Grand Itasca Rural Family Medicine Residency Program

Smiling woman in red shirt

Become a rural family medicine physician in picturesque Grand Rapids

Is it your goal to practice full-spectrum family medicine in a rural setting? Would you like to hone your skills in a friendly community with access to endless outdoor activities? Most of all, are you ready to help fill an ever-increasing need for rural family physicians? 

The Grand Itasca Rural program offers top-tier rural health training to help you meet your goals.

You will receive a customized, hands-on learning experience as you care for patients in a rural environment. Each day, you’ll spend a large amount of time directly with your patients and receive one-on-one guidance from deeply experienced faculty.

Kick off your first year of residency with our urban partner, UMN Woodwinds Hospital Family Medicine Residency. You will then spend your second and third years in the family-friendly community of Grand Rapids, nestled in the Northwoods of Minnesota. Pending ACGME accreditation, the program plans to begin in mid-June 2026.

Get trained in critical skills in rural communities

Your experience will include in-depth training alongside family medicine physicians in the hospital, intensive care, emergency department, obstetrics, and clinic. Additionally, you will work alongside a variety of highly experienced specialists in the areas of mental health, neurology, urology, OB/GYN, hematology/oncology, rheumatology, orthopedics, and cardiology.

Apply, benefits and residency resources

Clinics
A snowy outside view of the clinic

Grand Itasca Clinic & Hospital

Grand Itasca is an integrated clinic and hospital located in Grand Rapids. You can quickly and easily walk down the hall to speak to an obstetrician or a colleague in primary care or specialty care. From the inpatient hospital to the infusion center to the emergency department—it’s all in one place.

The clinic’s specialties include anesthesiology, cardiology, chiropractic, ear, nose and throat, elder care, emergency medicine, family medicine, general surgery, hospitalist, internal medicine, neurology, obstetrics/gynecology, occupational medicine, oncology, orthopedics, pediatrics, psychiatry, pulmonology, radiology, rheumatology, sports medicine, and urology.

Grand Itasca’s deep roots in the community date back to the logging camps and the booming paper mill in Grand Rapids and surrounding areas. In the late 1800s, the Sisters of St. Benedict opened a hospital in the town, but it closed in 1912. With a growing need for healthcare, the community worked together to open Minnesota’s first independent, locally funded hospital in 1918. More than 100 years later, Grand Itasca continues to thrive.

  • 45-bed hospital
  • 1,700 surgeries/year
  • 320 births/year
  • 15,700 emergency department visits/year
  • 93,500 clinic visits/year
  • 800 employees
  • A 76-acre lot along the Mississippi River

M Health Clinic - Bethesda

Located in Minnesota’s capital city of St. Paul, Bethesda clinic serves a diverse population of patients. The clinic provides specialties in behavioral health services, international travel medicine, pain management, sports medicine, family medicine, medication therapy management, pediatric psychology, and substance use disorder.

Hospitals
Woodwinds Hospital

M Health Fairview Woodwinds

  • Only residency at the hospital
  • Only hospital in the southeast metro area
  • Specializes in maternity care and orthopedic surgery
  • Location for all inpatient rotations
  • Complimentary food and spacious call rooms
  • Honored as one of U.S. News and World Report's 2023 "Best Hospitals for Maternity"
  • Named “High Performer” in 2024 LGBTQ+ health equity index

Learn more about Woodwinds Hospital

clinicandhospital

Grand Itasca Clinic & Hospital

Learn more about Grand Itasca Clinic & Hospital 

Outside photo of the entrance to a hospital

Masonic Children’s Hospital

  • Comprehensive Care
  • Inpatient Rotation
  • Pediatric Emergency Medicine
  • Tele-NICU Service
     

Learn more about Masonic Children’s Hospital

Range Medical Center

Fairview Range Medical Center

Community
Man outside riding a fat bike tire

Grand Rapids became a logging town due to its ready access to the Mississippi River, which quickly became the method of choice for log shipment to population centers. The Forest History Center, located in Grand Rapids, Minnesota, is a State Historic Site and a living history museum where you can witness daily life in a turn-of-the-20th century logging camp.  

As of the 2022 census, there were 11,268 people living in the city. The racial makeup of the city of Grand Rapids was 88.4% white, 1.1% African American, and 2% Native American. The median age in the city was 43.8 years.

Grand Rapids is the birthplace of Judy Garland, who played Dorothy in the Wizard of Oz, and is the home of the Judy Garland museum. Grand Rapids High School is home to one of the state’s most successful competitive marching bands.

Grand Rapids offers many family-friendly local attractions:

Annual tourism and local events:

Learn more about all the fun activities in Grand Rapids

 

Your Training

Expand all

Your Training

Primary Rotation Sites

  • Grand Itasca Clinic & Hospital
  • M Health Fairview Woodwinds Hospital
  • M Health Fairview Masonic Children's Hospital
  • Fairview Range Medical Center
  • M Health Fairview Clinic - Bethesda

     

Curriculum

See the curriculum by visiting our Curriculum and Call page

FAQs

Do you sponsor visas?

  • We do not sponsor visas at this time.

Do you participate in couple’s match?

  • Yes, we participate in the couple’s match.
     
Dr. Pehl

Contact Us

Tim Pehl, MD
Program Director
[email protected]

Lori Kent
Program Coordinator
[email protected]
 

Grand Itasca Student Opportunities

Rotations

We welcome medical students from U.S. LCME-accredited or COCA-accredited medical schools for two- to four-week rotations.

For more information about medical student opportunities, contact Lori Kent.

A map of Minnesota with grand itasca

Grand Rapids is located in Northeast Minnesota, about 180 miles — an easy three-hour drive — from the Twin Cities.