Nurse Replaces Surgeon
General After Obama Appointee Resigns
Surgeon General Vivek H.
Murthy, an Obama administration holdover, was asked to resign by the Trump
administration on Friday.
He was replaced by his
deputy, Rear Adm. Sylvia Trent-Adams, one of the first nurses to serve as
surgeon general.
Admiral Trent-Adams will
for now be in an acting role.
As of Friday evening, she
had already replaced Dr. Murthy on the surgeon general’s Twitter account,
and her portrait had replaced his on the agency’s
Facebook page.
One of the first comments
on that post asked, “Where is Dr. Murthy?”
Alleigh Marré, a
spokeswoman for the Department
of Health and Human Services, said in an emailed statement on Friday that
he was asked to step down “after assisting in a smooth transition into the new
Trump administration.”
Ms. Marré said Dr. Murthy
would continue to serve as a member of the Commissioned Corps of the Public
Health Service.
But Dr. Murthy’s wife,
Alice Chen, said on Saturday that her husband had refused to resign and was
fired.
Admiral Trent-Adams may be
the first surgeon general who is not a physician.
She is not the first
nurse, though.
Dr. Richard Carmona, who
served under President George W. Bush, was a nurse and a physician, and he
sometimes referred to himself as the first nurse to serve as surgeon general.
It was not immediately
clear why Dr. Murthy was relieved from duty.
There is a long history of
surgeons general creating unwanted controversy for their political bosses;
among the only ways that the government’s top medics usually gain attention is
when they leave office under a cloud.
Dr. Carmona blasted the
Bush administration after he
was not asked to serve a second four-year term.
He accused White House
officials of repeatedly trying to weaken or suppress important public health
reports because of political
considerations.
And Dr. C. Everett Koop,
the most famous surgeon general in the country’s history, largely achieved his
fame by defying the Reagan administration’s policies or wishes on a host of
public health issues.
Surgeons general have
little staff or power but generally use their positions to call attention to
important public health priorities.
Dr. Murthy has for years
made headlines for calling gun violence a public health threat.
In 2014, the
National Rifle Association urged the Senate not to confirm him.
In a Facebook post late
Friday night, Dr. Murthy said, “While I had hoped to do more to help our nation
tackle its biggest health challenges, I will be forever grateful for the
opportunity to have served.”
Employees at the
Department of Health and Human Services privately expressed surprise at his
sudden departure.
Admiral Trent-Adams
received a Ph.D. from the University of Maryland. She was a nurse officer in
the Army and also served as a research nurse at the University of Maryland. She
joined the Commissioned Corps of the Public Health Service in 1992 and served
as the deputy associate administrator for the HIV/AIDS bureau of the Health
Resources and Services Administration before joining the surgeon general’s
office.
Source: NY Times
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