
Updated at 4:19 p.m.
The leader of Vermontโs largest health care system is preparing to retire, according to a spokesperson for the University of Vermont Health Network.
Dr. John Brumsted has served as president and CEO of the UVM Health Network and its Burlington flagship hospital, the University of Vermont Medical Center, since 2011. An obstetrics and gynecology physician by training, he worked at the organization for three decades, according to the health network.
The network plans to convene a national search for a replacement, according to spokesperson Annie Mackin. Brumsted, who is 69, is expected to leave his post in September, Mackin said.
Brumsted, who was not immediately available for an interview, said in a written statement Tuesday that he was honored to have led the network.
โWe have faced many challenges, and there is no doubt that there will be more challenges in the future,โ he said. โI am confident that this organization will continue to innovate and improve the way we serve and advance the health of our patients and our communities, now and into the future.โ
Already the largest standalone hospital in Vermont, UVM Medical Center led the formation of the rapidly growing UVM Health Network during Brumstedโs tenure. Months after he took the helm, the Burlington hospital united with Central Vermont Medical Center in Berlin to create the health network in October 2011. In 2013, the health network expanded to New York state with the addition of three hospitals there. Porter Medical Center in Middlebury came on board in 2017.
In a written statement, Gov. Phil Scott called Brumsted a โtransformative leaderโ and โa strong partner.โ
โIโve enjoyed a great working relationship with him over the years and appreciate what heโs been able to accomplish,โ Scott said.
The health network today is a conglomeration of several organizations, most notably OneCare Vermont, an influential entity involved in health care reform in the state. The accountable care organization funnels millions of private and public health care dollars to providers all over Vermont.
Tom Huebner, former CEO of Rutland Regional Medical Center, said on Tuesday that Brumsted contributed to the health care environment in Vermont first as a physician and then as an executive. Huebner called Brumsted โforward-thinking and a real leader.” Brumstedโs legacy, Huebner said, would be in his contribution to health care reform efforts in Vermont.ย
Brumsted also saw the health network through some of its greatest challenges, including a pandemic that contributed to historic worker shortages and a cyberattack that paralyzed the Burlington hospital for several weeks in late 2020.ย
Mackin said Brumsted had planned to retire last fall but stayed for another year at the request of the board.
Brumsted hinted he was going to step down at a press briefing last week, when he said he was โstill CEO of the health network.โ Asked if he was leaving his position soon, Brumsted said, โNo. No, I was making a joke,โ adding that he โshould be more carefulโ with his jokes.
Kevin Mullin, chair of the stateโs health care regulatory Green Mountain Care Board, said Brumsted โhas an incredibly brilliant mind for medical delivery.โ
โThe state of Vermont owes John a debt of gratitude for staying past his thoughts of an earlier retirement date,โ Mullin said.
Brumsted had announced last November that he would step down as leader of the board of managers at OneCare. At the time, Brumsted said he would leave that position in January. Now, according to OneCare spokesperson Amy Bodette, Brumsted plans to stay on as chair โfor a little while,โ and the timeline for leaving that post has not yet been settled.
โGiven the pressures facing our stateโs delivery system, the process for nominating and selecting the next chair is taking additional time,โ she said.
OneCare, originally a joint venture of Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center and University of Vermont Medical Center, came under the UVM Health Network umbrella last fall. Steve LeBlanc, chief strategy officer at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Health, is now the sole representative of the Lebanon-based hospital chain on OneCareโs board.
Correction: An earlier version of this story misstated when UVM Medical Center faced a cyberattack.
