Richard Carmona - Department of Health and Human Services

Richard Carmona - Department of Health and Human Services

Richard Carmona is Surgeon General. According to whitehouse.gov: Richard Carmona was previously Clinical Professor of Surgery, Public Health, and Family and Community Medicine at the University of Arizona, as well as Chairman of the... [more]

Richard Carmona is Surgeon General. According to whitehouse.gov: Richard Carmona was previously Clinical Professor of Surgery, Public Health, and Family and Community Medicine at the University of Arizona, as well as Chairman of the State of Arizona Southern Regional Emergency Medical System. He was also chief executive officer of the Pima County Health Care System from 1997 to 1999, Medical Director of Kino Community Hospital from 1995 until 1999 and director of Trauma Services at Tucson Medical Center from 1985 to 1993. Richard has an extensive record of public service, including serving as an Army Green Beret in Vietnam, a police officer, a SWAT team member and as a nurse. He received his bachelor and medical degrees from the University of California, San Francisco.

Bush's Surgeon General of Industry-Friendly Spin

"White House officials viewed former surgeon general Richard H. Carmona as a public relations tool, pushing him to make political appearances and promote the Bush administration's agenda while he was in office, according to a series of executive branch e-mails released yesterday by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.)," reports the Washington Post. In July, Carmona had testified before Congress that Bush appointees routinely "sought to rewrite his speeches, send him on political trips, and suppress his reports on global health and other politically sensitive topics." The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform is also investigating allegations that Carmona "was blocked from participating in [a] breast-feeding advocacy effort and that those designing [a pro-breast feeding] ad campaign were overruled by superiors at the formula industry's insistence." The ad campaign, as originally designed, graphically illustrated the dangers of not breast feeding, with "photos of insulin syringes and asthma inhalers topped with rubber nipples." The watered-down ad featured "more friendly images of dandelions and cherry-topped ice cream scoops," supposedly to communicate the risk of respiratory dangers and obesity.


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