Dwight Locke Wilbur (September 18, 1903 – March 9, 1997) was a medical doctor and president of the American Medical Association. During his 1968-69 tenure, he was instrumental in convincing that organization to accept Medicare after many years of opposition.[1]
He was a founder of both the San Francisco Society of Internal Medicine and the California Society of Internal Medicine.[2] He also served as president of the American Gastroenterological Association from 1954 to 1955 and president of the American College of Physicians in 1959.[3] As a gastroenterologist and professor of medicine at Stanford starting in 1949, he published more than 200 scholarly articles.[4]