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Dr. Sanjay Gupta… for Surgeon General?

The WaPo’s Howard Kurtz is reporting that Obama has asked celebrity tele-Dr. Sanjay Gupta, he of CNN and CBS fame, to be the new surgeon general.

Now, I’m in no position to question Gupta’s abilities as a neurosurgeon or otherwise his medical qualifications. He may very well be an excellent doctor, as he seems to be (he performed brain surgery during the Iraq invasion in 2003). Furthermore, there is no doubt that he is telegenic and that he would make an excellent spokesman for public health issues. And, indeed, what’s needed in that position is not so much expertise in medicine as the ability to communicate effectively with the broader public, that is, to inform and teach through the media. (Think C. Everett Koop and his anti-smoking campaign in the 80s.) In this regard, the media-friendly Gupta, a man who is clearly comfortable in front of the camera, seems to be an excellent pick for the job.

And yet.

It seems to me that what is needed in a surgeon general is also someone who can make the case for, or at least someone who is supportive of, a reformed public health care system, given that this seems to be, as many of us hope it genuinely is, one of Obama’s main policy priorities. But is Gupta an advocate of such reform? I have my doubts. As he exposed in his critique of Michael Moore’s movie Sicko back in July 2007, he seems to be very much a part of, as well as a defender of, the status quo, namely, the corporatized health care system controlled by Big Pharma and the HMOs. As I put it then, he picked apart Moore’s movie, avoided subjecting the existing system and/or Moore’s critics to similar evaluation, and failed to address the most serious flaws of the American system, namely, the enormous costs even to those with insurance and the utter lack of insurance for millions.” So is this really the man who should be the spokesman for public health in the United States?

I see that my friend Steve Benen, while acknowledging (but not making much of) the Moore incident (which occurred on CNN, no less), thinks that Gupta “seems like a strong choice,” given that he “would likely be the highest-profile official since Koop, and could conceivably play a valuable role in advancing a reform campaign.” Well, maybe. And — yet again, yet again — I’m wondering if I should — yet again, yet again — give Obama the benefit of the doubt and trust that he knows what he’s doing, that all will work out. Like Krugman, though, I just can’t quite get past Gupta’s “mugging” of Moore — and that he got it wrong.

Should one ugly high-profile incident like this disqualify him? Maybe not, and, like I said, he undeniably has a lot going for him. For example, as Kurtz notes — and this I did not know — “[h]e was a White House fellow in the late 1990s, writing speeches and crafting policy for Hillary Clinton.” That certainly inspires greater confidence, but I need to know more about his position on health care reform, as well as on the existing system that has left millions of Americans uninsured, and about his willingness to work with and in support of soon-to-be health czar and HHS Secretary Tom Daschle, before giving Obama the benefit of the doubt and approving this questionable appointment.

It would be good for the U.S. to have a prominent, highly visible, charismatic, and telegenic surgeon general at a time of reform, not to mention in case of public health emergencies. It’s just not clear to me that Gupta is the right choice.

Yet.

(Cross-posted from The Reaction.)

  • DLS
    I already covered this. This is not Obama's best week. First Richardson, then the blunder with Panetta, and then teevee guy Gupta, whom (as we see) even the militant lefty kiddies won't like.

    No to any activist. Obama's smart to start slow and sure, not offend and repel the mainstream before he considers pushing leftward to test the mainstream. A former head of CDC for this role, or a public health official, definitely, so long as there's no taint of idiocy like gun control as a "health" issue. (Again, don't shock the normal people.) No to Gupta, but no, also, obviously, to someone like Marcia Angell.
  • Rudi
    Enough of the Panetta BS already. Bush 41 became the DCIA in 1976 with a similar background. In 1999 the headquaters was named after him:
    George Bush Center for Intelligence

    The Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1999* was signed into law by the President on October 20, 1998. Among its provisions, the Act directed that the Headquarters compound of the Central Intelligence Agency located in Langley, Virginia, shall be known and designated as the "George Bush Center for Intelligence."

    The building wasn't renamed after Porter Goss...
  • DLS
    That's because Bush (the elder) couldn't displace Ronald Reagan's name on National Airport. (And no, Obama is no replacement, either.)

    As for the Surgeon General selection, while many would probably want someone like Marcia Angell (and some, no doubt, someone like Michael Moore, "health expert") to be chosen, I say it should be someone non-political from CDC or someplace like the American Public Health Association. Safe and sane, not someone the lefty activists would prefer, that is.
  • Rudi
    OPbama nominates Dr. Steven Chu and Dr. Gupta.
    BDS(W) gave us Brownie and George C. Deutsch.
    George C. Deutsch, the young presidential appointee at NASA who told public affairs workers to limit reporters' access to a top climate scientist and told a Web designer to add the word "theory" at every mention of the Big Bang, resigned yesterday, agency officials said.
    ...
    The resignation came as the National Aeronautics and Space Administration was preparing to review its policies for communicating science to the public. The review was ordered Friday by Michael D. Griffin, the NASA administrator, after a week in which many agency scientists and midlevel public affairs officials described to The New York Times instances in which they said political pressure was applied to limit or flavor discussions of topics uncomfortable to the Bush administration, particularly global warming.

    "As we have stated in the past, NASA is in the process of revising our public affairs policies across the agency to ensure our commitment to open and full communications," the statement from Mr. Acosta said.

    The statement said the resignation of Mr. Deutsch was "a separate matter."

    Mr. Deutsch, 24, was offered a job as a writer and editor in NASA's public affairs office in Washington last year after working on President Bush's re-election campaign and inaugural committee, according to his résumé. No one has disputed those parts of the document.

    According to his résumé, Mr. Deutsch received a "Bachelor of Arts in journalism, Class of 2003."

    Yesterday, officials at Texas A&M said that was not the case.
    ...
  • I nominate John McCain's mother. You don't get to be 200 years old without knowing something about health :-)
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