[sometimes the Bushies do things that even I didn't expect.]

July 11, 2007 / New York TIMES
Surgeon General Sees 4-Year Term as Compromised
By GARDINER HARRIS

WASHINGTON, July 10 — Former Surgeon General Richard H. Carmona told a
Congressional panel Tuesday that top Bush administration officials
repeatedly tried to weaken or suppress important public health reports
because of political considerations.

The administration, Dr. Carmona said, would not allow him to speak or
issue reports about stem cells, emergency contraception, sex
education, or prison, mental and global health issues. Top officials
delayed for years and tried to "water down" a landmark report on
secondhand smoke, he said. Released last year, the report concluded
that even brief exposure to cigarette smoke could cause immediate
harm.

Dr. Carmona said he was ordered to mention President Bush three times
on every page of his speeches. He also said he was asked to make
speeches to support Republican political candidates and to attend
political briefings.

And administration officials even discouraged him from attending the
Special Olympics because, he said, of that charitable organization's
longtime ties to a "prominent family" that he refused to name.

"I was specifically told by a senior person, 'Why would you want to
help those people?' " Dr. Carmona said.

The Special Olympics is one of the nation's premier charitable
organizations to benefit disabled people, and the Kennedys have long
been deeply involved in it.

When asked after the hearing if that "prominent family" was the
Kennedys, Dr. Carmona responded, "You said it. I didn't."

In response to lawmakers' questions, Dr. Carmona refused to name
specific people in the administration who had instructed him to put
political considerations over scientific ones. He said, however, that
they included assistant secretaries of health and human services as
well as top political appointees outside the department of health.

Dr. Carmona did offer to provide the names to the committee in a
private meeting.

Bill Hall, a spokesman for the Department of Health and Human
Services, said that the administration disagreed with Dr. Carmona's
statements. "It has always been this administration's position that
public health policy should be rooted in sound science," Mr. Hall
said.

Emily Lawrimore, a White House spokeswoman, said the surgeon general
"is the leading voice for the health of all Americans."

"It's disappointing to us," Ms. Lawrimore said, "if he failed to use
this position to the fullest extent in advocating for policies he
thought were in the best interests of the nation."

Dr. Carmona is one of a growing list of present and former
administration officials to charge that politics often trumped science
within what had previously been largely nonpartisan government health
and scientific agencies.

[more at: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/11/washington/11surgeon.html ]
--
Jim Devine /  "The tooth fairy teaches children that they can sell
body parts for money." -- David Richerby

Reply via email to