29: 594:36.300°N 82.367°W 167: 166: 77:Brian Noland Ph.D 635: 605: 604: 602: 601: 600: 595: 591: 588: 587: 586: 583: 544: 541: 535: 522: 513: 510: 504: 503:Williams, p. 253 501: 495: 494: 488: 484:"CQ.com - Login" 480: 474: 471: 465: 464:Williams, p. 230 462: 456: 455: 445: 421: 415: 414: 412: 411: 402:. Archived from 396: 373: 19: 643: 642: 638: 637: 636: 634: 633: 632: 608: 607: 599:36.300; -82.367 598: 596: 592: 589: 584: 581: 579: 577: 576: 567: 553: 548: 547: 543:Williams, p 330 542: 538: 523: 516: 511: 507: 502: 498: 486: 482: 481: 477: 472: 468: 463: 459: 436:(12): 808–811. 423: 422: 418: 409: 407: 398: 397: 393: 388: 383: 382: 381: 379: 374: 279: 221: 131: 123: 118: 94: 62: 12: 11: 5: 641: 639: 631: 630: 625: 620: 610: 609: 574: 573: 566: 565:External links 563: 562: 561: 552: 549: 546: 545: 536: 514: 505: 496: 475: 466: 457: 416: 390: 389: 387: 384: 376: 375: 368: 367: 366: 355:East Tennessee 278: 275: 274: 273: 267: 257: 256: 250: 247: 244: 241: 220: 217: 177:and a part of 175:medical school 165: 164: 153: 152: 147: 143: 142: 137: 133: 132: 113: 111: 107: 106: 103: 99: 98: 95: 93:Academic staff 92: 89: 88: 85: 79: 78: 75: 69: 68: 63: 60: 57: 56: 53: 49: 48: 43: 39: 38: 35: 31: 30: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 640: 629: 626: 624: 621: 619: 616: 615: 613: 606: 603: 572: 569: 568: 564: 559: 555: 554: 550: 540: 537: 533: 532: 527: 521: 519: 515: 509: 506: 500: 497: 492: 485: 479: 476: 470: 467: 461: 458: 453: 449: 444: 439: 435: 431: 427: 420: 417: 406:on 2012-07-30 405: 401: 400:"Quick Facts" 395: 392: 385: 378: 372: 365: 363: 362:Ned McWherter 360: 356: 352: 347: 344: 340: 334: 331: 330:Winfield Dunn 327: 326:Richard Nixon 323: 318: 317:Alan Cranston 314: 307:Jimmy Quillen 305: 301: 299: 295: 290: 288: 287:Ned McWherter 284: 283:Jimmy Quillen 276: 272: 271:Mountain City 268: 266: 262: 261: 260: 255: 251: 248: 245: 242: 240: 236: 235: 234: 233: 225: 218: 216: 212: 210: 206: 201: 199: 198:Jimmy Quillen 194: 192: 188: 184: 180: 176: 172: 159: 154: 151: 148: 144: 141: 138: 134: 130: 126: 121: 116: 115:Mountain Home 112: 108: 104: 100: 96: 90: 86: 84: 80: 76: 74: 70: 67: 64: 58: 54: 50: 47: 44: 40: 36: 32: 25: 20: 575: 557: 551:Bibliography 539: 529: 508: 499: 490: 478: 469: 460: 433: 429: 419: 408:. Retrieved 404:the original 394: 348: 335: 310: 291: 280: 258: 230: 213: 202: 195: 193:in Memphis. 170: 168: 150:etsu.edu/com 120:Johnson City 597: / 313:Olin Teague 265:Rogersville 161:QCOM emblem 52:Established 612:Categories 491:www.cq.com 410:2009-06-03 386:References 357:was weak. 351:Republican 219:Facilities 254:Kingsport 125:Tennessee 73:President 452:20547907 359:Democrat 140:Suburban 110:Location 102:Students 27:Entrance 585:82°22′W 582:36°18′N 277:History 239:Bristol 189:at the 146:Website 450:  136:Campus 46:Public 487:(PDF) 173:is a 34:Motto 448:PMID 169:The 83:Dean 55:1974 42:Type 528:. 438:doi 434:152 129:USA 105:278 97:208 614:: 517:^ 489:. 446:. 432:. 428:. 127:, 493:. 454:. 440:: 413:. 122:, 117:,

Index

Entrance
Public
East Tennessee State University
President
Dean
Mountain Home
Johnson City
Tennessee
USA
Suburban
etsu.edu/com
QCOM emblem
medical school
East Tennessee State University
Johnson City, Tennessee
University of Tennessee College of Medicine
University of Tennessee Health Science Center
Jimmy Quillen
U.S. News & World Report
U.S. News & World Report

Affiliated Hospitals
Bristol
Kingsport
Rogersville
Mountain City
Jimmy Quillen
Ned McWherter
Tennessee Higher Education Commission
Tennessee Board of Regents

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