[Senate Hearing 110-719]
[From the U.S. Government Printing Office]
S. Hrg. 110-719
NOMINATION OF
JAMES W. HOLSINGER, JR., M.D., PH.D.
=======================================================================
HEARING
OF THE
COMMITTEE ON HEALTH, EDUCATION,
LABOR, AND PENSIONS
UNITED STATES SENATE
ONE HUNDRED TENTH CONGRESS
FIRST SESSION
ON
NOMINATION OF JAMES W. HOLSINGER, JR., OF KENTUCKY, TO BE MEDICAL
DIRECTOR IN THE REGULAR CORPS AND TO BE SURGEON GENERAL OF THE UNITED
STATES
__________
JULY 12, 2007
__________
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Pensions
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COMMITTEE ON HEALTH, EDUCATION, LABOR, AND PENSIONS
EDWARD M. KENNEDY, Massachusetts, Chairman
CHRISTOPHER J. DODD, Connecticut MICHAEL B. ENZI, Wyoming,
TOM HARKIN, Iowa JUDD GREGG, New Hampshire
BARBARA A. MIKULSKI, Maryland LAMAR ALEXANDER, Tennessee
JEFF BINGAMAN, New Mexico RICHARD BURR, North Carolina
PATTY MURRAY, Washington JOHNNY ISAKSON, Georgia
JACK REED, Rhode Island LISA MURKOWSKI, Alaska
HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON, New York ORRIN G. HATCH, Utah
BARACK OBAMA, Illinois PAT ROBERTS, Kansas
BERNARD SANDERS (I), Vermont WAYNE ALLARD, Colorado
SHERROD BROWN, Ohio TOM COBURN, M.D., Oklahoma
J. Michael Myers, Staff Director and Chief Counsel
Katherine Brunett McGuire, Minority Staff Director
(ii)
?
C O N T E N T S
__________
STATEMENTS
THURSDAY, JULY 12, 2007
Page
Kennedy, Hon. Edward M., Chairman, Committee on Health,
Education, Labor, and Pensions, opening statement.............. 1
McConnell, Hon. Mitch, a U.S. Senator from the State of Kentucky,
statement...................................................... 2
Bunning, Hon. Jim, a U.S. Senator from the State of Kentucky,
statement...................................................... 4
Enzi, Hon. Michael B., a U.S. Senator from the State of Wyoming,
opening statement.............................................. 6
Holsinger, James W., Jr., M.D., Ph.D., of Kentucky nominated to
be Medical Director and Surgeon General of the Public Health
Service Department of Health and Human Services................ 8
Prepared statement........................................... 8
Mikulski, Hon. Barabara A., a U.S. Senator from the State of
Maryland, statement............................................ 18
ADDITIONAL MATERIAL
Statements, articles, publications, letters, etc.:
Clinton, Hon. Hillary Rodham, a U.S. Senator from the State
of New York, prepared statement............................ 39
Letters of support........................................... 40
Letters of opposition........................................ 46
(iii)
NOMINATION OF
JAMES W. HOLSINGER, JR., M.D., PH.D.
----------
THURSDAY, JULY 12, 2007
U.S. Senate,
Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions,
Washington, DC.
The committee met, pursuant to notice, at 10:05 a.m., in
Room G-50, Dirksen Senate Office Building, Hon. Edward M.
Kennedy, chairman of the committee, presiding.
Present: Senators Kennedy, Mikulski, Murray, Sanders,
Brown, Enzi, Isakson, and Allard.
Also Present: Senators Bunning and McConnell.
Opening Statement of Senator Kennedy
The Chairman. Good morning. We'll come to order. We
congratulate Mr. Holsinger of Kentucky of being nominated to be
the Surgeon General and we have two of our very distinguished
colleagues and friends that are here to present it to the
committee. We know their busy program and schedule so without
further adieu, we'll recognize the senior Senator from Kentucky
and the distinguished minority leader, Senator Mitch McConnell.
We certainly welcome you and then we'll hear from Senator
Bunning.
We thank you for taking the time to tell our good nominee--
this is a very special recommendation you're getting. It's not
often we have colleagues coming and making statements and
comments in terms of support of a nominee so he's extremely
fortunate and we very much welcome your assessment and whatever
you have to tell our committee that you think would be
advantageous to us. Senator McConnell? Dr. Holsinger, if you'd
like to just introduce your family first and then we'll
recognize Mitch. I understand they are rather extensive and
members of families, large families, being the ninth member of
a large family, I appreciate this but I think we reached new
records today.
If you want to just take a moment or several moments,
whatever time but this is a special time, we know, for you and
for them and I think to hear that is first priority.
Dr. Holsinger. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
The Chairman. I think it just----
Dr. Holsinger. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I appreciate the
opportunity to introduce my family that are here today. I've
had the rare opportunity of having lived out my life in the
company of a remarkable group of women. Dr. Barbara Craig
Holsinger and I have been married for 44 years, my wife,
Barbara. The fact that she has been married to me for 44 years
represents her staying power, I think, and it's appropriate to
recognize that. We are the proud parents of four daughters,
several of whom are able to be here with us today.
Our daughter, Dr. Anna Holsinger Bampton and her husband,
Dr. James Bampton. Our daughter, Dr. Ruth Holsinger Lewellen
and her family live in New Zealand and so, for obvious reasons,
they're not able to be with us today but our daughter, the
Reverend Sarah Holsinger-Freisen and her husband, Dr. Tom
Holsinger-Freisen are here with us and she is en route to
having our sixth grandson. Now, if anyone thinks that God
doesn't have a sense of humor, we have four daughters and now
six grandsons. Also with us is our fourth daughter, Rachel
Holsinger. Rachel.
Now, like everyone else, my life has been heavily
influenced by the home in which I grew up. My father, Brigadier
General James Holsinger is buried in Arlington National
Cemetery but my 98-year-old mother, Ruth Holsinger, is here
with us today and she's on this side. My mother, Ruth
Holsinger. In a few short years, on June 15, 2009, a lucky
President of the United States will have an opportunity to send
her a 100th birthday card and we're looking forward to that
celebration with great interest.
Also with us is my mother-in-law, Barbara's mother, Betty
Craig and she is the woman that has made every mother-in-law
joke a bad joke because she treats me as her oldest son. I have
a number of other friends and relatives here with us today. I
just want to thank all of them for taking the time out of their
busy lives to come and be here in support of me sitting before
your committee. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I appreciate the
opportunity.
The Chairman. So, Senator McConnell, try and match that as
an opener here, if you can.
Statement of Senator McConnell
Senator McConnell. The only thing I can think of is that
Dr. Holsinger doesn't have nearly as many grandchildren as
Senator Bunning does, who must have--what's the latest count?
Senator Bunning. Thirty-nine.
Senator McConnell. Thirty-nine grandchildren. So match
that, anybody in the room. Thank you, Chairman Kennedy----
The Chairman. The Republicans are taking over here.
[Laughter.]
It could be the Irish Catholics that are ahead.
[Laughter.]
Senator McConnell. Thank you. Senator Kennedy, Senator Enzi
and members of the committee, I appreciate the opportunity to
be here today to introduce Dr. James W. Holsinger, Jr., the
President's nominee to be Surgeon General of the United States.
During his inspiring and impressive career, Dr. Holsinger
has led the Nation's largest healthcare system, the
Commonwealth of Kentucky's healthcare system and the Medical
Center of Kentucky's flagship university. As Surgeon General,
Dr. Holsinger would be the government's leading spokesman for
public health. I've come to know him very well over the years.
He is an outstanding individual with a lifetime of public
service and I can't think of a finer choice for this office.
Certainly no one is prouder today than Dr. Holsinger's
wife, who you just met, Dr. Barbara Craig Holsinger and their
daughters, Anna, Ruth, Sarah and Rachel. All of these folks
have just been introduced--his mother and his mother-in-law.
The whole clan is just about here. Their pride can only grow as
he embarks on his greatest role yet in public service.
Dr. Holsinger is currently a Professor at the University of
Kentucky and teaches at both the College of Public Health and
the College of Medicine. From 1994 to 2003, he served as
Chancellor of the University of Kentucky, AB Chandler Medical
Center. In that role, he oversaw several graduate schools and
two hospitals. Yet, Dr. Holsinger has the bedside manner of a
Kentucky doctor, he also has the skill and experience to lead a
large agency, as the Surgeon General must, by virtue of heading
up the U.S. Public Health Service Commission Corp and its 6,000
members.
By appointment of the governor, Dr. Holsinger served as
Kentucky's Secretary of the Cabinet for Health and Family
Services from 2003 to 2005. As Secretary, he oversaw Kentucky's
public health system. He modernized the State's $5-billion
Medicaid program that serves hundreds of thousands of
Kentuckians.
Dr. Holsinger served for 25 years at the Department of
Veterans' Affairs, ultimately as Chief Medical Director and
Undersecretary for Health at the Veterans' Health
Administration. As Chief Medical Director, he ran the country's
largest healthcare system, serving over 26 million veterans in
all 50 States.
Dr. Holsinger also served as Director of the VA Medical
Center in Lexington, Kentucky. In 1993, he was awarded the
Surgeon General's Medallion for Exceptional Achievement to the
College of Public Health and Medicine. He earned his M.D. and
Ph.D. in Anatomy at Duke and as a retired Major General in the
U.S. Army Reserve, surely must have only one reservation about
taking this job. He will have to wear a Navy uniform.
If confirmed, Dr. Holsinger will be the Nation's 18th
Surgeon General and the first from the Commonwealth of
Kentucky. As Surgeon General, he will focus on educating
parents and children about the risk of childhood obesity.
Scores of people who have worked with him throughout this
career can attest to his commitment to helping people live
longer, better and healthier lives.
My fellow Senators, there can be no debate on the breadth
or depth of Dr. Holsinger's experience in medicine and public
health. Being Surgeon General is a bit like being a doctor with
a large stethoscope. The Office gives its occupant the power to
recognize health trends across America and the bully pulpit to
dispense health information for all.
The nomination of Dr. James Holsinger is the right
prescription to help America confront today's health challenge.
I have every confidence he will succeed. I appreciate this
committee's expeditious handling of this nomination and I look
forward to his confirmation and I thank you, Senator Kennedy,
for the opportunity to be here on his behalf.
The Chairman. Very fine. Thank you very much. Now, we'll
hear from Senator Bunning.
Statement of Senator Bunning
Senator Bunning. Thank you, Senator Kennedy, Senator Enzi,
the rest of the committee. Today it is my great honor to
introduce to you Dr. James Holsinger, who has been nominated to
be the next Surgeon General. Kentuckians are proud to call him
one of their own.
Dr. Holsinger's life has been dedicated to serving the
Nation and improving the health of our citizens. His commitment
to public service is outstanding. My colleague from Kentucky
gave you his experience--26 years at the Department of the
Veterans' Affairs, 31 years in the Army Reserve, Chancellor of
the University of Kentucky's Medical Center and Secretary of
the Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Human Services.
I asked Dr. Holsinger what was the proudest moment of his
time as Kentucky Secretary and he mentioned a couple of
important accomplishments that I think show his dedication to
healthcare. He said he was proud of helping pass legislation to
fight obesity and to improve the health of children in our
schools. In fact, on the 2006 School Food Report Card, Kentucky
scored the highest grade of A, largely based on many of the
changes Dr. Holsinger helped make.
He also mentioned he was proud of modernizing Kentucky's
Medicaid system without having to remove anyone from its rolls.
Getting a handle on spending without cutting enrollment is
quite an accomplishment, as we all know and Kentucky's effort
can serve as a model to other States.
Dr. Holsinger is well respected by many in our State and
across the Nation for his hard work and dedication to
healthcare. When people talk of Dr. Holsinger, they use words
like integrity, conviction, honesty and ethical. In a letter of
endorsement, C. Everett Koop called him an impressive choice.
The Kentucky Medical Association said he is an excellent
nominee. The Kentucky Hospital Association enthusiastically
endorses Dr. Holsinger's nomination and says that his
contribution to healthcare and numerous other things in his
life will serve him well to lead the highest level of
healthcare.
I hope the members of this committee will look at Dr.
Holsinger's record in public service and dedication to
improving healthcare and come to the same conclusion that I
have--that he would serve admirably as Surgeon General and be
an asset to this country. Thank you, Senator Kennedy.
The Chairman. All right. I want to thank both of you very
much. You know you have many responsibilities and we are very
grateful for your presence here and for the excellent comments
that you've made. They've been very helpful to us. We thank
you.
We have effectively two tasks before us today. One is to
see that the best possible candidate fills the position of U.S.
Surgeon General. Today's hearing is to help determine whether
James Holsinger is the right person to fill that important role
but our second task is to see that the new Surgeon General has
the independence needed to provide objective, reliable,
scientific advice to the Nation. As the Nation's top doctor,
the Surgeon General must be free from political interference.
Sadly, in recent years, the reverse has been true, as
revealed by former Dr. Carmona's shocking testimony, the Office
of Surgeon General has been the victim of outrageous political
manipulation during the Bush administration. So to restore the
integrity and independence of the Office of the Surgeon
General, I'm today introducing the Surgeon General Integrity
Restoration Act and that legislation will one, require the
nominee for this important position be drawn from a list of the
Nation's most eminent physicians prepared by the Institute of
Medicine, give the Office of Surgeon General budgetary
independence by allowing the Surgeon General to submit budget
requests directly to the public, Congress and to the President
by passing manipulation by political appointees in the
Department of HHS, allow the Surgeon General to hire his or her
own staff directly without having to undergo political litmus
tests and prohibit censoring the work of the Surgeon General
for political reasons and bring greater transparency to any
changes to the Surgeon General's reports and speeches, all of
that for another time.
But today, we want to make sure that we have the best
possible candidate to be the Surgeon General for the United
States and few positions in government offer the greater
opportunity to improve the lives of so many citizens. The past
Surgeon Generals who have used their power well include Dr. C.
Everett Koop's historic and dedicated fight against the
country's AIDS epidemic, Dr. Luther Terry's groundbreaking
report on smoking that increased the American people's concerns
about tobacco and led to a broad-based anti-smoking campaign;
Dr. David Satcher's emphasis on the unacceptable racial and
ethnic health disparities that continue to plague us. These are
big shoes to fill.
The next Surgeon General must be a strong champion of
public health. At a time when the Nation is deeply polarized on
so many issues, we need someone who can unite Americans and who
can be trusted by all and we must be confident that the Surgeon
General will put public health first and leave politics and
ideology behind.
At this week's testimony from former Surgeon General
Richard Carmona showed that standard had not been met, far from
it. His testimony showed that the Office of Surgeon General has
become a morass of shameful political manipulation and
distortion of science.
Dr. Holsinger has the responsibility to provide strong
assurances and a clear plan for seeing that these abuses are
not repeated during his tenure, if he is confirmed. Many of us
are concerned about aspects of Dr. Holsinger's record that
indicate that Dr. Holsinger has let his ideological beliefs
cloud scientific judgment and these concerns are serious at any
time but all the more so in light of Dr. Carmona's alarming
testimony.
Many concerns were raised by a paper that Dr. Holsinger
wrote in 1991 on homosexuality for a study committee at the
Methodist Church. Dr. Holsinger wrote this paper from his
perspective as a medical doctor and he drew on his medical
training to analyze the scientific studies he cited. Yet as I
read it, it cherry-picks the science and is widely disputed
scientifically. For example, I recently received a letter from
nine doctors, highly respected in their fields, including one
of the authors of the papers cited by Dr. Holsinger's paper of
1991, denouncing that paper as unscientific, biased and
incredibly poor scholarship.
Indeed, William Owen, a co-author of one of the papers
prominently cited in the 1991 paper, stated recently that he
was particularly incensed that Dr. Holsinger misrepresented his
paper, which was actually written to help physicians feel
comfortable in dealing with gay patients.
Dr. Holsinger's paper is ideological and decidedly not an
accurate analysis of the science then available on
homosexuality. It is not even an accurate representation of the
scientific papers, which it cites as authority. Dr. Holsinger's
paper cherry-picks and misuses data to support his thesis that
homosexuality is unhealthy and unnatural. For example, a
disproportionate amount of the data Dr. Holsinger relies on in
his paper is pulled from emergency room and trauma studies,
which are not at all representative of the homosexual
population as a whole.
Dr. Holsinger also artificially padded his paper's
bibliography by adding citations to three sources that either
had nothing to do with either homosexuality or actually
directly refuted his paper's thesis. This misuse of science
gravely concerns me and I need to hear from Dr. Holsinger
himself that he will not similarly misuse his position to push
personal ideological beliefs over scientific research. We know
that Dr. Holsinger has strong personal views, as we all do,
about homosexuality. Our country is involved in an important
national conversation about it and we will continue to have
that conversation. We've heard reports of Dr. Holsinger's
kindness toward people who are gay or lesbians and I have no
reason to doubt any of these individual accounts of
benevolence. But as Surgeon General, Dr. Holsinger will be
responsible for providing the best medical and scientific
information to all Americans and we must be assured that he can
do so, freely, free of interference from his personal views.
Dr. Holsinger brings with him a wealth of experience as
Kentucky's former Secretary of Health Services and 26 years of
service to the Veterans' Administration. I've heard impressive
comments about his work against smoking and his passion of
ending childhood obesity. His colleagues at the University of
Kentucky speak very highly of him.
But we need to be confident that he is committed to
decision-making based on sound science and good judgment. The
Surgeon General must be a person who can be an indisputable,
respected and trusted voice about health, wellness and safety.
The Surgeon General's message should be able to reach across
the divisions that arise in a pluralistic society such as ours,
to educate, to inform and protect all Americans. So I welcome
Dr. Holsinger and I look forward to hearing from him.
Senator Enzi.
Opening Statement of Senator Enzi
Senator Enzi. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. The position of
Surgeon General has a long and prestigious standing within our
Federal Government that dates back to the 1870s, when the title
of Surgeon General was created. The mission of the Surgeon
General is to be America's top doctor and to act as the chief
medical educator and communicator to the American public on
public health and safety issues. Over the years, the Surgeon
Generals have played a key role in making sure that all
Americans understand the public health safety issues facing our
Nation, from the dangers of cigarette smoking and the need to
address obesity, advocating for effective disease prevention,
such as pandemic flu and HIV/AIDS.
Equally important is the Surgeon General's role in
overseeing the U.S. Public Health Service Commission Corps. The
Corp is comprised of more than 6,000 men and women dedicated to
the promotion of effective and sound health policy and to
assist in times of national public health crisis. The Surgeon
General, as the Head of the Commission Corp, has the vital
responsibility to ensure that the Corp is trained and ready to
handle our Nation's current and future public health safety
needs.
At today's hearing, we will hear from the President's
nominee for Surgeon General, Dr. James Holsinger. There is
little doubt about Dr. Holsinger's ability to be the manager
and administrator of the Public Health Service Commission Corp.
He spent a considerable part of his career working in public
service, including being the top doctor of the Department of
Veterans' Affairs as well as Undersecretary for the Department.
However, there have been concerns raised as we just heard
in the preceding speech, about whether Dr. Holsinger should be
the Surgeon General and whether he could be the top doctor for
all of the people. I don't know why anybody ever puts their
name up before the U.S. Senate. You take a reputation and
submit it to a scrutiny that no other position in the United
States would ever have.
In my recent meeting with Dr. Holsinger, I asked him a
bunch of difficult questions, including whether he can be
committed to representing all the people of this Nation and I
found his responses to be open, forthcoming, knowledgeable,
compassionate--all of the qualifications that you expect from a
doctor. In addition, he stated unequivocally that he can serve
as the top doctor for all of our Nation's people. I'm looking
forward to having him make these statements in public today and
to be given the chance to answer the difficult questions from
our committee members.
Recently, his peers, medical colleagues, former co-workers
have written the committee, praising his work and his
dedication to the medical profession. In addition, former
Surgeon General C. Everett Koop wrote to the committee in
support of this nomination and Mr. Chairman, I would request
that all of these letters be entered into the record.
The Chairman. They will be so included.
Senator Enzi. In conclusion, I know that Dr. Holsinger's
nomination has received widespread press attention, however Dr.
Holsinger hasn't had the opportunity to speak public about the
allegations and concerns raised against him. I look forward to
his testimony today so that he can finally address them and I
hope the committee gives him a fair hearing and we'll listen to
his responses so that we can determine and review his
qualifications to be the next Surgeon General. Thank you so
much for putting your name up for this office and agreeing to
serve our country and I wish you good luck today.
The Chairman. Thank you. Dr. Holsinger. The floor is yours.
STATEMENT OF JAMES W. HOLSINGER, JR., M.D., PH.D., OF KENTUCKY
FOR MEDICAL DIRECTOR AND SURGEON GENERAL OF THE PUBLIC HEALTH
SERVICE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Dr. Holsinger. Well, thank you, Mr. Chairman, Senator Enzi
and members of the committee. It is indeed an honor for me to
appear before the Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions
Committee to discuss my confirmation as Surgeon General of the
United States.
You know, this is a remarkable position. It may be one of
the most remarkable positions in our Federal Government. It's a
position that is held in deep affection by the American people.
It's a position that is unique, perhaps unique, in being able
to make a difference in the lives of all Americans.
So why would I even dream of being able to fill this
position? When I look over the last 40 years of my career in
public service, I've had the sense, as I've done that in the
last few months that perhaps each position that I've held, in
its own way, has helped to bring me to this place where I might
be considered to become the family physician for all Americans.
Now, I've got a deep love of public service. It comes out
of the home in which I was reared. I've spent a lifetime in
medicine, trying to provide quality healthcare to everyone and
I've got a deep passion for education. Public service is a high
calling and being Surgeon General is a position in which one is
held in high esteem.
I think that I can meet that challenge. I think that I can
proudly serve all Americans as their Surgeon General. Now, I
know there have been a lot of statements made about me.
Questions have been raised about my faith and about my
commitment to the health and well being of all Americans,
including gay and lesbian Americans. I'm deeply troubled
personally, as you might guess, by these allegations because I
don't feel that they represent who I am, what I believe or how
I have practiced medicine for the past 40 years. So I'm anxious
to have the opportunity to answer those questions with the
members of this committee today.
I can only say that I have a deep, deep appreciation for
the essential humanity of everyone, regardless of their
personal circumstances or their sexual orientation. I have
tried to live out my life in the practice of medicine caring
for people regardless of their personal circumstances. I am
deeply committed to doing so and should I be confirmed as
Surgeon General of the United States, I pledge to you today
that I will continue that commitment to serve all Americans,
regardless of sexual orientation or any other personal
characteristic.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I appreciate the time to be here
and appear before the committee and I'm anxious to answer the
questions.
[The prepared statement of Dr. Holsinger follows:]
Prepared Statement of James W. Holsinger, Jr., M.D., Ph.D.
Mr. Chairman, Senator Enzi and other members of the committee, it
is indeed an honor to appear before the Health, Education, Labor, and
Pensions Committee to discuss my nomination to be Surgeon General of
the United States. I would also like to thank Senators McConnell and
Bunning for their support.
With your permission I would be pleased to introduce some of my
family members present today. I have lived my life in company with a
group of remarkable women. First, Dr. Barbara Craig Holsinger and I
have been married for nearly 44 years. That fact alone indicates that
she is a person with exceptional stamina! We are the parents of four
daughters, several of whom are able to be here today. Dr. Anna
Holsinger Bampton and her husband, Dr. James Bampton, live in Richmond,
VA where Jim practices family medicine. Our second daughter, Dr. Ruth
Holsinger Lewellen and her family reside in New Zealand. The Reverend
Sarah Holsinger-Friesen is a deacon in the United Methodist Church and
her husband, Dr. Tom Holsinger-Friesen, teaches at Spring Arbor
University in Michigan. Rachel Holsinger and her husband live in
Lexington where she chairs the Science Department and teaches Biology
at Sayre School.
As is the case with all of us, I am the product of the home in
which I grew up. My father, Brig. Gen. James Holsinger, is buried in
Arlington National Cemetery beside his brother, RADM Raymond Holsinger.
My 98-year-old mother, Ruth Holsinger, is here with us today. On June
15, 2009, the President of the United States will have the pleasure of
sending her 100th birthday card. My parents imbued in me a love of
public service and through their example in serving the American people
as a part of our greatest generation; I have attempted to live out a
life of service to all Americans. Barbara's mother, Betty Craig, is
also here today. She makes every mother-in-law joke a bad one, as she
considers me her oldest son.
Mr. Chairman, I am deeply honored to have been nominated for the
position of Surgeon General. This is one of the most remarkable
positions in our national government; a position held in deep affection
by the American people; a position unique in its ability to make a
difference in the lives of all Americans. The Surgeon General has the
opportunity not only to make an impact on the lives of the people of
the United States but on the lives of individuals around the world.
Other nations have long desired to have such a position and even some
of our States are in the process of creating State Surgeons General in
order to provide health education to their people.
So, why would I even dream that I could fill such a position? As I
look back over my 40-year career in public service, I believe that in
many respects my previous positions seem to have uniquely prepared me
to serve in this role. Through these various roles, I have been able to
support significant improvements in public health and quality health
care. I have attached a brief summary of specific work that I have
accomplished. I bring to the position a deep love of public service, a
lifetime of providing quality healthcare to everyone, and a passion for
education. Impacting on the health of all Americans will require using
all my skills and persuasion to make a difference in their lives.
Public service is a high calling and the Surgeon General of the United
States is held in high esteem. I believe that I can meet the challenge
and proudly serve all Americans.
Should I be confirmed as Surgeon General, my major priority will be
engaging in an all out fight against the obesity epidemic in America,
and indeed around the world. Obesity is second only to smoking as the
leading cause of death in the United States. Its impact on our children
is becoming devastating and if we don't tackle the issue now its
consequences will be too great to bear. Secondly, I will continue my
predecessors' efforts to eliminate tobacco use in the United States. In
my own State of Kentucky, we have pursued ordinances to ban smoking in
restaurants and bars with minimal effect on their financial condition.
Thirdly, I will focus on the readiness of the Commissioned Corps of the
U.S. Public Health Service to meet man-made or natural disasters,
including the development of rapid response teams which will place the
Public Health Service at the forefront in capability for alleviating
suffering in such situations. The Public Health Service Commissioned
Corps should be second-to-none in its skill in dealing with these
issues in the post-9/11 and Katrina era.
Now, since my nomination on May 24, there have been several
statements made about me. Questions have been raised about my faith and
about my commitment to ensuring the health and welfare of all
Americans, including Gay and Lesbian Americans. I am deeply troubled by
these claims, which do not reflect who I am, what I believe or the work
I have accomplished in over 40 years of practicing medicine. I am
grateful for the opportunity to address those issues with you today.
Let me be clear--I have a profound respect for the essential human
dignity of all people, regardless of background or sexual orientation.
Throughout my 40-year career, I have dedicated myself to serving all
Americans regardless of their circumstances. I pledge to you to
continue that commitment especially if I am confirmed as Surgeon
General.
Mr. Chairman, this concludes my opening remarks and I would be
happy to respond to any questions.
______
public health accomplishments
As Chief Medical Director/Under Secretary for Health, DVA (1990-
1993):
Established a registry for Persian Gulf veterans with
health problems that may be related to their Gulf service, as well as
three referral centers for special diagnostic problems related to
Persian Gulf Syndrome.
Developed and led the implementation of national
guidelines for preventive medicine programs in VA Medical Centers.
Launched a major effort to increase veterans'
understanding of the hazards of smoking in an effort to decrease
smoking in veterans.
Implemented a smoke-free environment in all VA Medical
Centers and Clinics nationwide.
Opened four new Geriatric Research, Education and Clinical
Centers designed to develop additional understanding of the medical and
social needs of elderly veterans.
Published national infection control guidelines in an
effort to reduce nosocomial infections and prevent the spread of
infectious diseases.
Published the Blueprint for Quality, a national tool to
coordinate, integrate, and streamline the quality management programs
throughout all VA Medical Centers and clinics nationwide.
Developed a physician and dentist credentialing and
privileging system which was recognized and promulgated by the Joint
Commission on the Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) as
a state-of-the-art approach.
Established the VA/DOD Contingency Planning System to
provide support for Operation Desert Storm including a system of
providing up to 25,000 beds for DOD usage on 72-hours notice during the
ground campaign.
Developed the first national health care plan, including
preventive services, for VHA and its facilities nationwide including
prevention programs.
Supported the development and first implementation of
performance measures in the VHA, which became the foundation for
culture change and improvement in the system.
International Activities:
Led an international team of Chinese, Zimbabweans, and
Americans which determined the need for and planned the development of
a School of Health Sciences at Africa University, Mutare, Zimbabwe,
including nursing and public health programs in an effort to train
young men and women for combating HIV/AIDS.
Assisted in obtaining a USAID grant to build the facility
to house the School of Health Sciences at Africa University (Includes a
HIV/AIDS laboratory).
Trained Chinese academics in Public Health approaches at
Szechwan University and Shandong University, PRC.
As Chancellor of the University of Kentucky Medical Center (1994-
2003):
Developed Corporate Compliance programs to ensure access
to quality care for all patients requiring treatment at UK Hospital.
Oversaw the creation of the College of Public Health at
the University of Kentucky, the first new college created at the
University since 1966.
Developed and gained approval for two new public health
degrees at the University of Kentucky--Master of Public Health and
Doctor of Public Health.
Developed the rationale for housing the College of Public
Health on campus to facilitate a close interaction between the
colleges.
Developed and implemented a Ph.D. program in Gerontology
to train scientists to address scholarly questions in the aging.
Developed the funding for the new building to house the UK
Rural Health Center in Hazard, Kentucky.
Issued directives to make the Chandler Medical Center a
non-smoking healthcare facility protecting patients from the effects of
second-hand smoke.
Directed the creation of a Women's Health Center to study
the needs of women including issues of disease prevention.
As Secretary of the Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services
(2003-2005), led many efforts to expand health care coverage and
services, including:
Chaired the Board of Get Healthy Kentucky, an initiative
to address obesity, smoking and sedentary lifestyle and create a
healthier population in Kentucky.
Modernized Kentucky's Medicaid system by improving
technology, care and benefit management and thus maximizing the number
of individuals being cared for as well as improving the quality of
care.
Launched a strategy to improve Kentucky's insurance market
by attracting more insurance carriers to the market.
Advocated to promote exercise and improve school nutrition
in Kentucky elementary schools.
Initiated legislation to expand Kentucky's newborn
screening program from four tests to the national standard of 29 tests.
Launched a comprehensive survey on the preparedness of
Kentucky communities to meet the needs of the aging baby boomer
population.
Expanded the Kentucky All Schedule Prescription Electronic
Reporting (eKASPER) System to an electronic format to prevent the abuse
of prescription drugs.
Worked with the National Alliance on Mental Illness, to
preserve the use of second-generation anti-psychotic medications by
identifying inappropriate prescribing of the drugs to other
individuals.
Initiated the redesign of the delivery of services for
people with mental retardation, other developmental disabilities and
mental illness.
As a Professor of Preventive Medicine and Environmental Health
(2005-Present):
Developing a Patient Safety Organization for Kentucky in
cooperation with and between the Kentucky Medical Association and the
Kentucky Hospital Association in an effort to provide quality and safe
care to all Kentuckians.
Assisting in development of a new residency training
program in Preventive Medicine and Environmental Health.
Assessing Kentucky certificate of need legislation and its
impact on access to care.
The Chairman. Well, thank you. Thank you, Doctor. We have
one member of our committee, Senator Brown is going to have to
preside. We'll do 7-minute rounds. But he's going to have to
preside. So we'll necessarily be absent and I'll be glad to
have him yield for his questions at this time.
Senator Brown [presiding]. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I
appreciate that and Doctor, I also want to thank you for your
visit to my office and your candor and particularly your
comments about obesity, which I want to get to in a moment. But
I wanted to address some other issues first.
The outgoing Surgeon General, as Chairman Kennedy said,
testified before Congress and voiced his frustrations with the
Administration this way. He said, ``Anything that doesn't fit
into the political appointee's ideological, theological or
political agenda is ignored, marginalized or simply buried.''
To what extent do you think scientific evidence versus
political or religious ideology should influence the Surgeon
General's recommendations?
Dr. Holsinger. Senator, I am committed to using science as
the method under which I deal with issues that might come
before the Surgeon General. I believe that is the position of
any Surgeon General that it is the science that drives the
direction in which I would speak.
Senator Brown. There have been reports that over 50 Arabic
translators have been fired from the Pentagon simply because
they are gay. Given your past statements on homosexuality, what
do you see as a greater threat to the health and safety of
Americans--un-translated documents and intercepts from Al-Qaeda
or gay people?
Dr. Holsinger. Well, that's certainly an interesting
question that you have posed, Senator. I've not had an
opportunity to think through, as you might guess, an answer to
that question at all. I think that I would have grave concern
for having the effective translators that we might need in
order to be able to provide for the safety of our American
people.
Senator Brown. OK, thank you for that. I asked that because
as we know, terrorist attacks claimed the lives of 3,000
people. The war has since claimed more than 3,600 American
soldiers and too often, this Administration has allowed
ideology to override qualifications when it comes to critical
positions: Michael Brown at FEMA; Harriet Miers for the U.S.
Supreme Court; and Monica Goodling at the Department of
Justice. I just don't want to see us go down that road again.
Let me shift to the issue that we discussed for a moment,
for a few moments in my office about obesity. A couple of
specific questions and then I'd like to get your feelings
generally on what we do with the questions of obesity and
especially children. Then I'll just ask all three and then take
the rest of the time for you to answer. Do you think that junk
food, like sodas and soda pop, sugar cereals should be
advertised on television to children? Do you think we should
ban all junk foods from being sold to children in schools? And
then, in the context of the larger question, what are the
specific five things you would do to make a difference in the
obesity epidemic among children, but specifically if you would,
give us five but I'd like to hear your answer on soda, chips,
sugar cereals and junk food being sold to children in schools.
Dr. Holsinger. Well, I think as you are aware, Senator, I
had the opportunity to work diligently with one of our State
Senators, Alice Forgy-Kerr in putting through a healthy
children's bill through the Kentucky legislature in the 2005
legislative session. This was an effort to specifically deal
with, in Kentucky, the issues surrounding the vending machines
in our schools and the food served in our school cafeterias.
There were remarkable things that came to light, obviously, as
to what was available in the machines and we moved to try and
develop a situation where our Department of Education and the
School Board for the Commonwealth of Kentucky would issue the
appropriate regulations to control the types of food that
appeared in those vending machines. They did an outstanding job
of doing that.
In addition, though, we found very remarkable things, such
as taking already deep-fried chicken nuggets and thawing them
by throwing them back into the deep fat fryer and re-greasing
them once again. So we worked very diligently to try and
develop an approach that would provide for much healthier food
in our school cafeterias.
I believe that there is a real place for legislative action
in the area of what appears in the vending machines within
schools. Junk food certainly causes major issues as far as the
obesity epidemic is concerned. I think that if you look at a
variety of the kinds of things that can be done--first of all,
let me say that should I be confirmed as Surgeon General, one
of the first things I would try to do is to bring together a
Best Practices conference to determine what are the best
practices out there that we could attack the problem of
childhood obesity in a concerted way, putting all of our time,
effort, energy and money, both from within the Federal
Government, the State and from private sources, into the fight
for obesity, childhood obesity.
I think that it is awfully easy for us with so many
organizations involved, to run in parallel and not to pull
ourselves together where we are actually pinpointing the places
where we can make the biggest difference in the lives of
children the quickest. Clearly there are issues, as you
mentioned, around the issue of various foods being advertised.
I think that I would be willing to work very closely with the
appropriate agencies to look at how we might address those
issues in a way that would be positive for our children and for
dealing with the obesity epidemic.
Senator Brown. Would you lead an effort to ban advertising
of junk food to children on television and radio and
newspapers?
Dr. Holsinger. I think that that would be an effort that I
could join in, with whichever was the appropriate Federal
agency. It is obviously not the specific thing that a Surgeon
General can put into place but he can certainly stand on the
bully pulpit and deal with the issue of attempting----
Senator Brown. And you would do that?
Dr. Holsinger. I would do that.
Senator Brown. Last question. If this or a future
administration pressured you to modify your medical advice in a
way that counters prevailing science, what would you do?
Dr. Holsinger. Well, the first thing I would do is to work
to use the tried and true leadership techniques that I've used
throughout my life, which is one of bringing people to
consensus in an effort based upon education and I would use the
science to attempt to educate the policymakers that were
involved in an effort to bring them to a point where the
science would have the appropriate impact. I think that I would
utilize my personal ability to do that kind of leadership in an
effort to make a difference.
Quite candidly, if I were unable to do that and I was being
overridden, if necessary, I would resign.
Senator Brown. Thank you.
The Chairman [presiding]. Thank you. We're going to
accommodate our colleagues on both sides, necessarily
scheduled. As I said, we'll have 7-minute rounds. Doctor I want
to come back to the issue of science because we have seen and
it's important. I mean, you've had important references about
your humanity and there is testimony. I want to indicate that I
read letters from your children as well. You probably don't
even know about it but that's certainly very decent and
wonderful. I don't think there's any question about that.
The challenge that I think that we're facing in terms of
your particular position is whether science and--ideology
overrules the science of our time and the information that is
available. As has been pointed out, we have seen with regards
to the environment, global warming, the distinguished leader at
EPA, Mr. Hanson saying that ideology overrode science. Many of
us believe that that's been the same with regard to stem cell
research, many of us. We saw it with regards to the FDA and the
Plan B program. We listened to it on the networks and in
testimony yesterday from Dr. Carmona, talking about it.
So this is something that is enormously relevant and you
wrote a very important paper. In fact, it goes back to 1991,
where there are so many that say that you did not look at the
real science and that you were controlled by ethics and by your
morality and religion, all of which are admirable elements and
all of which have value in terms of politics--ethics--and in
terms of making judgments and decisions. But the issue is, did
you avoid available science in terms of your particular
document at that time?
That's a very important issue and a second related issue,
particularly when we have, at this time, so many different
studies that have been done by the American Psychiatric
Society, American Psychological Association, American Academy
of Pediatrics, American Public Health Association, World Health
Organization--all of which had very important scientific
information on what, as I understand in reading the notes from
the meetings of your superiors when you were tasked to do this
study, were directly related to the subject matter in which you
were challenged to and all of that scientific information was
effectively ignored. None included.
And what we also had in this situation, in this paper, is
the fact that you quoted three different articles--your paper
cited three sources in the bibliography that were not used or
cited in the paper. Torre, Busch and Eckert. You cited these
sources. They had nothing to do with the issue of homosexuality
as sexual preference and I'm unsure why you included them. It
looks like obvious padding of a bibliography, that's what it
appears. I mean, you added this information and all of whose
studies come to different conclusions than you raised. But you
cited them in terms of support for your outcome.
This raises serious questions about your willingness to use
the best in terms of science and it's against a very
challenging background that we have seen on this and I want to
give you an opportunity.
We're limited on the time as well but I want to give you an
opportunity to address it and then I want to give you an
opportunity to explain whether this is the same view that you
have today as you had then and if it isn't your same view, do
you have a different view and what is the basis for that
different view? So that we can really give not just to the
committee but really, to the American public, should you be
confirmed that you are going to follow the science and that you
are going to have the kind of basic and fundamental integrity
to speak truth to power, should it come, as we've seen it out
there. That's what I'd like to try and do, at least in my first
round, if you'd be good enough to address that issue. I can get
into greater specificity about it but you know what I'm talking
about in this question.
Dr. Holsinger. Certainly, Mr. Chairman. Thank you. I think
that it would be helpful to perhaps understand the context a
little bit better on the paper. The paper I was asked to write,
I was asked to deal with certain specific issues because the
other ones had already been covered in other papers that had
been presented to the committee over a significant period of
time. I was asked to do essentially a letter to review the
health issues surrounding the issue of homosexuality. It was
not a paper dressed to the question of sexuality but to
homosexuality specifically because that's what the committee's
charge by the 1988 General Conference was.
There was no attempt to pad the bibliography, Mr. Chairman.
The situation was simply that in the case of paper after paper
that were presented to this committee, we offered additional
information besides what was quoted in the papers in an effort
to provide reading material potentially for the individuals who
were on the committee. Members of the committee brought in
papers that they found or news articles that they had
discovered.
I've gone back also and reviewed my files on the
committee's work. They stand about a foot and a half tall. So
there were a significant number of documents that were
provided. I did not attempt to write a definitive scientific
paper. I was writing for a lay audience composed of
theologians, biblical scholars, pastors, individuals that had a
Christian emphasis who had difficulty understanding some of the
issues surrounding the practice of homosexuality and that was
my sole intent, was to try and provide them with the
information that they indicated that they needed in order to be
able to make their own decisions about what direction things
would go.
The Chairman. Well, your response is, your bibliography is
just to add different, additional information so that it could
be used as reference material for people? That's rather a
bizarre view of a bibliography, isn't it? I mean, don't people
generally include in the bibliography the references that
support their positions or that are used about--that was always
my sense about it.
Dr. Holsinger. Certainly for a scientific paper, it would
be a bizarre use of a bibliography. This was not written as a
scientific paper. It was written for a lay audience to have the
assistance that they felt they needed in order to be able to
move forward with their work. So I was simply using the same
techniques that other people had used, which was to provide a
maximum amount of information for other members who might want
to have additional papers and information that they could look
at.
The Chairman. But if it's the literature review, why would
you not then reference the most prominent medical journals and
scientific journals that the country has? I mean, in terms of
the American Academy of Pediatrics, the Public Health
Association, the Psychiatric Association, the Psychological
Association or the World Health Organization? The list of
distinguished publications that all come to rather dramatic
different kinds of conclusions. If the bibliography is to try
to inform and give greater information to people to understand
what this issue is, why would you not--did you think about it,
about providing it? And then I have one further question and
then I'll yield.
Dr. Holsinger. I thought that much of that information had
already been presented in previous papers and in previous
discussion. I thought that I had a very narrow focus that I was
asked to discuss and that was what I was attempting to do,
Senator.
The Chairman. OK. Just finally, are we to understand then
that your paper represented your understanding of the best
science that was available at the time? Is that a fair
characterization?
Dr. Holsinger. I'm sorry, I didn't mean to interrupt you,
Senator. It represents the literature search that was done for
me through our library. I happen to have a copy still in my
file of that original Med-Law search and it was from that Med-
Law search that I went to and worked to obtain the documents
that I used to perform the literature review.
The Chairman. Just finally and your position today, given
as a medical official and obviously as a doctor. Is your
position the same as it was then, based upon your own
understanding and reading of various journals and articles that
are in the scientific community and if it is different, how is
it different?
Dr. Holsinger. I think that the issue is very different
today. We are nearly 20 years past with the majority of the
papers that were cited. They were 1986, 1988 papers, as I went
back and looked at it. We're now 20 years later. I don't even
think the same questions, Mr. Chairman, would be asked today as
were asked 20 years ago, at the height of when Dr. Koop was
having his hardest work on the whole HIV problem. The issues
that appeared in the review would not even be the major issues
in front of our gay and lesbian community today.
The Chairman. I've overstayed my time. I'll come back.
Thank you very much.
Senator Enzi.
Senator Enzi. Well, this isn't where I had intended to
start but I will anyway because we can all see that there are--
have been concerns I guess raised about your willingness to
serve the gay and lesbian population if you are confirmed as
Surgeon General. It seems to me an important question in this
discussion is whether you would render medical information and
treatment to all persons, regardless of race, sex, age or other
status. So could you perhaps provide some examples where you've
provided medical information or treatment to gays and lesbians
and/or promoted initiatives that have been of benefit to the
health of the gay and lesbian community?
Dr. Holsinger. I'd be happy to do that, Senator Enzi. Yes,
I have worked diligently throughout my 40-year medical career
to provide quality healthcare to everyone, regardless of the
various personal characteristics that any of us may have,
including our sexual orientation and I think I can demonstrate
that through several ways.
First, in 2002, I came under intense fire politically in
the Commonwealth of Kentucky because our Women's Health Center
was holding a conference in which a major section of it was
dealing with the needs, the health needs of our lesbian
population. I believe absolutely that everyone needs to--
everyone who is a practitioner--needs to understand the health
needs of our gay and lesbian community in an effort to be able
to provide quality healthcare to all individuals. So I fought
fiercely for that, even though I had a huge political pushback
on it. In fact, our budget was actually being threatened in the
State legislature.
I have, as you all know from the letters that you have
received, when I have been--I'm often asked by people to help
them with healthcare issues. They come to me for advice on who
to see as a physician and help to get into an appointment and
this sort of thing. I clearly have done that regardless of a
person's sexual orientation, as you know from some of the
letters that you have received. I feel that it's part of my
role as a physician to broker healthcare for all individuals.
One of my dearest friends at the University of Kentucky, late
one Friday night, received a phone call that he had been
diagnosed with cancer of the colon. He called me early on
Saturday morning to tell me what had happened and I asked him,
I said, ``Where are you?'' And he said, ``I'm at home'' and I
said, ``Well, stay right there. I'm on my way.''
And I went to his home and I worked with him and his
partner as we worked through the issues of what he might expect
with a diagnosis of colon cancer. I walked with him through
that entire period of 3, 3\1/2\ years until his death occurred.
He was one of my dearest and closest friends. It was
catastrophic, both to all of us and to our university when he
died of his colon cancer.
I had the opportunity back in the late nineties and early
part of this century, to work with Africa University in Mutare,
Zimbabwe. In the creation, I led an international team of
Chinese-American and Zimbabweans health care professionals in
putting together a plan to help them deal with the AIDS crisis
in Sub-Saharan Africa. There, as an educational institution, we
came up with the fact that the best way to do that was through
the creation of a School of Health Sciences with a program in
nursing, which they did not have and one in public health, in
an effort to educate young Zimbabweans and other Africans to be
able to enter the fray on the field and deal with the AIDS
crisis in Africa. I helped them obtain a USAID grant to build
the buildings, which houses one of the few AIDS laboratories in
all of southern Africa and they are in the process now of
working with an American institution to field test an AIDS
vaccine in Zimbabwe.
My point simply is that I don't believe there is a place in
my life as a physician to do anything that would be inimical to
the healthcare of anyone, regardless of their personal
characteristics. The AMA has taken a strong position on this
issue and as an AMA member, I'm proud of what we've done in
trying to say that for physicians, it makes no difference what
a person's personal characteristics are. We want to take care
of them.
Senator Enzi. Thank you. I'll switch to a different topic
then because I believe that smoking is a critical issue and
you've indicated that reducing the health burden of tobacco is
important to you. Being from Kentucky, how did you approach
this issue and what role do you believe the Surgeon General can
play in that issue?
Dr. Holsinger. I live in the largest burley tobacco growing
State in the Nation and until just a few short years ago, my
home county of Fayette County was the No. 1 burley producing
county in America. It is a key issue in Kentucky and we tackled
this--we had the lowest cigarette tax or the second lowest
cigarette tax in the country at 3 cents a pack. I wanted to go
to the national average. I pushed hard for 75 cents. Through
the political process, we got 30 cents, a 10-times increase.
But out of that just in the 3 short years since then, we have
watched what we knew would happen because of the price
sensitivity of tobacco products to teenagers, we've seen an 11
percent decrease in teen smoking in the Commonwealth of
Kentucky.
When I was Chancellor of the University of Kentucky
Chandler Medical Center, I made it a smoke-free facility. That,
in its day, in the late--mid to late nineties, was a remarkable
accomplishment in the Commonwealth of Kentucky. I took VA
Medical Centers smoke-free back in the nineties.
I have testified for local ordinances. For example, in
Louisville for local ordinances to ban cigarette smoking in
restaurants and bars and I'm happy to say, the election in
Kentucky in my hometown has one of the strongest local
ordinances in Kentucky. We now have 12 to 15 different counties
and cities that have taken this step and I believe that there
is a strong place for commonwealths and States all across the
country to move in this direction.
Senator Enzi. Thank you. I've almost used up my time.
The Chairman. Thank you.
Senator Mikulski.
Senator Mikulski. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Well, Dr.
Holsinger, we meet again.
Dr. Holsinger. Yes, Senator.
Statement of Senator Mikulski
Senator Mikulski. I remember our meeting from 1990 to 1993,
you were the Medical Director of VA and I chaired the Senate
committee on Appropriations that dealt with VA. As I recall
during those 3 years, we did not have a good time together. We
clashed on a number of issues.
As I recall those times and reviewed the record, our
experience with you was that you resisted change in the area of
quality control. You were often indifferent or dismissive of
oversight when it came to the healthcare of women veterans and
also sexual harassment at VA medical facilities. I'm going to
review the record and then I'm going to ask you what's changed,
if anything.
I recall that in 1991, soon after you were appointed, a GAO
report, along with newspaper accounts indicated that there was
a very serious issue of quality control at several VA hospitals
and in particular, there were even a particular hospital in
which six veterans had died. You told the committee that yes,
there were management changes but no system was perfect and
then you were resistant to changing some of the systemic
problems at VA.
Then at that time of great reform coming from this
committee, we worked on mammogram quality standards and also
something called CLEA, the Clinical Laboratory Improvement. It
came because a large part, we found, was laboratory problems
and particularly in the area of pap smears. We asked you to
implement CLEA at VA but you fought us tooth and nail to adopt
CLEA standards at VA and when I directly watched your attention
to problems with pap smears, the record will show, if one
chooses to review it, that you told me it would not be a
problem. VA didn't do a lot of pap smears.
Then we had the unhappy situation of sexual harassment at
Atlanta Hospital that was so pervasive that even the Inspector
General called it the worst scandal since Tailhook for which
there was then a culture of silence in terms of both at the
Atlanta Hospital and then others. I will not read what the
Inspector General found that were often the comments that were
directed at women staff. That would be too inappropriate to
share with the committee.
There was a culture of silence and the response of your
leadership at VA was just to kind of move people around. So we
kind of went at it for some time, as you know and then when
there was a change in administration, you then chose to go to
Kentucky. But for those 26 years, I can't speak to that. But I
can raise those issues about when we did this.
You know, I believe we all change and this was 15 years
ago. So my question to you is, what has changed? The Surgeon
General is the advocate for all of the people. Senator Kennedy
raised those issues. You know my concern about women's health.
But it's also about quality and yet, our experience was that
you advocated the status quo, whether it was on quality of
care, the treatment of women in healthcare and also a culture
of sexual harassment that had developed at some institutions.
So now, as we look at your role to be, the chief spokesman
in the area of healthcare for the United States of America and
to be an advocate, what has changed? And what can I count on
you to have changed in those years that have transpired since
that really very unfortunate time?
Dr. Holsinger. Yes, thank you, Senator for keying up that
question. First of all, let me just simply say to begin with
that I hope, should I be confirmed as Surgeon General, that you
will give me the opportunity to work with you to work for the
health and the well-being of the people of Maryland and of the
United States. I would relish the opportunity to do that.
I could go back and provide countervailing arguments to
many of the things that you've said. I think that would be
nonproductive. I think what you want to hear from me is who am
I?
Senator Mikulski. Who are you now?
Dr. Holsinger. Who am I now? I believe that as a person
that I am a deeply compassionate person that I care greatly for
the issues around women's health. As you have seen, I have four
daughters, who I am exquisitely proud of. They are an
outstanding group of young women. I have mentored women
throughout the last 15 years, actually before that but
specifically through the last 15 years and there are a number
of women who come to me for mentoring because they feel that I
am willing to do that when perhaps other people are not.
I have had the opportunity and for example, just in the
past year and a half, as a faculty member at the University of
Kentucky in our College of Public Health. Our College of Public
Health has the most diverse student body of any college at the
University of Kentucky. It has a predominant number of women
that are our students in and among our faculty and I have the
joy of working with them on a day-to-day basis.
Senator Mikulski. Well, first of all, I salute you in terms
of your family and we acknowledge this. This is not easy. I
know it's not easy for you and it's not easy for us to have to
bring this up but we do have the responsibility of advise and
consent. I want to go to organizations. I want to go to
systemic change. I believe that the individual efforts that
you've just recounted are really quite positive. But I want to
go to where you would be as the Surgeon General and what do you
envision?
Let's take the issue of quality of care. You say we have
the best healthcare system in the United States of America, yet
we do know we need to improve quality. We've been a great
advocate of the new, electronic record system to eliminate
errors, drug safety, et cetera. Where would you come in and how
would this be different because you seem to be resistant of
regulatory change or Congress advocating change that improves
quality. What have you done in that and where would you see
being the Surgeon General in terms of quality care from an
organizational and systemic and cultural approach?
Dr. Holsinger. Well, Senator, I am a strong advocate for
change in our structural systems. Let me give you an example. I
signed at the time, the largest contract ever signed at the
University of Kentucky--$70 million to put in a new electronic
medical records system, including all the facets of it. I
believe we must move in that direction if we're going to
improve our quality of care in America. We know the IOM reports
over issues surrounding deaths from errors in American
hospitals and across our medical system. We can't stand to keep
that going. We must make systemic changes. We do need the
support of Congress to do that, obviously.
I served for 6 years on the Board of Commissioners, the
Joint Commission on Accreditation of Health Care Organizations.
I've been up to----
Senator Mikulski. Do you have ideas and recommendations
that you would do as Surgeon General?
Dr. Holsinger. I believe--yes. I think that I would
strongly advocate for an electronic medical record that would
allow us to provide information across facilities, across
practices in an effort to be able to take your record with you,
in essence, so that you, as the individual, can have what you
need, wherever you might be seen in a facility in America or in
a physician's office. We've got a situation right now where it
is so fragmented that we can't provide the kind of quality care
to all Americans.
Senator Mikulski. So we're up to electronic records. Do you
have any other ideas?
Dr. Holsinger. Yes. I think that we need to move ahead with
dealing with the issues of drug/drug interactions in a way that
will reduce the errors that occur that result in people's death
or their additional impact on their lives. I think we need to
move forward in looking at how we can, as a people, have a
better understanding through our education of our healthcare
practitioners and the needs of all Americans and how we take
care of them.
Senator Mikulski. Mr. Chairman, I see our time is up. We'll
come back. I know you've been generous.
The Chairman. Fine. Thank you very much.
Senator Isakson.
Senator Isakson. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Dr. Holsinger,
your prepared remarks make reference to your 98-year-old mother
being in the audience. I've looked all over for a 98-year-old
person. I don't see one.
[Laughter.]
Is she here?
The Chairman. Aww, there's a smooth-talking gentlemen here.
We've got a smooth talker. We love it. We always benefit from
that southern charm.
[Applause.]
Senator Isakson. I was hoping Senator Burr would be here
for her to say hi to him. Doctor, you answered Senator Brown's
question on scientific influence, on scientific decisions, I
think in the following way. He asked you if the President of
the United States or his or her emissaries tried to get you to
take a position that you believed was scientifically incorrect,
that you would do everything you could to advocate why you
thought that was true but in the end, if you were being asked
to take a position you believed was scientifically incorrect,
that you would resign. Was that your answer?
Dr. Holsinger. That's potentially my answer but there's an
awful lot that goes in between those two steps.
Senator Isakson. Which is my point. I want to ask a second
question. Let's just assume that the President of the United
States for whom you work, he or she, comes to you and asks you
to take a position that you believe is morally wrong. You would
advocate your moral position, reasons why and in the end, if
you did not prevail, would you resign then?
Dr. Holsinger. I would.
Senator Isakson. Then you reached the $64,000 question,
which all of us in government have to deal with lots of times
and that is, where there are both moral and scientific
implications. What do you do in that case?
Dr. Holsinger. I think that you must balance those. I think
we cannot have unfettered science without moral and ethical
implications being looked at on all of those kinds of things. I
think that it's clear that there are balances. I think we
cannot have simply unfettered moral or ethical things that
depend on our individual propensities. I think we need to work
together to come to a consensus around the best approach to
meet the needs of Americans and to meet our own moral and
ethical standards as a people.
Senator Isakson. Well, I appreciate that answer because
having been in an appointed administration position, nonelected
position myself, chairing the State Board of Education, I had
to deal with the whole issue of sex education--at what grade it
was appropriate, what was appropriate and obviously that has
many moral and scientific implications, which in the end, we
came to the decision that the parents should make the decision.
We should provide the information and they should know the
curriculum. If they felt it was inconsistent with their
beliefs, they could opt their child out of the curriculum but
they couldn't deny everybody else because of it. Those are the
types of issues where both morality and science, in fact, do
come into play.
Dr. Holsinger. Correct.
Senator Isakson. And I appreciate the way in which you
answered both of those questions. On the obesity question, I
read and I'm sorry I didn't bring it. I meant to. I read a
couple of days ago and one of the things I read that some of
the obesity programs, information programs around the country
that have been attempting to reduce student consumption of
concentrated fats and fast foods and all those other things,
had done a pretty good job of awareness but hadn't done
anything to reduce it.
You've worked a lot on obesity in Kentucky. You've made
reference to policies and procedures in the cafeterias in terms
of frozen food, not refrying them, things like that. Are there
other things like that you did in Kentucky in this obesity
program that have actually paid dividends in reducing it?
Dr. Holsinger. We have also worked very diligently trying
to bring about change in the whole area of our sedentary
lifestyle. Kentucky is a remarkable State from a variety of
points of view but we are also remarkable from a variety of
points of view that aren't so positive. We have one of the
largest percentages of our population being obese or
overweight, both among adults and children, of any State in the
country and we're also one of the most sedentary populations in
the United States. The coggling of these two things are
obviously exquisitely important and one of the problems that we
have faced and which I think is not unusual across the various
States of the union, has been the difficulty in getting the
whole concept of how we can develop physical exercise within
the school day without it impairing the ability for our
teachers to teach and students to learn and meet the testing
requirements.
It usually comes back to physical education as being the
result. I'm talking about physical exercise. I think there are
a number of ways that we could help our teachers, increase the
amount of movement of children within the classroom that would
allow for additional exercise than what is normal in the school
day. So we worked hard to try and bring that about. We failed
in our 2005 bill. We came back again in 2006, failed again.
We're not through with that effort in Kentucky but I think we
have to deal with the whole issue of our sedentary lifestyle as
Americans and particularly for our children.
Senator Isakson. I too, appreciate that. You know, C.
Everett Koop got great praise for his AIDS initiative but he
also got me to quit smoking, which is one of the smartest
things I ever did and he was a great advocate. I think the role
of the Surgeon General and there are clear examples--Senator
Kennedy's introduction pointed out, where there are clearly
people in history in that position who've made a remarkable--
had a remarkable impact on health without banning things or
doing things by fiat but instead by taking the bully pulpit and
using it.
On the obesity issue, I think that is the issue before the
next Surgeon General and I think it is where that next Surgeon
General can make a major difference. We have some good examples
of where businesses and food producers have voluntarily gotten
rid of trans fats or set targets to do that. The soft drink
industry, both Pepsi and Coke have voluntarily began taking
positions on what they will and will not vend in vending
machines.
You as an advocate, being outspoken and talking about the
benefits to people--which is ultimately why people do
anything--can make a remarkable difference so I would just
encourage you, should you be confirmed for this position, to
take that advocacy role to its fullest, not only on obesity but
the other initiatives that are so important to the quality of
life of Americans. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
The Chairman. Thank you very much.
Senator Murray.
Senator Murray. Dr. Holsinger, welcome to the committee.
You and I have not met. I was one of the offices that you did
not choose to come and talk to beforehand so this is my first
opportunity to have a discussion with you and I think you may
know from the past that I care deeply about the offices of FDA
and the Surgeon General and the independence of those offices
because those of any in our government are ones that everyday,
average citizens have to really count on, rely on. It takes an
incredible, impeccable resume of a wide variety of people
across this country to place their trust into somebody and we
certainly do need that in a number of areas in the medical
profession today, to have the trust of this country as we move
forward, whether it's on obesity or whether it's on teen sex or
whatever the issue is.
So this is extremely important and I am deeply troubled by
a number of the decisions made by this Administration and
that's why I'm looking at your background and your answers
today as extremely important. Senator Mikulski and Senator
Clinton and I have had to fight this Administration tooth and
nail to ensure that women have access to safe and effective
drugs and we've watched some pretty misleading ideology be
placed in a number of very important critical positions that
are deeply troubling and obviously, this week as we heard past
Surgeon Generals testify that they were censored, their
speeches were edited--these things are deeply troubling to all
of us because we need someone in this office that can be
independent that Americans trust.
So having said that, let me ask you, you obviously have
heard the testimony of Dr. Carmona this past week and having
been subjected to political interference based on ideology and
religious beliefs and I wanted to know what your reaction was
as you heard him testify.
Dr. Holsinger. Well, first of all, I've not had the
opportunity Senator, that I know of, to ever have met Dr.
Carmona so I have----
Senator Murray. You've certainly heard about his testimony
this week.
Dr. Holsinger. Right. Oh, I have. But I'm just saying, I've
not had the opportunity to have a direct conversation with him
about his work.
Senator Murray. I'm not asking you about him. I'm asking
you about the fact that he felt that he was told to edit his
speech and do different things based on political beliefs, not
based on himself. What was your reaction personally when you
heard that?
Dr. Holsinger. Oh. I would obviously be deeply concerned
that any Surgeon General would feel that that has occurred.
Certainly from my perspective, I would commit myself to, should
I fill this job, to using the science as the basis on what
might----
Senator Murray. But do you think what he testified to was
inappropriate or was it just part of his job?
Dr. Holsinger. Since I don't have the firsthand experience
in knowing, it's hard for me to answer that question, Senator.
Senator Murray. Well. OK.
Dr. Holsinger. I would be troubled if that were to happen
in my life, obviously. So I can understand where he might feel
the same.
Senator Murray. But do you think it's appropriate for the
White House or for HHS to edit speeches that you were to give?
Dr. Holsinger. I'm struggling with having an understanding
of how I think that would happen. The three things that I think
are of overriding importance going into this position, should I
be confirmed are obviously obesity. The second one is smoking
and the third----
Senator Murray. I heard your issues and I appreciate that.
I want to know, if the White House told you that they wanted to
edit your speeches, what would you tell them?
Dr. Holsinger. First of all, I would sit down and talk
through the situation and find out what the issue was that they
wanted to edit, if that were the case and then determine
whether I thought it was appropriate for it to be so edited. If
I didn't think it was appropriate to be so edited, then I would
have a conversation with the appropriate people to discuss my
position.
Senator Murray. If you were told to mention the President
at least three times in every speech, would you do that?
Dr. Holsinger. Well, it would clearly depend on what the
speech was, whether it was appropriate to or not. If there were
no reason to, then I would probably not find myself in a
position to do that.
Senator Murray. If you were Surgeon General and there was
an extremely important scientific report that was out there and
you were told, do not release that report, what would you do?
Dr. Holsinger. If I felt that it was of overriding
importance, as I said before, I would resign.
Senator Murray. What would be of overriding importance to
you?
Dr. Holsinger. It would depend on the particular situation
and what the report was about. It's hard for me to speculate
exactly what that might be. I have not had that experience. My
problem is, I gave many, many speeches in 2 years as Secretary
in the Commonwealth of Kentucky. I was never told by the
Governor to mention his name. I was never told--my speeches
were never vetted. I don't anticipate----
Senator Murray. And you may be asked to do this. What would
you say to somebody from the White House if they told you that
they did not want to release a report? What would you say?
Dr. Holsinger. I would say, I would sit down and say,
``let's talk about it. Let's find out what the issue is. Let's
find out whether we can reach any kind of consensus on what is
the appropriate way to go.'' If we can't and I felt it was of
overriding importance, I would quit.
Senator Murray. Can you give us an example of an area that
you would see as a conflict between yourself and what you have
seen from this Administration, regarding any of their
decisions? At FDA or health-wise, in the last 4 years?
Dr. Holsinger. I'm struggling with trying to figure out how
to pick out something because it's--I have not been tracking
all of those kinds of issues as closely as I might of, if I had
known I was going to be nominated for Surgeon General of the
United States. I haven't had the reason to. I've been busy with
Kentucky. So if you could help me----
Senator Murray. Let me ask you a specific one. For the past
decade, the Federal Government has spent more than a billion
dollars on unproven, dangerous abstinence only programs. It's
been the most dramatic fundraising--or funding increase
occurring during the Bush administration for the last 6 years
and a 2004 report by the House Committee on Government Reform
revealed that many of the most common abstinence-only curricula
contained errors, contained distortions, contained stereotypes.
If you had that scientific report in front of you, what would
you say to the Administration?
Dr. Holsinger. Well, if it was one that I was supposed to
sign off on, I wouldn't be able to. I mean, if there were
distortions and inappropriate----
Senator Murray. What do you think--tell me what you think
of the abstinence only studies that have been done?
Dr. Holsinger. Well, I don't--I have not had an opportunity
to study them or the science surrounding abstinence education
and so until I was able to do that, I could not give you an
informed opinion.
Senator Murray. So you don't have an opinion on abstinence
only studies--abstinence only curricula at all?
Dr. Holsinger. Oh, I think abstinence is one of the
mechanisms that we can use in dealing with issues around
unplanned pregnancies.
Senator Murray. What about STDs?
Dr. Holsinger. And STDs as well. But I'm just saying, I
have not studied the literature to be able to give you an
informed answer. That's all I'm saying.
Senator Murray. As Surgeon General, if you were asked about
whether or not the correct and consistent use of condoms or
other methods of contraception is an effective way to prevent
unintended pregnancy, how would you answer?
Dr. Holsinger. Well, I think condom use is an important
approach to unintended pregnancy. I would encourage condom use.
Senator Murray. For young people? Unmarried people? Would
you qualify it?
Dr. Holsinger. Well, yeah, I think that the--I would
certainly do that for individuals that----
Senator Murray. As Surgeon General, you would be speaking
across the country or talking to a group of high school
students----
Dr. Holsinger. If you're talking about----
Senator Murray. If you're talking to a group of high school
kids and you're asked a question about the use of condoms for
young people, how would you respond?
Dr. Holsinger. I would respond that that is one of a number
of appropriate means of birth control and prevention of STDs. I
would also talk about others. It's just the fact that they need
to have conversations with their families around their sexual
lives and what's appropriate. I think that I would encourage
them to consider abstinence as one of those possibilities. I
think that they need to be fully informed as to what the
science shows as far as the ramifications of unplanned teen
pregnancies and the impact it has on the lives, usually on the
mother, not the father and that we need to have a fully
informed group of young people in this country.
Senator Murray. What about Plan B? How would you respond if
you were asked about that?
Dr. Holsinger. I think Plan B is available. So I don't know
why that would be an issue.
Senator Murray. Mr. Chairman, my time has expired. Thank
you.
The Chairman. Thank you.
Senator Allard.
Senator Allard. Mr. Chairman, thank you and I want to
welcome you to the committee here, Dr. Holsinger. You do have
an outstanding academic resume when I look at it, having
graduated from medical school and then proceeding on to become
a Ph.D. and then actually Chancellor of a university. You then
spent a considerable amount of time in public service. I
congratulate you on being willing to serve the people of
Kentucky and also the people of the United States. Right now
we're looking at you as a candidate for Surgeon General, which
in my view, is an extremely important position as far as
healthcare is concerned and I do think that your record as a
public official is very important.
I'm interested in your serving, first of all, as Secretary
of the Cabinet for Health and Family Services. During that
time, Kentucky was the only State to receive an A on the school
foods report card. Can you detail what changes you undertook
that supported this award as well as discuss what you consider
as some of your other accomplishments in that and if you think
it's appropriate to carry that experience to the Federal
office?
Dr. Holsinger. Thank you, Senator. I'm very proud of the
fact that Kentucky, which has been noted for not often having
very high marks in many of our health issues, received that No.
1 ranking in that report and it came about clearly because of
our work on the Healthy Children's bill in our 2005 legislative
session.
But we couldn't do that alone and as part of what I was
involved with during that time, I also chaired the Healthy
Kentucky Board for the Commonwealth of Kentucky. This was a
group of individuals that came together to try and deal with
these specific kinds of issues--whether we can make a
difference in the lives of all Kentuckians. And with their
strong support, we were able to get the bill passed and also
with their strong support in working with our Department of
Education and with the State School Board, we were able to get
very, very good regulations written on the issue of vending
machines and the school cafeteria program as well.
I think that the fact that we were able to work together in
a collaborative method, in an effort to bring together all the
people that needed to be there to make a difference is one of
the reasons why we were successful and we were able to bring
together both people from across the isle, because as maybe
you're aware, we have a Democratic-controlled House of
Representatives and Republican-controlled Senate and so it was
necessary to work with both portions of our legislature in
order to be successful.
I think that we also, though, need to be prepared to deal
with the sedentary life issue as in Kentucky and that one has
so far been slightly beyond us. We do have now a Governor's
Physical Fitness Council, which is making inroads, I believe,
in that problem but we're still going to need some legislative
assistance to make the difference.
Senator Allard. And I assume that also, you view that as a
problem nationally?
Dr. Holsinger. It is a problem nationally.
Senator Allard. Now, you were also Undersecretary of Health
for the Veterans Administration under Secretary Brown and as a
part of the Clinton administration. When you left, I understand
that you had some positive statements from Secretary Brown
about your work there. Can you give us some examples of your
work as Undersecretary of the VA?
Dr. Holsinger. Well, one of the key things that I was faced
with in August 1990, when I arrived as Chief Medical Director
and then became Undersecretary of Health in the VA was the
issue of the quality of healthcare in VA hospitals. One of the
first things I did was to bring in an Associate Chief Medical
Director for Quality and Management, Dr. Galen Barber. And
Galen's major assignment was to develop a Blueprint for Quality
for the VA. That document was produced and was moved forward
and became basically the basis for the growth in the
development of all of the quality efforts within the VA over
the years to come. It was a bedrock document that he produced
under my overall leadership. We worked at----
Senator Allard. Is that document being used in this current
Administration?
Dr. Holsinger. The document would be outdated now because
things have progressed in quality management techniques beyond
where we were but at the time when we came in, the quality
management techniques in the Veterans Health Administration
were over 20-years old. They had not kept pace with the
scientific knowledge and quality management that was present at
the time. Things have grown past that subsequently.
One of the first things I was also faced with was the fact
that in the previous 11 years, in 8 of those, there had been a
GAO or IG report stating that the VA's Credentialing Program
for Physicians and Dentists was broken. One of the first things
Secretary Diwinsky gave me as a task, he said, ``You've got to
fix it'' and I told him, I could fix it and I would fix it. And
that was clearly demonstrated a year later, when the Inspector
General went out and did another survey and came back with a
report that the system was fixed and part of the Joint
Commission used that system as a best practice for years in
their Joint Commission Accreditation visits.
Senator Allard. One other thing I'd like to clear up for
the record. My understanding is that you did offer to meet with
all members of the committee. Is that true?
Dr. Holsinger. That was my understanding that the staff of
the Department of Health and Human Services----
Senator Allard. Had extended an invitation for you to meet
with all members.
Dr. Holsinger. That's correct. I was hoping to meet with
every member.
Senator Allard. And the staff had informed you they'd made
that effort?
Dr. Holsinger. That was my understanding, yes.
Senator Allard. Yes. And did all of them choose to meet
with you or not?
Dr. Holsinger. I did not have an opportunity to meet with
every member of the committee, no sir.
Senator Allard. Well, did the staff inform you that any
members of this committee chose not--said they just didn't have
time to meet with you or what was the response?
Dr. Holsinger. I was not informed that that occurred. It
was simply that----
Senator Allard. It was just that you just didn't have an
opportunity to meet with all of them?
Dr. Holsinger. Well, these were the members that had been
able to find time for me to meet with them and that apparently,
others did not.
Senator Allard. I see. And, now----
Dr. Holsinger. To my knowledge, no one refused to meet with
me is the point I'm trying to make, Senator. I have no
knowledge of that.
Senator Allard. OK. But that was handled through the staff.
Dr. Holsinger. That's correct.
Senator Allard. Yes. Not through your own personal decision
necessarily.
Dr. Holsinger. Well, I was willing--more than willing to
meet with any member.
Senator Allard. Yes, it was important, I think. Can you
tell me a little bit about some of your goals that you would
like to see implemented when you are the Surgeon General?
Dr. Holsinger. There are three things that I think that are
on the plate for--I mean, should I be confirmed as Surgeon
General. One we've talked extensively about, which is the
obesity issue. I am concerned that we're going to have a
devastated group of children from obesity if we don't move
rapidly to deal with the issue and the personal impact on their
lives of the early onset of diabetes and other diseases will be
devastating their lives, let alone as far as our budget is
concerned, as far as healthcare is concerned. So we've talked
about that extensively.
Smoking and tobacco use, I am committed to continuing all
of my predecessors since Dr. Terry's efforts at making America
a tobacco-free Nation. I think that's where we need to go and
that's where I'm going to push to try and push one more step
closer to that, should I be confirmed.
The third thing is that I am really convinced that one of
the things that has to happen is the Commission Corp, the
Public Health Service has to be that leading edge group for us
to deal with manmade or natural disasters in this post-9/11 and
Katrina period. We need to have an office--a Commission Corp
that is second to none in their ability to respond as first
responders to those kinds of issues and I am committed to
making sure, should I be confirmed that they have the training
that's necessary, the organization that's necessary, the
logistical support that's necessary in order to be able to make
a difference in the lives of Americans when those kind of
disasters occur.
Senator Allard. Well, on your third suggestion, I think
that there is a lot of foresight in that and obviously, with
the current threats that we're having now from terrorism and
what not, I think it's an important part of your
responsibility, to make sure that the communities and the
States and the Federal Government are well prepared to address
many of those potential threats. I know historically, the
Surgeon General has assumed that role. We haven't talked much
about it because more popular items have been brought up, like
the BC and smoking but, the third one is not one where you have
any special interest group pushing it but it's certainly very
important to the health and welfare of this country. Thank you.
Dr. Holsinger. Thank you, Senator.
The Chairman. Senator Sanders.
Senator Sanders. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. Mr.
Chairman, the essential problem with the hearing today has
nothing to do with Dr. Holsinger and his qualifications. It has
to do with the fact that really the most important witnesses
are not here and that is the President of the United States,
the Vice President, Karl Rove and other political appointees
because no matter how qualified you may be, Dr. Holsinger, what
we are hearing from the White House is that you may not be able
to do your job. They will dictate what your job is.
Let me just quote, if I might, from yesterday's New York
Times.
``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 second-hand 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. That's yesterday's New York
Times.
I regard that as an outrage. I regard that as an extremist
administration intimidating a public official who is supposed
to be America's doctor and not just an exponent of a right-wing
ideology. I consider that to be an outrage. What is your
response to that report from Dr. Carmona?
Dr. Holsinger. Well, my sense would be very similar to
yours, did I know that the facts were that. I simply, as I
said--I've not had a chance to talk to Dr. Carmona so I have no
idea as to the kinds of things he experienced. I would tell you
that I intend--I met with Dr. Koop several weeks ago. I would
intend to meet with all of my predecessors in an effort to
understand what their life was like and what I might expect and
how I might deal with issues.
Senator Sanders. See, the difficulty that I am having is
not necessarily the strength or weaknesses of your
qualifications, be that as it may. It's your willingness to
stand up to this Administration and say, ``I have a job to do
to be the doctor for all of the American people and not just to
espouse a right-wing political ideology and I must be honest
with you.'' I have not heard you make that commitment to us.
What happened to Dr. Carmona sounds more like what would
happen, frankly, under Stalinist Russia than an American
democracy--that a Surgeon General has to mention the President
of the United States three times on every page? This doesn't
sound like the America I know. I think it's an outrage. Tell me
how you respond to what the New York Times reported.
Dr. Holsinger. Well, all I can say, Senator, is that, as I
said before, I think that if I were faced with a situation that
I felt I could not, in conscious, do, I think I have a clear
response to that. I would resign. The point being, though, is--
which I'm sorry. I didn't mean to interrupt you.
Senator Sanders. No, no. Please.
Dr. Holsinger. The point would be this: I have a particular
leadership style. Mine may be very different from Dr.
Carmona's. As I said, I don't know him. I work under a process
of trying to work with people to understand the issue, to
determine what I might need to do or not do----
Senator Sanders. But in all due respect, when you're
dealing with people like the President, the Vice President,
Karl Rove--these are very sophisticated political operatives.
They are very smart. They know what they want to accomplish.
Have you gone to the President and said, ``Mr. President, under
no circumstances will I take that kind of censorship and that
kind of direction. I won't work under those conditions. I need
to be an independent Surgeon General.''
Dr. Holsinger. Well, I think that my approach would be that
as I have stood forth for decades in my life, Senator, I
believe in doing the right thing in the right way the first
time. You know, it's just too expensive to do it the other way.
I believe in doing only what is legally and ethically and
morally right.
Senator Sanders. Let me change direction here if I can,
Doctor.
Dr. Holsinger. OK.
Senator Sanders. OK. Let me ask you this. You are, if
confirmed, will be America's doctor.
Dr. Holsinger. Yes, sir.
Senator Sanders. In America today, we have 46 million
Americans without any health insurance. The cost of healthcare
is soaring. We are the only Nation in the industrialized world
that does not guarantee health care to all people. There are
studies that indicate some 17,000 people die every single year
because they don't have health insurance. As America's doctor,
will you advise the President that we have got to move to
universal healthcare so that all of our people have healthcare
as a right of citizenship?
Dr. Holsinger. I would clearly advise that we move to
remove the uninsured. I don't know what the best way to do that
is. I think that we need to have every American covered for
healthcare. As I said, I don't know from a political policy
point of view what is the best method. But I believe that is a
position I could advocate strongly for across America, that
every American needs full, unfettered, nonjudgmental access to
healthcare regardless of their personal circumstances, period.
Senator Sanders. With 46 million people uninsured----
Dr. Holsinger. Is unconscionable.
Senator Sanders. Thank you. With 46 million people
uninsured, we pay at least twice as much per capita for
healthcare as any other Nation on earth. What can we do about
that?
Dr. Holsinger. We have spent years bandaiding our system.
Senator Sanders. I'm sorry?
Dr. Holsinger. We have spent years bandaiding our system. I
think that it may be time for us to think about what is the
system that we would like to see in place.
Senator Sanders. Are you an advocate of a national
healthcare system guaranteeing healthcare to all people, as
every other major country has?
Dr. Holsinger. Well, you'll have to--you have to remember,
Senator, that Ovy Rhinehart told me back when I was head of the
VA system that I was running the largest socialized system in
the world.
Senator Sanders. Right. You were.
Dr. Holsinger. America's--the world's top socialized
doctor.
Senator Sanders. And it's a very cost-effective system, is
it not?
Dr. Holsinger. I think there are methodologies that we can
see in both the Federal Employee Health Benefits Plan. There is
an approach in the VA, potentially is an approach. I think
there are a variety of approaches. I think that's going to take
a huge----
Senator Sanders. Let me ask you this--and I'm sorry to
interrupt you. It's just that there is a limit of time here. We
have 9 million--I was shamed, I believe--9 million children in
this country who have no health insurance at all--not to
mention 46 million. Will you join some of us in advocating at
least that every child in America, as soon as possible, has
health insurance through the expansion of the ASTRA program or
other programs?
Dr. Holsinger. I have worked diligently in Kentucky to get
the maximum of children on the K-Chip program.
Senator Sanders. Will you support those of us?
Dr. Holsinger. I support trying to get every child covered,
one way or another but--and that's the reason why when I re-did
the Medicaid program in Kentucky, I did it in a way that
wouldn't cut people off the rolls, as my States around us are
having to do.
Senator Sanders. Let me--thank you. Let me just switch
gears a little bit. As a Nation, we pay by far the highest
prices in the world for prescription drugs, by far. It's a very
serious problem for many people. The pharmaceutical industry in
the last 10 years has spent something like $900 million on
lobbying to make sure that we pay the highest prices in the
world. Do you have any views or thoughts about how Congress can
get a handle on the escalating costs of prescription drugs and
take on the pharmaceutical industry?
Dr. Holsinger. I do and it may not be palatable to the
Congress.
Senator Sanders. Well, let's hear it.
Dr. Holsinger. That would be to rescind legislation that
allows the direct advertising of pharmaceutical agents to the
public.
Senator Sanders. OK. So your view is that the
pharmaceutical companies putting ads on television, pushing
their products--that should be rescinded, which I, by the way,
would agree with you. Is that what you're saying?
Dr. Holsinger. Yes. What I'm saying is, is that puts an
unconscionable pressure on America's physicians to prescribe
the blue pill or the pink pill or whatever the pill of the
month might be and I think that we have done a disservice to
our physicians by allowing that to occur.
Senator Sanders. Thank you. I would tend to agree with you.
My last question. A lot of debate about the impact of
environmental degradation on health. I come from a small State
in the Northeast. A lot of my kids have asthma. We think it
might be related to some of these coal-burning plants in the
Midwest but that's not the only problem. What role do you see
as the Surgeon General playing in terms of addressing the
health problems caused by pollution and environmental
degradation?
Dr. Holsinger. I think there is a clear role for the
Surgeon General to speak to that issue from a bully pulpit.
Asthma is a major issue in the Commonwealth of Kentucky. It is
one of the highest costs in our Medicaid program. We are
clearly aware of the issue and----
Senator Sanders. Is it tied, do you think, to environmental
degradation?
Dr. Holsinger. Well, I'm not 100 percent sure whether it's
environmental degradation in our case or it's the large amount
of pasture land that we have because we're such a major horse
raising State and a major agricultural State. But I think that
those are the places where I would look to the science to say,
``What is the issue and where do we go from here?''
Senator Sanders. Well, let me just conclude and I thank you
for your presentation. It seems to me that the challenge that
you face is convincing me and this committee that you are
prepared to tell the President of the United States that you
believe in science, you believe in medical knowledge and not
extremist political ideologies.
Dr. Holsinger. If I could just say one thing, Senator. I've
taken positions in my life that have not been comfortable
positions. Back in 1991, following the end of the Persian Gulf
Land Campaign, when we first saw the return of Persian Gulf
veterans complaining of a strange syndrome, Persian Gulf
Syndrome, I went out on a major limb and issued a directive to
all VA Medical Centers that we would treat every single
returning Persian Gulf veteran, whether they were service-
connected or not because by that time, really they weren't and
who weren't going to get care otherwise, just like we're
treating individuals who claimed Agent Orange exposure from the
Vietnam War. I took tremendous heat over that decision but was
strongly supported in that decision by Congressman Sonny
Montgomery, who was Chair of the House Veterans Affairs
Committee at the time and who, within 6 months, was able to get
the legislation I needed.
In 2002, I took a stand in a 10-years later report or
hearing to say that the Secretary of Veterans Affairs needed to
have congressionally approved standby authority to be able to
move rapidly to take care of returning service men and women
from a period of conflict before we actually would know what
the issues were that were going to require them to be service-
connected.
Quite honestly, I think if my recommendations had been
taken in 2002, we may not be in some of the problems we're
having today with our returning men and women from Iraq and
Afghanistan. Those were not popular opinions to hold but they
represent the fact that I am willing to take a stand. I was
willing to take a stand for America's veterans. I grew up in
the home of one. It was exquisitely important to me that
America's veterans received care as the VA's motto is Second to
None and I stand on that today.
Senator Sanders. Thank you very much, Doctor.
The Chairman. Thank you. Thanks very much. I think you--
certainly as a result of the hearing, during the course of the
morning--have some understanding of the anxiety that exists on
this committee and I think Senator Mikulski pointed out that
these are tough issues. These are tough questions but we've got
to meet certainly our responsibility in terms of advice and
consent and I think you have to gather, from the sense of the
questions that have been there, of those of us who have been
committed to the science over the period of time and understand
the importance of certainly ethics dealing with the science. I
mean, you can go nuclear weaponry--there are many other issues
but that's certainly a part.
But the whole question, as you've gathered, whether it's in
the environment, particularly in the health areas, is the
willingness of people to be--to stick with it and we've had--we
have a marvelous head at the NIH, Dr. Zerhouni, who testified
in terms of stem cell research. That took a position different
from the Administration, a courageous position on his part. He
was willing to face science but we have seen so many instances,
as has been pointed out in these questions, where individuals
have--and Carmona's testimony has really reflected, where the
science has been subverted and that's just really unacceptable
and these questions, obviously, to trying to get some ideas
about where are your own kind of positions. We go back in terms
of some of these other documents, the older documents,
primarily to get some kind of an indication as to your
adherence to science and good science over the past.
The troublesome aspect in terms of going back to the 1991
document is that it really represented more of a viewpoint
rather than the best science that was available. The question
that I asked you just before my time wound up is what your own
kind of view about that study was. I think, quite frankly, it's
a significant stretch to say that was based upon the science
that was available at that time and we could go over that,
whether it was a selection in terms of the Copenhagen study,
one STD clinic there, representing a general population or
whether the information that was gathered from clinics and from
trauma centers represents a general population with regards to
a homosexual community. I don't think that it does and I think
we want to try and sort of move beyond but I want to be able to
give you a fair opportunity to make just a final comment about
that study.
Because I personally feel that it's flawed and failing to
take advantage of the range of different information that was
available and the publication on the bibliography not in--
producing the other information that gave a more balanced and I
think, more scientifically accurate information, I find
troublesome. But I'm interested in moving on but I've got to
know, quite frankly, where you stand on that document because I
think, at least for me, it's somewhat of an indication. You may
differ--I mean, you may say, ``Well Senator, I think--I'm
prepared to take the time, go over the document in detail and
look at the other information. I think it was sound at the
particular time.'' But I've got to know what your own view
about that document is today and what your view is about the
issue that you were asked to write about in terms of your own
understanding about the science and where it is today.
Dr. Holsinger. I think that's a very fair question, Mr.
Chairman, and I'll attempt to answer it. First of all, the
paper does not represent where I am today. It doesn't represent
who I am today and it represented a specific time in a specific
context and a specific purpose. It's not a published paper.
I've published outstanding scientific papers. In fact, if
somebody really wants to read a good paper that I wrote and I
just published one last year, on what physician professionalism
in the 21st century should look like and it says we need to get
away from being independent as physicians and place our effort
on the needs of the patient, for example. I think that--you
know, you raised the Copenhagen study. I specifically selected
this Copenhagen study for a specific reason. It's because of
the things that were going on in the committee at the time. A
paper from the United States would have been suspect from the
point of view of American homophobia for the committee. A paper
without male and female authorship would have been considered
patriarchal by the committee. I was looking for a paper that
addressed not just homosexuality but bisexuality and
heterosexuality in an effort to give balance to the paper. It
was a specific effort to try and do something that would be
found by the committee members to have some substance. I was
faced with major issues in this committee over those kinds of
issues. That's the reason why it is a selected paper. It was
not meant to be all inclusive and it was not meant to be a
scientific paper that I would ever publish. The fascinating
thing is, it's had wider distribution of anything I've ever
written and yet it was never meant to be distributed beyond a
few people for their own personal use. It's an amazing
situation as far as I can tell. I'm sorry. I wish I could give
it a different----
The Chairman. Well, let me just mention on the Copenhagen
study, for example. You had one study, one single study and you
mention the Copenhagen and it was one STD clinic.
Dr. Holsinger. Yes.
The Chairman. And yet your paper fails to mention the
source of the data--relies--is from the STD clinic study and
the reader is left to assume the figures were taken from a
general population of Copenhagen, sort of a very small sample
of men who visited one STD clinic and that's the type of issue
and question in terms of science.
Dr. Holsinger. I understand that and that clearly wasn't my
intent. My intent was to provide----
The Chairman. You can understand how people----
Dr. Holsinger. I can clearly understand and I understand
the reason why people are concerned. And if I've hurt anyone,
Senator, by that paper----
The Chairman. Now, it isn't a question of hurting, you
know. We're not--it's just getting the science right.
Dr. Holsinger. But I'm also concerned that people take that
as an example of my scientific work. I would simply ask you to
read scientific papers that I've published as an example of my
scientific work.
The Chairman. OK, fair enough. Let me go into, as the time
is moving on, into stem cell research. Obviously, there's--I
don't think there are probably many other areas that have been
politicized and distorted as the issue of stem cell research.
Basically, it's not a partisan issue. One of our colleagues,
Senator Hatch, others on this committee, Mrs. Reagan, others
have been strong supporters of it.
On March 20, 2002, at a Kentucky Senate Judiciary Committee
hearing, you voiced opposition to a bill that would have
criminalized embryonic stem cell research. Let me remind you of
some of the other provisions of the Kentucky Human Cloning
Prohibition Act. It banned both the cloning of a human and the
development of stem cells for research purposes. It made
embryonic stem cell research a Class C felony and could have
led to the imprisonment of doctors, scientists and researchers.
It also subjected doctors to millions of dollars of fines for
working with stem cell lines that the National Institutes of
Health were providing the funds for.
Do you remember which of the provisions caused you the
greatest concern?
Dr. Holsinger. Well, the entire bill caused grave concern
for me. The reason simply is, is that it would have banned all
research, regardless of whether it met the President's decision
in 2001. We were doing research under that decision on the
current stem cell lines but it would have banned all research
and not only that, any patient that left the Commonwealth of
Kentucky and went to another State, should it have passed, and
come back home to Kentucky with tissue implanted in them
secondary to an ongoing study in another State, it would have
criminalized the return to the State. It would have made it a
Class C felony--in Kentucky, it's the same thing, same level,
as a second-degree rape or a second-degree manslaughter. It's 5
to 10 years in prison.
It was a huge issue for me, likewise for our research
scientists. Virtually every research scientist with a Federal
grant has part of their salary paid off of that grant. That's
part of what has to happen in order to pay their salaries. It
would have criminalized that to the tune of a million dollar
fine and a Class C felony.
The Chairman. Let me just ask, there's--and I won't take
the time--the overwhelming scientific community, including the
Director of the NIH, that the current restrictions on stem cell
research are unjustified. How do you stand? Do you stand with
the scientific community in agreeing that we ought to move
ahead with the embryonic stem cell research?
Dr. Holsinger. Well, in the case of stem cell, I'm in favor
of doing stem cell research. We are currently doing that. We
are doing it effectively under the President's current 2001
decision, which allowed, as I remember, for the first time for
Federal funds to be used for stem cell research. I think that,
it seems to me that we're going with an effective program at
the moment and that we should continue to track and see how
things turn out if we go forward.
The Chairman. Senator Enzi. My time is up. I might just
come back to that in a minute.
Senator Enzi. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I came here directly
from receiving a grant on behalf of the Wyoming State
Historical Preservation Society from the First Lady on behalf
of President Bush and it was also an opportunity for an
historic preservation program that President Bush is supporting
that I think will make a difference in all 50 States. President
Bush had Laura do an outstanding job of making that
presentation.
Now, the reason I just mentioned this, is I just used
President Bush in a speech three times. I don't think I
impugned my integrity at all.
[Laughter.]
If anybody can't work the President into a speech when it
deals with the United States three times without impugning
their own integrity, they're not very conversant, probably. So
I appreciated your answers where you mentioned that it mattered
what context it was supposed to be in. That is a difference and
I appreciate your integrity on your answers on that.
We've gone into a lot about what your public pronouncements
might be and during the term of being Surgeon General, you
might make some great pronouncement that would make a dramatic
change in the health of this country and I would hope that
would be the case.
But the job is really a lot about management and that's
probably where the biggest difference will be made. You have
the oversight for the Commission Corp and given the changes
since 9/11 and our renewed Federal response after Hurricane
Katrina, could you more fully describe your vision for this
Commission Corp? What key items would be addressed so that the
officers can appropriately respond? How do you keep those
individuals focused on both the day-to-day public health
activities as well as potential disaster response? That's going
to be one of your major functions, I think.
Dr. Holsinger. You have just hit on a major issue, Senator
Enzi. I think that one of the most important things that can
come out of the next budget cycle for the Public Health Service
Commission Corp is the rapid response team's additional 220
lines that I've heard are supposed to be in that budget.
This would allow for the Commission Corp to have two
dedicated rapid response teams who would be full-time rapid
response teams. As you know, currently every Corp Officer is
assigned to an agency and in order to be able to pull the rapid
response teams in requires pulling them from the agency in
which they work full-time. That would then move to the second
tier of individuals.
But in order to be able to have a Commission Corp that is
ready to go into action in the case of a manmade or natural
disaster, we need to have well-done, appropriate readiness
training carried out and I would work to develop and make sure
that we had the funds available to have that kind of
outstanding training available. I've heard recently that there
are some 800 officers going to Fort Sam in Houston, Texas to
Camp Bullis for in-the-field training in this cycle. I think
that is absolutely critical.
If there is one thing I learned out of 31 years in the Army
Reserve, it's the importance of having your troops trained and
ready to move at a moment's notice.
The other thing that's got to be key is making sure that
the Corp has the logistics available that they need in order to
be able to respond and be where they need to be in the time
they need to be there. But I think that we can work through
those kinds of issues as part of the transformation of the
Public Health Service Commission Corp, which is currently
underway and which I would move to rapidly bring to fruition
and finalize it in an effort to be able to move as forward in
this post-9/11 and Katrina period.
Senator Enzi. Thank you and I appreciate the meeting that
we had and more depth of questions that I was able to go into
at that time. I really appreciate the management skills that
I've learned about and read about and I appreciate the
leadership that you provided when you were on the Cabinet of
Health and Family Services in Kentucky, where your State did
get the A in School Foods Report Card and the changes that you
put into place to get that award.
I think you have a wide range of knowledge that would serve
us well in the position of Surgeon General and I hope members
of the committee will look at the record, probably ask some
additional questions and then get you confirmed so that you can
be in a position where you can do the kinds of things that will
lead this country on as the Nation's doctor.
Thanks again, as I mentioned in my opening remarks, for
subjecting yourself to this important process and it is an
important process and seeing it as an opportunity to answer
questions that may have been taken out of context before. So I
appreciate the wonderful job you've done doing that.
The Chairman. Thank you. Let me, Doctor, I'll just conclude
here. On the stem cell research, there are obviously moral and
scientific judgments. I'm interested just in the scientific
judgment. Would the opportunity for scientific and medical
progress be greater if the President's restrictions on the
Federal funding of stem cell research, if they were rescinded?
Dr. Holsinger. I have to confess, Senator Kennedy that I
have since the 2002 hearing, not had a lot of reason to stay
engaged in the stem cell discussions. So I'm not as informed on
both the science on current stem cell work as well as some of
the new alternative processes that are coming. I simply don't
feel comfortable giving you my opinion when I don't feel like
I've had the proper time to study it.
The Chairman. Let me just mention on one final item. On
these first responders, if this moves ahead, it's going to be
one of the key issues in public policy, is whether on this
first--what kind of compensation they're going to receive and
whether they are going to be indemnified if they get on into
these dangerous situations. We're asking people to volunteer if
we have a dangerous pandemic or biochemical kind of talk and
asking the first responders--firefighters and policemen--to go
over and check out something. If they are going to be
contaminated and endangered and lose maybe their lives or be
seriously injured, if we're not going to be able to invest in
them and ensure that their well-being, themselves and also
their families, this process isn't going to work. You have seen
this in the past. So I hope--but that's very--that's an issue
that's divided up to here in terms of what we ought to do about
it. But another issue at another time, we'll come to grips
with.
Thank you, thank you very much. We thank all your family
for being very patient and we thank all of our audience for
their courtesy in listening through. The committee now stands
in recess.
Dr. Holsinger. Mr. Chairman, thank you so much for this
opportunity. Senator Enzi, thank you.
[Additional material follows.]
ADDITIONAL MATERIAL
Prepared Statement of Senator Clinton
Chairman Kennedy and Ranking Member Enzi, I would like to
thank you for holding this hearing on the Administration's
nominee for Surgeon General.
We must not underestimate the crucial role the Surgeon
General plays in promoting public health and raising awareness
and educating the public about important health issues.
We witnessed the impact of this position in the early
1960s, when Surgeon General Luther Terry increased public
understanding of the adverse impacts of smoking on our health,
laying the groundwork for our current smoking cessation and
secondhand smoke awareness efforts. We witnessed the impact of
Surgeon General C. Everett Koop providing Americans with
honest, scientific information about HIV and prevention methods
at a time when there was much fear and ignorance about AIDS.
And we saw the impact of Surgeon General David Satcher's focus
on issues of health disparities, and the need to reduce the
disproportionate burden of often-preventable diseases on our
communities of color.
Unfortunately, this Administration has sought to use the
Surgeon General's office not as a platform to provide accurate
information about health care, but to advance an ideological
and political agenda.
Earlier this week, former Surgeon General Richard Carmona
testified before the House of Representatives, noting that
during his tenure, he faced significant interference from the
current Administration. In his testimony, he states that the
Administration went so far as to discourage his cooperation
with a Special Olympics event--an organization that has helped
millions of children with special needs--because the group was
founded by Democrats. As Dr. Carmona noted, ``The job of
surgeon general is to be the doctor of the Nation--not the
doctor of a political party.''
But I am concerned that President Bush is doing exactly
that--placing ideological beliefs over the Nation's public
health needs.
Among other duties, the Surgeon General is charged with
protecting and advancing the health of the Nation through
disease prevention and health promotion efforts. He or she is
supposed to articulate scientifically based health policy
analysis and advice for the President and the Secretary of
Health and Human Services. And the Surgeon General is supposed
to elevate the quality of public health practice in the
professional disciplines through the advancement of appropriate
standards and research priorities.
I have grave concerns about the ability of Dr. Holsinger to
fulfill these duties.
A quarter century after the AIDS epidemic first appeared in
our country, there is still stigma and ignorance about HIV. We
need, as our Nation's chief health educator, someone who will
be able to provide unbiased and accurate information about
prevention and treatment.
Several of the comments Dr. Holsinger has made about
homosexuality raise doubts about his ability to be effective in
this role as chief health educator, especially if the American
people cannot rely on him as a source of unbiased scientific
information.
Many of our Nation's HIV and AIDS groups, including the New
York AIDS Coalition, have stated their opposition to Dr.
Holsinger because of these comments. If there is distrust
between those who are on the front lines of our prevention
efforts and the lead prevention advocate of our Federal
Government, I fear that it will set back our efforts to prevent
the more than 40,000 new HIV infections we face annually.
I am also concerned about Dr. Holsinger's management record
while serving as Chief Medical Director for the Veterans Health
Administration. During his tenure, the General Accounting
Office released with a report documenting several cases where
patients died because of substandard care at the VA. And during
his tenure as Kentucky's Secretary for the Cabinet and Family
Services, Dr. Holsinger failed to adequately address problems
at a State institution for individuals with developmental
disabilities, leading the Center for Medicare and Medicaid
Services to notify the facility that it would be cutting off
Medicaid funds due to lack of compliance with Federal
regulations.
This experience does not bode well for the ability of Dr.
Holsinger to elevate the quality and standards of public health
practice in our Nation.
Indeed, our Nation's leading public health advocacy
organization, the American Public Health Association, has
stated their opposition to Dr. Holsinger's nomination. At a
time when we have so many pressing public health issues facing
us, it is critical we have someone who will inspire confidence
among providers, patients and the public.
Because of the questions that have been raised about Dr.
Holsinger's qualifications and ability to fulfill the duties of
the job, I do not believe that he will be able to provide
adequate leadership in the public health field as Surgeon
General, and I must go on the record as opposing his
nomination.
LETTERS OF SUPPORT
The C. Everett Koop Institute at DARTMOUTH,
Hanover, New Hampshire,
July 2, 2007.
Hon. Edward M. Kennedy,
U.S. Senate,
317 Russell Senate Building,
Washington, DC. 20510.
Dear Ted: I am writing today in support of Dr. James W. Holsinger.
Jr.'s nomination as Surgeon General of the U.S. Public Health Service.
Since serving as Surgeon General 20 years ago, I have never written on
behalf of a nominee.
As the Nation faces unprecedented rates of chronic disease and
other public health threats (to say nothing of natural or intentional
catastrophies), we need a physician with the experience and leadership
to educate the American people as Surgeon General. His 40 years of
public service as a physician and an educator make him an impressive
choice. He has a proven record during that time of bringing diverse
parties together to address challenging issues. Most recently, he has
worked to address the growing obesity epidemic by successfully leading
the Healthy Kentucky initiative in his home State. Those I know who
know him well concur.
Since 1871, the Surgeon General has served as American's chief
health educator, giving our citizens the best, most up-to-date
information on how to improve their health and reduce the risk of
disease. Surgeon General Luther Terry's 1962 report raised concern
about smoking and health that led to today's broad-based efforts to
reduce tobacco use. During my tenure as Surgeon General, I issued a
report on AIDS, which helped provide accurate, comprehensive
information to give Americans a greater understanding of a new and
frightening disease, and proved tobacco was addictive and side-stream
smoke, a killer. I know that Dr. Holsinger will continue in this
tradition and serve as a strong voice for the public health needs of
all Americans.
Dr. Holsinger's experience is outstanding. I have confidence that
he is an admirable choice to carry on as the 17 Surgeon Generals who
preceded him. I urge the Senate to act quickly to confirm him.
Sincerely yours,
C. Everett Koop, M.D., ScD.
PS: I miss the days you and I stood in the ``swamp'' in front of
the Capitol and put the cigarette folks in their place.
______
World Methodist Council,
Lake Junaluska, North Carolina,
June 8, 2007.
The World Methodist Council, a Christian World Communion, began in
1881 and today is composed of 74 denominations in more than 132
countries with ministries that reach 75 million persons. Dr. James W.
Holsinger has been a leader in the World Methodist family since 1986.
The following statements supporting his nomination as Surgeon General
of the United States are from Dr. John C.A. Barrett, Chairperson, and
the Officers of the Council. Dr. Barrett is an ordained member of the
British Methodist Church and Principal of the Anglo-Chinese School in
Singapore.
Dr. James Holsinger has been a leader in the World Methodist
Council since 1986. The Council is the voice of the World Methodist/
Wesleyan family around the world and speaks to issues such as war,
injustice, poverty, HIV/Aids, etc. Dr. Holsinger's experience, insight,
compassion and concern have helped to guide us in addressing concerns
on behalf of the Methodist/Wesleyan family. He has worked with the
leadership of Churches from around the world on behalf of the Council
and is appreciated for his competency, intellect and concern for all
persons, irrespective of their ethnicity, race, religion, wealth,
status. gender or sexual orientation. I feel he will serve his country
very well as the Surgeon General of the United States.
______
Statement from John C.A. Barrett, United Kingdom, Chairperson,
and the Officers of the World Methodist Council
As a leader in the field of medicine, education and healthcare
administration, Dr. James W. Holsinger possesses the highest degree of
integrity and commitment to excellence in his profession. As a leader
in the World Methodist Council, he brings the same commitment in
working with Church leadership around the world. As evident from his
leadership, he is known for his compassion and concern for equal
treatment of all persons, whatever their circumstances or location. His
sense of fairness and commitment to justice are evident in all of his
contributions to our work together through the World Methodist Council.
Dr. John C. A. Barrett, United Kingdom/Singapore, Chairperson,
World Methodist Council; Dr. George H. Freeman, General Secretary,
World Methodist Council; Dr. Fran Alguire, Chapel Hill, North Carolina,
Honorary President, World Methodist Council; Bishop Heinrich Bolleter,
Zurich, Switzerland, World Methodist Council Geneva Secretary; Dr.
Eddie Fox, Nashville, Tennessee, Director of World Evangelism, World
Methodist Council; Bishop William Hutchinson, Louisiana Area United
Methodist Church, Baton Rouge, Louisiana; Bishop Lawi Imathiu,
Methodist Church of Kenya, Chancellor, Kenya Methodist University,
Meru, Kenya; Larry Malone, President, World Fellowship of Methodist and
Uniting Church Men, Samuel Samuels, Panama, Methodist Church of the
Caribbean and the Americas; Bishop Kyung Ha Shin, Presiding Bishop,
Methodist Church of Korea; Rev. Jill Van de Geer, General Secretary,
Methodist Church of New Zealand.
______
American College of Physicians (ACP),
May 31, 2007.
Hon. Harry Reid,
Majority Leader,
U.S. Senate,
528 Hart Senate Office Building,
Washington, DC. 20510.
Hon. Edward Kennedy,
Chairman,
Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions,
317 Russell Senate Office Building,
Washington, DC. 20510.
Dear Majority Leader Reid and Chairman Kennedy: On behalf of the
American College of Physicians (ACP), the Nation's largest medical
specialty society representing 123,000 internal medicine physicians and
medical students, I am pleased to express our strong support of the
nomination of Dr. James Holsinger, Jr., M.D., MACP for U.S. Surgeon
General. Dr. Holsinger's dedication to public health, academic
achievement, and devotion to public service distinguish him as an
excellent choice for this position.
Dr. Holsinger has served with distinction as the Secretary of
Health and Family Services for the Commonwealth of Kentucky, the
Chancellor of the University of Kentucky Medical Center, and as chief
of staff or director of several VA medical centers during a 26-year
career with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. He successfully
led the effort to construct a Women's Health Center and the creation of
a School of Public Health at the University of Kentucky. In 1994, he
established a new health center to provide care underserved and
predominately minority population in northern Lexington, Kentucky. Dr.
Holsinger has been a member of ACP since 1971 and has been awarded a
mastership in the College, a highly distinguished honor bestowed upon
those exhibiting preeminence in practice or medical research, holding
positions of high honor, or making significant contributions to medical
science or the art of medicine.
I strongly believe Dr. Holsinger's experience and accomplishments
in the field of medicine make him an excellent choice to be the next
Surgeon General. On behalf of ACP, I am proud to support his
nomination.
Sincerely,
David C. Dale, M.D., FACP,
President.
______
University of Kentucky (UK),
June 15, 2007.
Hon. Edward M. Kennedy,
U.S. Senate,
317 Russell Senate Building,
Washington, DC. 20510.
Dear Senator Kennedy: It is my great pleasure to support the
nomination of James Holsinger, M.D., Ph.D. for Surgeon General of the
United States, I am dean emeritus of the University of Kentucky College
of Medicine and I currently direct the Office of Health Research and
Development at the University. I worked with Dr. Holsinger in his
capacity as Chancellor of the University of Kentucky Chandler Medical
Center for 9 years. Please consider this my strongest recommendation.
I have great respect for Dr. Holsinger, and I fully endorse his
nomination for Surgeon General. First, I don't think you will find a
person better prepared for this important role. He has had a long and
illustrious career as a physician, a cardiologist, a clinical
anatomist, a teacher and a medical administrator. He has served these
roles in many capacities including academic medicine, public health,
Veterans Administration health system, university administration, and
the Kentucky State health system. Second, when you have the opportunity
to talk to Dr. Holsinger, you will find that he is a student of
medicine and all aspects of health care. His knowledge and experience
come from his capacity to read and absorb large amounts of material
related to health care and other fields. His extensive education
background further attests to his eagerness to learn and to expand his
thinking. Third, I believe Dr. Holsinger will excel in this position
because he is an experienced administrator. The people of this Nation
face many behavioral risk factors such as smoking, poor eating habits,
and decreased physical activity that result in chronic diseases,
causing decreased productivity and often premature death. If we are
going to deal with problems such as these, we will have to start in
early childhood. His interest in addressing childhood obesity will
speak to this need. His knowledge and experience in the health of the
public and his administrative experience at both national and State
levels greatly enhance the likelihood of his success in this position.
Finally, I think you will find that Dr. Holsinger has the personal and
professional attributes which are necessary for this responsibility. He
is disgustingly pleasant and relates to all people as colleagues. When
he first came to the University of Kentucky, I had concerns about his
prior history as a military person and as a VA administrator. I must
now say that I have never known anyone more collegial and more caring.
Quite frankly, the concerns expressed by certain groups that Dr.
Holsinger would not be appropriate for this position was a surprise to
me. In the 9 years I worked with him, I never once heard negative
remarks or connotations toward any such groups or any other segment of
the population. In fact, he was an advocate for accessible and
affordable health care for everyone. He is above any remarks or any
position that would denigrate any segment of the population.
In summary, I urge you and the other members of the Senate to
confirm and even endorse Dr. Holsinger as Surgeon General. I will
assure you that he will not embarrass you or others in this Nation. If
I can provide additional information on his behalf, I will be happy to
do so.
Sincerely,
Emery A. Wilson, M.D.
______
University of Kentucky,
Lexington, Kentucky,
June 16, 2007.
Hon. Edward Kennedy,
Chair,
317 Russell Senate Building,
Washington DC. 20510.
Dear Senator Kennedy: I am writing to support the nomination of Dr.
James Holsinger for the position of Surgeon General of the United
States. I have known Dr. Holsinger for nearly 10 years, first when he
served as Chancellor of the University of Kentucky Medical Center,
followed by his work as Secretary for the Cabinet of Health and Family
Services and now as a faculty member at the University of Kentucky.
Through all these years, I have consulted with Dr. Holsinger, and he
with me. We have discussed student social work internships in the
Medical Center; we have discussed inter-professional education,
including his support of problem-based learning and we have discussed
the place of academic social work in University medical centers.
When he was appointed Secretary for the Cabinet of Health and
Family Services, he immediately sought my assistance as well as
assistance from our faculty in the College of Social Work. I was a
member of his ``kitchen cabinet'' as we attempted to take on thorny
issues of child welfare service delivery, the funding problems for such
services and the questions around academic preparation for front line
social workers in public child welfare.
Through these years, I know Jim Holsinger only as a wonderful human
being who works toward human betterment whether he is working with
individual patients or setting policy in State government. His concern
in working with me has always been, how can we ``fix things'' to make
systems work better for people. How can we insure that at-risk children
receive the services they must have and how can we create a more able
workforce to serve vulnerable people? These are all big questions based
upon big ideas.
I know of his special interests in vulnerable children. He and his
wife were foster parents themselves, many years ago. His own children
have all grown to be people who serve others. I believe that he would
articulate and support health policies that would insure a better
future for children. I completely support him for Surgeon General.
Sincerely,
Kay Hoffman,
Dean and the Dorothy A. Miller Professor
in Social Work Education.
______
House of Representatives,
Commonwealth of Kentucky,
June 19, 2007.
Hon. Edward M. Kennedy,
U.S. Senator,
317 Russell Senate Building,
Washington, DC. 20510.
Dear Senator Kennedy: It gives me great pleasure to express my
wholehearted support for the appointment by President George W. Bush of
Dr. James Holsinger as our country's 18th Surgeon General.
As a State representative and Chair of the Budget Review
Subcommittee on Human Resources in the Kentucky Legislature, I have had
the privilege of working extensively with Holsinger in decisionmaking
processes that affect health care for Kentuckians. Time after time I
witnessed Dr. Holsinger making decisions that he believed were right
and would be in the best interests of the people, rather than doing
what would have been ``politically popular'' for him. I firmly believe
that he would serve with an even deeper commitment to the best
interests of all Americans in his capacity as Surgeon General.
Dr. James Holsinger is deeply committed to providing quality,
affordable health care for all Americans. As you know, our Nation faces
public health issues that require immediate attention of the Surgeon
General, including childhood obesity. The challenges that have faced
Surgeon Generals in the past and continue to face them today are to
ensure that Americans live longer, better, and healthier lives. I have
no doubt that Dr. Holsinger is a perfect fit to confront the task
before him.
Thank you for your thoughtful consideration of Dr. James
Holsinger's appointment as America's 18th Surgeon General. Please feel
free to contact me if you wish to discuss this further.
Sincerely,
Jimmie Lee,
State Representative.
______
June 7, 2007.
Hon. Mitch McConnell,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, DC. 20510.
Dear Senator McConnell: I am writing in support of the nomination
of Dr. Jim Holsinger as U.S. Surgeon General.
I was employed during Dr. Holsinger's tenure at the University of
Kentucky in the Chancellor's Office. As a lesbian employee, I have
nothing but the highest regard and respect for Dr. Holsinger. He was
not only a kind and fair leader, but also a caring friend.
I have many personal anecdotes of his justness and equanimity in
the workplace. Much has changed in the world in the 16 years since he
wrote the papers which has attracted unfortunate media attention. I
believe this was evidenced most clearly by Dr. Holsinger's support of
the Lesbian Health session at the Women's Health Conference.
I will also share that during my pregnancy (via artificial
insemination), Dr. Holsinger was kind enough to assist me in getting in
to see a specialist that had no openings. He was no longer at the
University and still came to my assistance. I consider Jim Holsinger
not just a former employer, but also a friend, A man who does not
discriminate.
I am a liberal democrat and a member of gay and women's rights
organizations. Still, I strongly support Dr. Jim Holsinger as a leader
and administrator who is able to see across divisive issues and relate
with integrity to people, no matter their life circumstances. He is the
right candidate for U.S. Surgeon General and I am proud to support him.
Thank you for your consideration.
Yours sincerely,
Maria Kemplin.
______
EXODUS,
Orlando, FL 32854,
June 6, 2007.
Exodus Supports White House Nominee's Position on Change
in Homosexuality
Orlando, FL.--President Bush's nominee for Surgeon General, Dr.
James W. Holsinger, has recently come under attack for supporting the
fact that homosexuals can change. Dr. Holsinger founded Hope Springs
Community Church, a church that offers help to individuals seeking an
alternative to homosexuality. Alan Chambers, president of the world's
largest outreach to those affected by unwanted same-sex attraction,
issued a response:
``As former homosexuals, we cannot ignore this hypocritical
attack upon Dr. Holsinger. As a society, we should not
disqualify an individual simply because of his belief that
those conflicted by their same-sex attraction can and should be
helped. Thousands of us have experienced inner distress and
external devastation when we were living as homosexuals and
have found a faith honoring a psychologically sound way out. We
know that change is possible because we have experienced it.
Opposing this alternative is incompatible with free thinking
and personal choice.
``While we do not support or oppose the nominee, we are
grateful that President Bush has put forth a candidate who
supports individual autonomy and authentic diversity. We call
upon members of the Senate Health Committee to offer the same
tolerance afforded gay activist groups to former homosexuals as
well.''
______
National Ex-Gay Group Defends Surgeon General Nominee Holsinger
and Ex-Gay Community Attacked by Gay Groups
Washington, DC.--Parents and Friends of Ex-Gays & Gays (PFOX) today
condemned the bigoted remarks by gay activists being made about the new
Surgeon General nominee. Gay rights groups are attacking Dr. James
Holsinger's nomination because his church is inclusive of ex-gays and
he supports the right to self-
determination regarding one's sexual attraction.
Ex-gays and Americans who support the right to self-determination
of same-sex attraction are routinely ridiculed by the very people who
claim to be victims themselves. ``Gay activists lobby to be included in
tolerance policies, hate crimes and employment non-discrimination
legislation, but work hard to deny ex-gays the right to the same
treatment,'' said Regina Griggs, executive director of PFOX. ``This
demonstrates how far the gay rights movement has moved from self-
described victims to proactive perpetrators.''
``Ex-gays should not have to be closeted for fear of other's
negative reactions or disapproval,'' Griggs said. ``They do not think
something is wrong with them because they chose to fulfill their
heterosexual potential. We need to ensure the safety, inclusion, and
respect of former homosexuals in all realms of society, but especially
by the medical and mental health communities starting at the highest
levels.''
``As a medical doctor, it seems Dr. Holsinger is aware that
contrary to distortions by gay activists, no professional medical or
mental health associations deny the right of any individual to seek
support in resolving unwanted same-sex attractions.'' Griggs said.
``Indeed, these associations adhere to a code of ethics which call for
their members to support the client's right of self-determination.''
``Americans need to face the growing issue of bigotry perpetrated
upon ex-gays and their supporters. Gay activists cannot claim sympathy
as victims when they attack ex-gays for political purposes of their
own,'' said Griggs. ``Tolerance is not a one-way street. All
individuals with unwanted same-sex attractions deserve the right to
self-determination and happiness based on their own needs, and not the
political inconvenience of others.''
______
Academy of General Dentistry,
Chicago, Illinois,
July 6, 2007.
Hon. Edward M. Kennedy,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, DC. 20510.
Dear Senator Kennedy: The Academy of General Dentistry is a
professional organization representing 35,000 general dentists. Our
mission is to advance the value and excellence of general dentistry and
one of the primary ways in which we accomplish this is by requiring our
members to achieve 75 hours of continuing education over a 3-year time
period.
Last month, I had the pleasure of meeting with Ms. Nicky Bassford,
in your office to discuss several items of importance to the AGD and
general dentists. Our legislative council is currently in the process
of reviewing your Minority Health and Health Disparity Elimination Act
of 2007, (S. 1576). Today, I write you to request your support on
another matter which AGD supports.
As you are aware, on June 5, 2007 the president nominated Dr. James
Holsinger to be the 18th Surgeon General of the United States. AGD
supports this nomination and requests that you shepherd his nomination
through committee and vote to confirm him.
In Federal services, Dr. Holsinger served for over 31 years in the
U.S. Army Reserve, with his Reserve career culminating with his
assignment to the Joint Staff as Assistant to the Director for
Logistics in 1989, and his promotion to Major General in 1990. Dr.
Holsinger, likewise, served for 26 years in the Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA), retiring on July 13, 1994. His career culminated in his
appointment by the President of the United States as Chief Medical
Director of the Veterans Health Administration on August 6, 1990. In
1992, he became Undersecretary for Health, Department of Veterans
Affairs.
In academia, Dr. Holsinger served as Chancellor of the University
of Kentucky Medical Center from 1994 to 2003. In State service he
served as Secretary of the Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family
Services from 2003 to 2005. Dr. Holsinger currently serves as a
Professor of Preventive Medicine and Environmental Health at the
University of Kentucky.
Dr. Holsinger is a consummate professional with vast experience in
health care systems administration, research, academia, and government.
AGD is of the firm belief that, with confirmation, Dr. Holsinger will
aid in the effort to secure access to oral health care for all
Americans, especially those who are disadvantaged.
Sincerely,
Vincent C. Mayher, Jr., DMD, MAGD,
President.
______
LETTERS OF OPPOSITION
Congress of the United States,
Washington, DC. 20515,
June 25, 2007.
Senator Edward M. Kennedy, Chairman,
Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, DC. 20510.
Senator Michael B. Enzi, Ranking Member,
Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, DC. 20510.
We write to express our serious concerns regarding the nomination
of Dr. James Holsinger to the position of Surgeon General. Allegations
have recently surfaced suggesting that Dr. Holsinger harbors anti-
homosexual prejudices that make him ill-suited to serve the public
health needs of all Americans.
As America's chief health educator, the Surgeon General must be
relied upon to provide Americans with the best scientific information
on how to improve their health and reduce the risk of illness and
injury. However, given Dr. Holsinger's record, specifically writings in
which he equates homosexual acts to pathology, we are concerned that
his own biases will prevent him from objectively evaluating
scientifically based health care information.
We therefore urge you to closely examine his record during the
upcoming confirmation hearing and carefully scrutinize his record on
gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender Americans as part of his
qualifications to become the next Surgeon General of the United States.
Sincerely,
Tammy Baldwin, Raul Grijalva, Jim McDermont, Keith Ellison, Neil
Abercrombie, Jan Schakowsky, Eliot Engel, Carolyn Maloney, Barney
Frank, Zoe Lofgren, Shelley Berkley, Dianne DeGette, Linda Sanchez,
Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Lois Capps, Sam Farr, Christopher Murphy,
Peter Welch, Henry A. Waxman, Louise M. Slaughter, Mazie K. Hirono,
Barbara Lee, Robert Wexler, Rosa DeLauro, Ellen Tauscher, Hilda L.
Solis, Howard Berman, Anna Eshoo, James Moran, Jerrold Nadler, Rush
Holt, Maurice Hinchey, Gary Ackerman, Gwen Moore, and Lynn Woolsey.
Members of Congress.
______
American Public Health Association (APHA),
Washington, DC. 20001-3710,
July 11, 2007.
Hon. Edward Kennedy, Chairman,
Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions,
428 Senate Dirksen Office Bldg.,
Washington, DC. 20510.
Dear Chairman Kennedy: On behalf of the American Public Health
Association (APHA), I write to express our serious reservations
regarding the nomination of James Holsinger, Jr., M.D., for surgeon
general of the United States. APHA is the Nation's oldest, largest and
most diverse organization of public health professionals in the world
representing more than 50,000 members from over 50 public health
occupations--dedicated to protecting all Americans, their families and
their communities from preventable, serious health threats and assuring
community-based health promotion and disease prevention activities and
preventive health services are universally accessible in the United
States.
As our Nation's most trusted advisor and leading educator on
health, the surgeon general plays a vital role in promoting health,
preventing disease and protecting the public. Scientific objectivity
must be the standard for any nominee.
APHA is very concerned with Dr. Holsinger's past writings regarding
his views of homosexuality, which put his political and religious
ideology before established medical science. We have long opposed
discrimination against individuals based on their sexual orientation.
At a time when one of our association's top priorities is to eliminate
disparities in health, including disparities in the gay and lesbian
community, we cannot support a nominee with discredited and non-
evidence-based views on sexuality. While we have no doubt that Dr.
Holsinger has made positive contributions throughout his medical and
public health career, we believe his previously expressed views on
sexuality are inconsistent with mainstream medicine and public health
practice and ask that you thoroughly examine them.
We are hopeful that the Senate will reject his nomination and urge
the President to put forth another nominee. This nominee must be an
established leader on a broad range of public health and health care
issues. The nominee should have experience and training in population
health and be respected and accepted by his or her counterparts at the
Federal, State and local levels. Finally, he or she must be able to
engender trust, bring people together and be a professional with the
highest level of ethics and objectivity while working to protect the
health of all Americans.
Thank you for your attention to our concerns regarding Dr.
Holsinger's nomination.
Sincerely,
Georges C. Benjamin, M.D., FACP, FACEP (Emeritus),
Executive Director.
______
June 7, 2007.
NEWS RELEASE
log cabin republicans* urge senate to reject nominee for
u.s. surgeon general
Washington, DC.--Log Cabin Republicans urge the Senate to reject
Dr. James Holsinger's nomination to serve as U.S. Surgeon General.
``Dr. Holsinger's professional views about sexual orientation fall far
outside the scientific mainstream, and call into question his ability
to fairly deal with critical medical issues,'' said Log Cabin President
Patrick Sammon. While the President should ordinarily receive the
benefit of the doubt in his appointments, the post of U.S. Surgeon
General requires a nominee who relies on science and fact.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Log Cabin Republicans is the Nation's largest organization of
Republicans who support fairness, freedom, and equality for gay and
lesbian Americans. Log Cabin has State and local chapters nationwide,
full-time offices in Washington, DC. and Sacramento, CA, a Federal
political action committee and State political action committees.
www.logcabin.org.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Holsinger's professional opinion on gays and lesbians is contained
in an eight-page report that he wrote in 1991 for the United Methodist
Church, entitled, ``Pathophysiology of Male Homosexuality.'' The
report, which goes into graphic detail about sexuality, has received
harsh criticism from medical experts for its ideological overtones and
false statements about the nature of gays and lesbians. He argued in
the report that homosexuality is biologically unnatural.
Holsinger was a founder of Hope Springs Community Church in
Lexington, Kentucky. The church operates a so-called ``ex-gay''
ministry, which seeks to change a person's sexual orientation--a
concept that has been debunked by every major medical and psychological
association and mainstream researcher who has studied this issue.
``The medical community has long rejected the notion that sexual
orientation can be changed,'' said Sammon. ``The fact that Dr.
Holsinger advocates this type of junk science is troubling and
represents a wholesale rejection of accepted and mainstream scientific
opinion.''
``During the Senate confirmation hearings, we expect a thorough
examination of Holsinger's professional views,'' said Sammon. ``Absent
a full and complete explanation from him, one that makes it clear that
he rejects the junk science he once embraced, the Senate should reject
his nomination.''
______
June 5, 2007.
The National Physicians Alliance Expresses Deep Concern Over the
Nomination of Dr. James Holsinger, Jr. for Surgeon General of the
United States
Reston, VA.--The National Physicians Alliance today announced that
it has serious reservations regarding Dr. James Holsinger 's nomination
for surgeon general of the United States. The concern is based on
Holsinger's apparent authorship of a piece entitled ``Pathophysiology
of Male Homosexuality,'' which wields the jargon of medical science in
support of his strong, well documented religious opposition to
homosexuality.\1\ \2\ If Holsinger did indeed author this document, the
implications are worrisome.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ James W. Holsinger, Jr., M.D., ``Pathophysiology of Male
Homosexuality,'' Prepared for the Committee to Study Homosexuality of
The United Methodist Church (Jan. 14, 1991).
\2\ http://confessingumc.org/Newsletter/cmnewsma98.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services,
``The Surgeon General serves as America's chief health educator by
providing Americans the best scientific information available on how to
improve their health and reduce the risk of illness and injury.'' \3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ http://www.surgeongeneral.gov/aboutoffice.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
``We cannot abide a surgeon general prejudiced against an already
underserved and medically stigmatized population,'' said Dr. Lydia
Vaias, president of the National Physicians Alliance. ``It is
imperative that the Nation's chief health educator publicly recognize
and work to address the health concerns of all people, including the
GLBT community. Homosexuality itself is not an illness and prejudice
based on the religious exclusion of gay and lesbian people is not
consistent with medical ethics. The surgeon general should not be a
person predisposed to denigrate an entire swath of our population.''
United across medical specialties, the National Physicians Alliance
seeks to restore physicians' primary emphasis on the core values of our
profession: service, integrity, and advocacy. We work to improve health
and well being, and to ensure equitable, affordable, high quality
health care for all people.
To learn more about the National Physicians Alliance, our strategic
priorities, and what makes us different, please visit us online at
http://www.npalliance.org/.
______
AIDS ACTION,
June 6, 2007.
Hon. Edward Kennedy,
U.S. Senate,
317 Russell Senate Office Bldg.,
Washington, DC. 20510.
Hon. Michael Enzi,
U.S. Senate,
379 Russell Senate Office Bldg.,
Washington, DC. 20510.
Dear Chairman Kennedy and Ranking Member Enzi: On behalf of AIDS
Action I am writing to express our opposition to the confirmation of
Dr. James W. Holsinger, Jr. as the Surgeon General of the United
States.
The mission of the Surgeon General is that ``The Surgeon General
serves as America's chief health educator by providing Americans the
best scientific information available on how to improve their health
and reduce the risk of illness and injury.'' The Surgeon General of the
United States has long been called America's doctor. There should never
be a question about the Surgeon General's devotion to helping Americans
to lead fit and healthy lives, nor their commitment to science.
Dr. Holsinger has a long, documented history of prejudice towards
lesbians and gay men. This includes attempting to put a scientific
veneer on his prejudice. In a paper prepared for the Committee to Study
Homosexuality of the United Methodist Church, Dr. Holsinger argues that
male homosexuality is ``pathophysioloigical'' (an abnormal function)
largely on his descriptions of the difference between the alimentary
and reproductive systems. This was an unscientific argument even during
the 1990s and is less scientific today. Perhaps even more troubling,
Dr. Holsinger helped to found Hope Springs Community Church which
``ministers to people who no longer wish to be gay or lesbian.''
Reparative therapy, also called conversion or reorientation therapy has
been repeatedly discredited by mainstream medical, psychiatric and
psychological organizations, including the American Medical Association
and the American Psychiatric Association. Unfortunately, Dr.
Holsinger's writing and support for a widely disputed and potentially
harmful approach leads AIDS Action to conclude that he is not able to
commit to the bedrock principles of science.
AIDS Action believes that the Surgeon General must be committed to
all Americans including those who have been left behind by our Nation's
healthcare system (as several people living with HIV are). As you are
well aware, HIV/AIDS is a disease, made all the more insidious because
of the high levels of stigma made against men, women and even children
who are living with the disease. Such stigma is often compounded by
biases towards race, gender, sexual orientation or income levels. The
personal biases of Dr. Holsinger are likely to perpetuate the stigma
associated with HIV/AIDS and homosexuality, hindering efforts to combat
the HIV epidemic in the United States.
In the past, the Surgeons General of the United States have been at
the forefront of leadership against HIV. For example Surgeon General C.
Everett Koop, the Surgeon General under President Ronald Reagan took
the unprecedented action of mailing information about HIV to every U.S.
household. Surgeon General David Satcher who served under President
Clinton certified, on the basis of all available scientific evidence,
that needle exchange both lowered the rate of transmission of HIV
infection and did not increase substance abuse. Both of these decisions
were made in the face of strong political opposition but faithfully
adhered to the current science. We must expect no less of the next
Surgeon General.
One of the duties of the Surgeon General is to provide leadership
in promoting special departmental health initiatives such as HIV
prevention efforts. Regretfully AIDS Action does not believe that Dr.
Holsinger, will ever be able to inspire the confidence of people living
with HIV/AIDS, nor will he be able to overcome his background of
leadership in efforts to specifically stigmatize lesbians and gay men,
who continue to be highly affected by HIV. Consequently we oppose his
nomination and ask that you do so as well.
Sincerely,
Rebecca Haag,
Executive Director.
______
July 11, 2007.
Hon. Edward Kennedy,
U.S. Senate,
317 Russell Senate Office Bldg.,
Washington, DC. 20510.
Hon. Michael Enzi,
U.S. Senate,
379 Russell Senate Office Bldg.,
Washington, DC. 20510.
Dear Chairman Kennedy and Ranking Member Enzi: We, the undersigned
HIV/AIDS, lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT), women's rights
and human rights service and advocacy organizations, are writing to
express our opposition to the confirmation of Dr. James W. Holsinger,
Jr., as the Surgeon General of the United States.
As you deliberate Dr. Holsinger's nomination, please remember that
the mission of the Surgeon General is to serve as America's chief
health educator by providing Americans the best scientific information
available on how to improve their health and reduce the risk of illness
and injury. The Surgeon General of the United States has long been
called America's doctor. As America's doctor, the Surgeon General must
be devoted to helping ALL American's lead healthy lives and be firmly
committed to science.
Dr. Holsinger has had an extensive medical career; however, he also
has a long documented history of prejudice towards lesbians and gay
men. HIV/AIDS continues to be one of the most devastating public health
crises facing our Nation, heavily impacting the gay community. HIV/AIDS
is a disease made all the more insidious because of the high levels of
stigma surrounding homosexuality. Dr. Holsinger's personal biases,
which he has expressed publicly, are likely to perpetuate stigma
associated with homosexuality, hindering efforts to combat the HIV/AIDS
epidemic in the United States. It is doubtful that Dr. Holsinger will
be able to advance objective public health policies for the LGBT
community if he believes that homosexuality should be discouraged and
altered.
In 1991, Dr. Holsinger prepared a paper for the United Methodist
Church entitled ``Pathophysiology of Male Homosexuality,'' in which he
attempts to give a scientific and medical rationale for his opinions
that homosexuality is abnormal and that the sexual practices of gay men
pose health dangers. In this paper, he repeatedly misrepresents and
distorts medical science, including the studies he cites in order to
support his own beliefs. Furthermore, Dr. Holsinger makes several
fallacious claims in his paper, which were refuted by widely published
and well respected medical and public health journals. Some of these
studies were published as much as a decade before Dr. Holsinger's
paper.
His record also shows his support for reparative therapy to
``cure'' homosexuals. Reparative therapy, also called conversion or
reorientation therapy, has been repeatedly discredited by mainstream
medical, psychiatric and psychological organizations, including the
American Medical Association, the American Psychological Association
and the American Psychiatric Association. This practice has been shown
to lead to depression and even suicide. If Dr. Holsinger has approved
of its use, it conflicts with his duty to accept and promote sound
science in the interest of public health.
Dr. Holsinger's attempts to put a scientific veneer on his
prejudices and his writing and support for a widely disputed and
potentially harmful approach leads us to conclude that he is not able
to adhere to the bedrock principles of science and puts his ability to
advocate for the better health of all those living with and at risk for
HIV/AIDS into serious question. We believe that if confirmed, he will
not gain the confidence of people living with HIV/AIDS and will further
marginalize and stigmatize LGBT people.
In the past, the Surgeons General of the United States have been at
the forefront of leadership against HIV. For example Surgeon General C.
Everett Koop, the Surgeon General under President Ronald Reagan took
the unprecedented action of mailing information about HIV to every U.S.
household. Surgeon General David Satcher who served under President
Clinton certified, on the basis of all available scientific evidence,
that needle exchange both lowered the rate of transmission of HIV
infection and did not increase substance abuse. Both of these decisions
were made in the face of strong political opposition but faithfully
adhered to the current science. We must expect no less of the next
Surgeon General.
A Surgeon General with a record of prejudice towards and bias
against lesbians and gay men would likely be a divisive, polarizing
figure and detrimental to the health and well-being of all Americans.
Furthermore, a Surgeon General that is not committed to evidence-based
science would jeopardize public heath efforts such as the prevention,
care, and treatment of HIV/AIDS.
Consequently, we oppose the nomination of Dr. James Holsinger, Jr.,
for Surgeon General. As confirmation hearings ensue, we ask that you
also oppose his nomination.
Sincerely,
Advocates for Youth--Washington, DC.; AIDS Action Baltimore--
Baltimore, MD; AIDS Action Coalition--Huntsville, AL; AIDS Action
Committee of Massachusetts, Inc--Boston, MA; AIDS Action Council--
Washington, DC.; AIDS Care Ocean State--Providence, RI; AIDS Family
Services--Buffalo, NY.; AIDS Foundation of Chicago--Chicago, IL; The
AIDS Institute--Washington, DC.; AIDS Project Los Angeles--Los Angeles,
CA; AIDS Resource Alliance, Inc.--Williamsport, PA; AIDS Services
Foundation Orange County--Irvine, CA; AIDS Survival Project, Georgia's
Statewide Resource for Community-based Advocacy and HIV Treatment
Education--Atlanta, GA; AIDS Taskforce of Greater Cleveland--Cleveland,
OH; Alliance of AIDS Services Carolina--Raleigh, NC; Altamed Health
Services Corporation--Los Angeles, CA; American Academy of HIV
Medicine--Washington, DC.; Americans for Safe Access--Washington, DC.;
amfAR, The Foundation for AIDS Research--Washington, DC.; Association
of Nutrition Services Agencies--Washington, DC.; Austin Health Center-
CBC Initiative--Chicago, IL; Brothers Uplifting Brothers, Inc--
Merrillville, IN; Campaign to End AIDS--Florida; Central Illinois
FRENDS of PWA, Inc.--Peoria, IL; CHAIN (Community HIV/Hepatitis
Advocates of Iowa Network)--Des Moines, IA; Chattanooga CARES HIV/AIDS
Resource Center--Chatanooga, TN; Community HIV/AIDS Mobilization
Project (CHAMP)--Providence, RI; The Feminist Majority--Arlington, VA;
Gay Men's Health Crisis--New York, NY; Hispanic AIDS Forum--New York,
NY; HIVictorious, Inc--Madison, WI; Housing Works, Inc--Brooklyn, NY;
Hudson Pride Connections--Jersey City, NJ; Human Rights Campaign--
Washington, DC.; Legacy Community Health Services, Inc--Houston, TX;
The Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Community Center--New York,
NY; Liberty Research Group, HIV/AIDS Advocates and Consultants--
Rochester, NY; The LIFE Program--VA; Lifelong AIDS Alliance--Seattle,
WA; The LOFT: LGBT Community Center for New York's Lower Hudson
Valley--White Plains, NY; Log Cabin Republicans--Washington, DC.;
Milwaukee LGBT Community Center--Milwaukee, WI; Minnesota AIDS
Project--Minneapolis, MN; Montrose Counseling Center--Houston, TX; The
NAMES Project/AIDS Memorial Quilt--Atlanta, GA; Nashville Cares--
Nashville, TN; National Alliance of State & Territorial AIDS
Directors--Washington, DC.; National Association of Lesbian, Gay,
Bisexual and Transgender Community Centers--Washington, DC.; National
Association of People with AIDS--Silver Spring, MD; National Coalition
for LGBT Health--Washington, DC.; National Council of Jewish Women--
Washington, DC.; National Gay and Lesbian Task Force--Washington, DC.;
National Minority AIDS Council--Washington, DC.; Needle Exchange
Program of Asheville--Asheville, NC; New York AIDS Coalition--New York,
NY; New York Association on HIV over Fifty--New York, NY; New York
State Black Gay Network--New York, NY; North Shore Health Project--
Gloucester, MA; Oklahoma Native American AIDS Coalition--Tulsa, OK;
Open Door Clinic--Elgin, IL; Outreach, Inc.--Madison, WI; Parents,
Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG)--Washington, DC.;
Pittsburgh AIDS Task Force--Pittsburgh, PA; Planned Parenthood
Federation of America--Washington, DC.; Project HOPE of DEAF, Inc--
Allston, MA; Project Inform--San Francisco, CA; Seacoast Outright--
Portsmouth, NH; Sexuality Information and Education Council of the
United States (SIECUS)--Washington, DC.; SMART, Inc- Sisterhood
Mobilized for AIDS/HIV Research and Treatment--New York, NY;
SmithBarnabee & Co., LPA--Bedford, OH; South Carolina Campaign to End
AIDS--Columbia, SC; Special Audiences, Inc--Newark, NJ; Tapestry
Health--Greenfield, MA; Tarzana Treatment Centers--Los Angeles, CA;
Tennessee Association of People with AIDS--Nashville, TN; TII CANN--
Title II Community AIDS National Network--Washington, DC.; Whitman
Walker Clinic--Washington, DC.
______
The AIDS Institute,
Washington, DC.,
June 6, 2007.
the aids institute registers grave concerns about nomination of the
next u.s. surgeon general
Washington, DC.--The AIDS Institute is expressing grave concerns
over the nomination of Dr. James Holsinger as the next U.S. Surgeon
General. ``While Dr. Holsinger does have a substantive medical
background, there are a number of disturbing reports from his past that
are raising red flags,'' commented Dr. Gene Copello, Executive Director
of The AIDS Institute. ``Particularly troubling are his views on
homosexuality. HIV/AIDS continues to be a major public health epidemic
in the United States. With the gay community so heavily impacted by
HIV/AIDS, we question if Dr. Holsinger is the right person to be
`America's chief health educator.' ''
``If the nomination is ever considered by the Senate Committee on
Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions, we trust Senators will
carefully examine the many reports being made about Dr. Holsinger's
past to determine if he is the best qualified physician in the country
to serve as the Nation's Surgeon General for the next 4 years. The
public health of all Americans, including gay, lesbian, bisexual, and
transgender Americans, is just too important,'' Copello continued.
According to numerous reports, Dr. Holsinger helped to found a
church that ministers to persons changing their sexual orientation (so
called ``ex-gays'') and preaches that homosexuality is a chosen
lifestyle not an orientation. He also endorsed a pastor who tried to
prohibit an openly gay man from joining the church. Time magazine
reported in 1991 that Dr. Holsinger quit a United Methodist Church
panel on homosexuality ``because he felt certain the report would
follow liberal lines.'' He also has written that when viewing
homosexuality, ``biological and anatomical incompatibility'' should be
considered.
Copello concluded: ``It's difficult to see how a person with these
views would be able to reach out to and be accepted by the gay
community as an effective health and wellness messenger, a central role
of the U.S. Surgeon General.''
______
Hon. Edward Kennedy, Chairman,
U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions,
428 Senate Dirksen Office Building,
Washington DC. 20510.
Hon. Michael Enzi, Ranking Member,
U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions,
428 Senate Dirksen Office Building,
Washington, DC. 20510.
Dear Senators Kennedy and Enzi: We are writing in anticipation of
the hearing on President George Bush's nominee for Surgeon General of
the United States, Dr. James W. Holsinger, Jr. As medical professionals
who have had a long interest in the many public health issues facing
the United States we feel compelled to express our concerns about Dr.
Holsinger's 1991 paper, ``Pathophysiology of Male Homosexuality,''
prepared for the Committee to Study Homosexuality of The United
Methodist Church. Among our contributers we feel compelled to point out
that Dr. Owen is a co-author of one of the works that was specifically
cited in Dr. Holsinger's paper. Others of us have written about or
worked directly on, the health issues of lesbians, gay men, bisexual
and transgender (LGBT) people at the time the paper was written and
through the present.
We start by stating that we recognize that the paper was
specifically written to advocate in support of the position that
homosexuality is a ``pathophysiology'' (abnormal function) for the
purpose of a discussion within the Methodist Committee to Study
Homosexuality and also that the paper was not submitted to peer review.
However, the paper is medically significant because Dr. Holsinger
specifically writes from his authority as a doctor with the intention
of basing his beliefs in science. As such, Dr. Holsinger specifically
cites consideration of anatomy, physiology, and pathophysiology. It is
clear that the paper was meant to impress upon the committee the idea
that there was a scientific consensus within some disciplines for
concluding that homosexuality is abnormal. Were it not for his both
explicit and implicit claim that the paper represents a consensus
within parts of the scientific community we would not concern ourselves
with the document. Unfortunately, we believe that the document
misrepresents the actual scientific understanding of homosexuality in
1991.
The thesis of Dr. Holsinger's work is that male homosexuality is a
pathophysiological (e.g., abnormal) function. Dr. Holsinger seeks to
support this via one main assertion, that the male and female sex can
be scientifically shown to be complementary. He implies, but does not
specifically state, that if it can be shown that the sexes are
complementary, sexual behavior outside of this complementary structure
is necessarily abnormal. As proof of complementarity, he cites the
separation of the alimentary and reproductive systems in humans. He
then cites instances of elevated disease and injury levels among
homosexuals as evidence that homosexuals have breached the
complementarity of the sexes. In fact one of the key issues that Dr.
Holsinger fails to note in this paper is that risky or unsafe sexual
practices can lead to the health issues whether or not they occur in
the heterosexual and homosexual population. This conclusion was widely
understood at the time Dr. Holsinger wrote this paper. Dr. Holsinger
makes much of this supposed elevation of disease and injury within the
gay male community and in our opinion in several instances the data
that Dr. Holsinger cites is either misrepresented or glaringly
incomplete and thus does not reflect the scientific consensus as it was
known even in 1991. The paper looks even less scientific in light of
today's knowledge.
First it is important to note that we do not take a position on the
concept of ``complementarity'' except to note that as the concept is
used in this paper, it is essentially a religious or non-scientific
concept and consequently not subject to proof under the scientific
method. Dr. Holsinger begins his discussion on complementarity on pp.
1-2 by noting that there is a scientific consensus that the alimentary
and reproductive systems are separate and then further asserts that the
``vagina is designed to receive the penis'' (emphasis added). He
further seeks to show that this is true by noting that the vagina has a
squamous epithelium (a protective layer of cells) and a muscular tube
``intended'' to receive the penis (emphasis added).
Unfortunately evidence of design is not a testable scientific
hypothesis. It is certainly true to note that most scientists in 1991
(and today) may have accepted the concept that the vagina and penis
mutually evolved. However, it would not have been possible at the time
and is not currently possible now for scientists to take the next step
and state that mutual evolution means that the vagina is ``intended''
to ``complement'' the penis. This is not a scientifically testable
hypothesis. Unfortunately, it is difficult to tell whether this
confusion over the scientific and religious meanings of the word
``complementary'' is intentional or simply in error.
While we take issue with the portrayal of science as we have stated
above, we have greater concerns with the sections of the paper that
purport to show elevated rates of disease among gay men. In our
opinion, Dr. Holsinger misrepresented data from some of the studies
which he cites by failing to include important points from those
studies that would have undermined his points. Additionally although he
cites 14 studies in his bibliography we do not believe that he
accurately depicted the thrust of most of those studies and we also do
not believe that he accurately represented the wide range of opinion
and papers available in 1991.
First, Dr. Holsinger draws conclusions from samples that are not
representative of men who have sex with men (MSM). The studies cited by
Dr. Holsinger are neither random nor representative of the overall
population of gay men. For example, on page 3 Dr. Holsinger purports to
give data on the rates of STDs among men who have sex with men.
However, the study he cites draws its data from a sample of 365 men at
a single STD clinic in Copenhagen. This is a small sample based on a
specific urban environment. It cannot be taken as representative of all
gay men. Similarly, the major studies by Agnew, Bush, and Geist (pages
2-5) observe conditions in patients who visited an emergency room.
Since the sample takes place in an emergency setting it will of
necessity yield alarming instances of injury and sickness, but
emergency room patients simply are not representative of all men who
engage in anal intercourse with other men, indeed it is likely that
very few gay men experience trauma due to anal intercourse sufficient
to cause them to go to the emergency room. While the studies themselves
are sound, Dr. Holsinger misuses them to attempt to support his own
conclusions--conclusions that they are not intended to support.
A well-known, peer-reviewed study, ``The Gay Report on Sexually
Transmitted Diseases'' found that ``specific sexual activities such as
anal sex and anilingus did not appear to be as important as the number
of different lifetime sexual partners and furtive sexual activities.''
That study was reported 10 years prior to 1991 and was based on a large
sample size of more than 4,000 answers to a survey on sexual health and
practices conducted in 1977. While we do not believe that Dr. Holsinger
should have attempted to cite every study available to him, it is a
reality that there were hundreds if not thousands of studies available
and many of these studies concluded that safe sex between men who have
sex with men was possible. Dr. Holsinger ignores this large body of
work.
Even more problematically, Dr. Holsinger misapplies data from
sources discussing heterosexual sex, non-consensual sex and sex in
which proper safety precautions are not practiced to imply that
consensual anal sex between men is more dangerous than vaginal sex
between men and women. In doing so, we believe that he seriously mis-
states the dangers of male-to-male anal sex and contravenes the
scientific consensus about anal sex between males as it was known in
1991.
There are numerous examples of this. On page 2, the data from the
Bush and Geist studies drew evidence largely from victims of sexual
assault (generally female victims in the Geist study), which Dr.
Holsinger does not mention in his writing. By excluding this important
data Dr. Holsinger implies that his conclusions are about consensual
sex between men rather than sexual assault on either a man or a woman.
On the same page, Dr. Holsinger discusses abrasions and lacerations
that result from penetration by foreign objects with the implication
that this is typical of men who have sex with men. However, Agnew whose
study is miscited by Dr. Holsinger actually discusses penile-anal
intercourse separately with different findings. Data on harm from
penetration by foreign objects cannot be used to support conclusions
about intercourse, yet this is precisely what Dr. Holsinger attempts to
do.
It was well known in 1991 that anal sex could be safely practiced
both between straight men and women and between gay men. Unfortunately
that anal sex between men could be practiced safely is never mentioned
by Dr. Holsinger, despite the fact that it was explicitly stated in the
very papers that he cites. This is a very serious omission. On page 5,
Dr. Holsinger quotes the Bush study as saying,
``Consensual penile-anal intercourse can be performed safely
provided there is adequate lubrication. Few anorectal problems and no
evidence of anal-sphincter dysfunction are found in heterosexual women
who have anal-receptive intercourse.''
Dr. Holsinger does not give any explanation as to why similarly
safe anal sex cannot be practiced by men who have sex with men. Dr.
Holsinger also fails to note that Geist states that lacerations to the
anus are ``neither uncommon nor serious'' and describes similar vaginal
lacerations that can occur during penile-vaginal intercourse.
Dr. Holsinger follows this dual reasoning throughout his paper and
often implies that conditions which apply to both men who have sex with
men and their straight male and female counterparts are exclusively
problematic for men who have sex with men. Most dramatically on page 3
Dr. Holsinger, quoting from the Owen study, lists 26 sexually
transmitted diseases that ``may be encountered in homosexually active
men.'' However, all of these diseases may also be encountered in
sexually active heterosexual men and women. Dr. Holsinger does not note
that. On page 6 he discusses the presence of anal warts and their
relationship to human papilloma virus (HPV). He does not additionally
note that HPV is related to elevated levels of genital warts and
cervical cancer among women. It should be stated that HPV was not as
well understood in 1991 as it is today. However, it was known that HPV
had a strong correlation with genital warts and cervical cancer and
complete omission of this topic as being an issue among sexually active
straight men and women also does not reflect the scientific consensus
of that time.
One consequence of Dr. Holsinger's exclusive focus on injury and
sexually transmitted disease is that he implicitly and explicitly
accuses all MSM of engaging in high-risk sexual practices. This is a
complete exaggeration. A paper published in 1986 concluded after
compiling survey answers from 403 MSM in New York City from 1982-1983
that the average number of sexual partners per month had declined by
nearly 50 percent, and that 49.5 percent of MSM had cut down on or
entirely stopped unsafe activities such as unprotected anal sex.
Similarly, two other studies published in 1987 and 1989 reached the
same conclusions: that promiscuity and unprotected sex had declined in
response to education about the risks of HIV/AIDS.
Finally the paper significantly sidesteps the scientific consensus
from fields other than those listed in the paper. This severely
reductive approach thus allows Dr. Holsinger to bypass studies that
directly undercut his theory that homosexuality is abnormal from fields
other than biology, anatomy, physiology, pathology and pathophysiology.
Most notable of course, the view of homosexuality as a mental illness
(and thus abnormal in the sense that most people understood the term to
mean) had long been rejected by the medical establishment. In 1973, the
American Psychiatric Association removed homosexuality from the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), the
official manual that lists mental and emotional disorders. The American
Psychological Association passed a resolution supporting the removal
within the next 2 years.
In 1991, the medical field did not believe that homosexuality was
abnormal. Most of the medical field accepted the conclusion found in a
lengthy review of the literature on men who have sex with men that,
``Physicians can best help their homosexual patients by accepting them
and their relationships nonjudgmentally and by understanding their
special health needs.''
In summation, we have deep concerns about Dr. Holsinger's paper. We
are concerned that the paper misrepresents, in the aforementioned ways,
the studies on which the paper was based. In addition, it explicitly
seeks to show that there is a complementarity to the male and female
sexes. Unfortunately the concept of complementarity as Dr. Holsinger
describes it is not testable and is thus not scientific.
Finally the paper implicitly attempts to show that there is a
scientific consensus for the proposition that homosexuality is
abnormal, when in fact the scientific consensus in 1991 was much more
strongly in favor of the concept that homosexuality is not abnormal and
is not a disorder. Incidentally, that consensus has only strengthened
over time. We are forced to draw the conclusion that Dr. Holsinger's
paper is not based on science but rather is ideology with a veneer of
science.
As ``America's Doctor'' and chief health educator, the Surgeon
General of the United States must be firmly and undoubtedly committed
to the best science available. Dr. Holsinger's paper puts his ability
to base health policies on scientific evidence, rather than ideological
principles, into question. We therefore urge you to reject Dr.
Holsinger's nomination.
Jerry Cade, M.D., AAHIVS AAHIVM Public Policy Committee, UNLV
University Medical Center, Las Vegas, NV; Judith Feinberg, M.D., AAHIVS
AAHIVM Public Policy Committee, Infectious Disease Center, University
of Cincinnati, Holmes Hospital, Cincinnati, OH; Jason Flamm, M.D.,
AAHIVS AAHIVM Public Policy Committee, Kaiser Permanente, Sacramento,
CA; Eric Goosby, M.D., Pangaea Global AIDS Foundation, San Francisco,
CA; Steve O'Brien, M.D., East Bay AIDS Center, Oakland, CA; William F.
Owen, Jr., M.D., Co-author of ``Trauma and Other Noninfectious Problems
in Homosexual Men,'' San Francisco, CA; Jeffrey T. Schouten, M.D., JD,
AAHIVS AAHIVM Public Policy Committee Seattle, WA; Charles M. Walworth,
M.D., Center for Special Immunology, Fountain Valley, CA; and Michael
T. Wong, M.D., AAHIVM Public Policy Committee, Beth Israel Deaconess
Medical Center, Division of Infectious Disease, Boston, MA.
______
Methodist Federation for Social Action (MFSA)
To: The Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions:
Senators Edward Kennedy, Christopher Dodd, Tom Harkin, Barbara A.
Mikulski, Jeff Bingaman, Patty Murray, Jack Reed, Hillary Rodham
Clinton, Barack Obama, Bernard Sanders, Sherrod Brown, Michael B. Enzi,
Judd Gregg, Lamar Alexander, Richard Burr, Johnny Isakson, Lisa
Murkowski, Orrin G. Hatch, Pat Roberts, Wayne Allard, and Tom Coburn,
M.D.
From: The Rev. Kathryn Johnson, Executive Director, Methodist
Federation for Social Action, Bishop Clifton Ives, Co-President,
Methodist Federation for Social Action, and Ms. Marilyn Outslay, Co-
President Methodist Federation for Social Action
Date: June 22, 2007
Re: The Nomination of Dr. James Holsinger for Surgeon General
On behalf of the Methodist Federation for Social Action, a
nationwide network of United Methodists, we are writing to express deep
concern about the nomination of Dr. James Holsinger to the position of
Surgeon General of the United States and to urge the Senators who will
be acting on this nomination to take these concerns into account.
As church leaders, we are not in a position to critique Dr.
Holsinger's medical credentials. We do feel qualified, however, to
comment on his demeanor and effectiveness in positions of leadership
within the United Methodist Church.
Dr. Holsinger serves as the President of the United Methodist
Judicial Council, the ``Supreme Court'' of the United Methodist Church
if you will. In the past few years an unprecedented number of decisions
supported by Dr. Holsinger and the conservative majority of which he is
part, have been challenged by the Council of Bishops and in two cases
have been reversed. In a case decided last year related to the court's
understanding of who has authority to determine church membership, the
court's decision has caused an uproar throughout the church.
Both in his work with the United Methodist Committee to Study
Homosexuality and in his position as President of the United Methodist
Judicial Council, Dr. Holsinger's actions often appear to be
ideologically driven. This certainly seems to be the case with the
paper he authored entitled, ``Pathophysiology of Male Homosexuality.''
In this paper Dr. Holsinger lifts up health concerns related to the
sexual behavior of some homosexuals. He writes about this not as a
means to say that the medical field must therefore aid homosexual men
in maintaining their health, but rather to propose that male homosexual
behavior is ``pathological.''
In one of the most helpful articles we have found written about the
work of Dr. Holsinger, author Jim Burroway has carefully studied
Holsinger's ``Pathophysiology of Male Homosexuality'' and concludes
that it has ``very little scientific value.'' He writes, ``Worse, it
shows a startling eagerness to pull evidence out of context to provide
damning evidence against gay men, while willfully ignoring counter
evidence in the same literature which essentially destroys the core of
his arguments.'' We strongly commend this paper to anyone in a position
to make decisions related to Dr. Holsinger's fitness to serve as
Surgeon General. It can be found at http://www.boxturtlebulletin.com/
2007/06/11/431.
There have been reports in the press about Dr. Holsinger's
respectful behavior with individual gay and lesbian persons. We have no
reason to doubt accounts of acts of individual kindness. Dr. Holsinger
has not been nominated, however, to serve as a chaplain to individuals.
He has been nominated to a position as the Nation's chief health
educator.
There have also been press reports challenging opponents to Dr.
Holsinger for attacking him on the basis of his religious beliefs. We
wish to be very clear that we are not doing this. We have no problem
with persons of faith serving in public office. Nor would we discourage
individuals from allowing their faith commitments to inform their
ethics in making decisions. Indeed, as an organization, we encourage
this. Our concern comes when we observe a person, such as Dr.
Holsinger, appearing to sacrifice medical and scientific accuracy in
support of his ideological commitments.
At a time when our Nation is deeply polarized on so many issues, it
is important to have someone in the position of surgeon general who is
widely trusted across the board, a person Americans believe will act
with medical integrity. Americans must be confident that the surgeon
general will promote the common good, making decisions and promoting
policies in the best interest of all citizens.
Perhaps most important, national leaders, including the surgeon
general, should be persons who can bridge the inevitable divisions that
arise between citizens in a pluralistic society such as ours. We
question whether Dr. Holsinger is such a person.
______
The North American Old Catholic Church,
Washington, DC. 20002-6427,
June 7, 2007.
Senator Edward Kennedy, Chairman,
Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions,
428 Senate Dirksen Office Building,
Washington, DC. 20510.
Dear Mr. Chairman: I write to you today regarding President Bush's
nomination of Dr. John Holsinger for the position of Surgeon General of
the United States.
In media reports, it has become apparent that Dr. Holsinger,
through a church he helped to found in Kentucky, advocates a
``treatment'' for homosexuality called Conversion Therapy, which uses
spiritual and unfounded, dangerous, and harmful ``psychological''
methods to ``treat'' the condition of being gay.
According to the Web site for the office of the Surgeon General of
the United States, one of the chief responsibilities of the Surgeon
General is \1\ ``To articulate scientifically based health policy
analysis and advice to the President and the Secretary of Health and
Human Services (HHS) on the full range of critical public health,
medical, and health system issues facing the Nation.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ http://www.surgeongeneral.gov/aboutoffice.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In reviewing The American Psychological Association Web site, it is
apparent that Conversion Therapy is not based in any way on scientific
fact, but on bias, prejudice, and ideological perspectives that are
inconsistent with quality mental health standards. On the APA Web
site,\2\ they state:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ http://www.apa.org/logics/orientation;htm;/conversion
therapies.
``Some therapists who undertake so-called conversion therapy
report that they have been able to change their clients' sexual
orientation from homosexual to heterosexual. Close scrutiny of
these reports however show several factors that cast doubt on
their claims. For example, many of the claims come from
organizations with an ideological perspective which condemns
homosexuality. Furthermore, their claims are poorly documented.
For example, treatment outcome is not followed and reported
overtime as would be the standard to test the validity of any
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
mental health intervention.
The American Psychological Association is concerned about such
therapies and their potential harm to patients. In 1997, the
Association's Council of Representatives passed a resolution
reaffirming psychology's proposition to homophobic in treatment and
spelling out a client's right to unbiased treatment and self-
determination. Any person who enters into therapy to deal with issues
of sexual orientation has a right to expect that such therapy would
take place in a professionally neutral environment absent of any social
bias.
It is apparent that Dr. Holsinger advocates a psychological
``treatment'' to homosexuality that is not rooted in science, but
rooted in prejudice.
The person appointed Surgeon General of the United States should be
a practitioner who advocates and participates in sound, proven medical
treatments that have been accepted by the professional medical
societies in the appropriate field of study. Conversion Therapy does
not meet that litmus test.
While we respect Dr. Holsinger's right to freely practice his
religious beliefs in his private life and medical practice, upon
appointment to be America's physician, his practice becomes public, and
he needs to represent only sound, accepted medical treatments to
American Citizens.
His ready acceptance of this controversial treatment, a treatment
that is opposed by practitioners specially trained in psychoanalysis
demonstrates his inability to properly fill the role of Surgeon General
of the United States.
On behalf of our clergy and members of our congregations in
Wisconsin, Illinois, Tennessee, Kentucky and the District of Columbia,
we strongly encourage you to vote AGAINST Dr. Holsinger's confirmation
as the eighteenth Surgeon General of the United States.
Cordially,
The Most Reverend Michael V. Seneco, SPSA, DD, L.Th.,
Presiding Archbishop.
______
June 5, 2007.
Senator Edward M. Kennedy, Chairperson,
Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions,
Russell Senate Office Building, Room 317,
Washington, DC.
Dear Senator Kennedy: I understand that you are the chair of the
Senate Committee that will be reviewing the nomination of Dr. James
Holsinger to be U.S. Surgeon General.
Attached is a commentary on serious questions being raised about
Dr. Holsinger's qualifications. They are based on reliable research.
There are two questions about his integrity and qualifications:
1. Dr. Holsinger claims to be a cardiologist without board
certification.
2. Dr. Holsinger is driven by personal views and has disregarded
the sensitivities and insights of other persons, particularly as Chair
of the Judicial Council of The United Methodist Church, The Judicial
Council functions as a ``Supreme Court'' on interpretation of our Book
of Discipline, the laws of our church. His partisan behavior in that
position disqualifies him from being a Surgeon General for all persons.
I ask you to argue against his appointment as Surgeon General.
Thank you for your consideration.
Roy I. Sano,
Executive Secretary, The Council of Bishops,
The United Methodist Church.
Attachment.--Bush Taps Judicial Council Head for Surgeon General
(By Cynthia B. Astia, Editor)
UM NeXus
President George W. Bush has nominated Dr. James W. Holsinger, Jr.,
68, currently president of the United Methodist Judicial Council, to
become the Nation's 18th surgeon general.
Holsinger's confirmation hearings will be held before the Senate
Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions, chaired by Senator
Ted Kennedy (D-MA). If confirmed, Holsinger will succeed Richard H.
Carmona, who resigned at the end of his term in July 2006. At UM NeXus'
deadline, no date had been set for the hearings because of Congress'
Memorial Day recess.
As word of the nomination spread, media outlets began raising
questions about Holsinger's qualifications and past performance, along
with questions of continued cronyism on the part of President Bush, as
with his previous nominations of Harriet Miers for the Supreme Court
and Alberto Gonzales as Attorney General.
ANATOMY, THE BIBLE AND REPUBLICANS
A Kansas City, KS, native, Holsinger has a Ph.D., in anatomy and a
medical degree from Duke University, along with a master's degree in
hospital management from the University of South Carolina. He also has
a master's degree in biblical studies from multidenominational Asbury
Theological Seminary in Wilmore, KY.
Although trained in general surgery and cardiology, and described
in President Bush's announcement as a cardiologist, Holsinger has no
national board certification in any speciality, according to the
Website of the American Board of Medical Specialities.
Holsinger currently holds the Wethington Chair in Health Sciences
and serves as professor of preventive medicine at the University of
Kentucky College of Public Health. Prior to his current UK post,
Holsinger led the Commonwealth of Kentucky Cabinet for Health and
Family Services from 2003 to 2005. Before that, he was chancellor of
UK's A.B. Chandler Medical Center for 9 years, and directed the
Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Lexington, KY, from 1993 to 1994.
Altogether, Holsinger served with the Veterans Administration,
renamed the Department of Veterans Affairs in 1989, from 1969 through
1994. He rose to Chief Medical Director and Undersecretary of Health
for the agency under President George H.W. Bush. Holsinger retired from
the Army Reserve Medical Corps in 1993 with the rank of major general.
Holsinger has been a consistent contributor to the Republican
Party, according to Newsmeat.com. The Web site lists close to $17,000
in contributions to the national Cheney, both fellow United Methodists,
and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY).
STAUNCH ANTI-GAY LEADER
In The United Methodist Church, Holsinger rose to national
prominence through his membership on the 1989-92 churchwide Committee
to Study Homosexuality. He resigned from the committee shortly before
the 1992 General Conference in Louisville, KY, because he said the
committee's report was ``skewed toward liberal interpretations'' of
homosexual orientation and behavior. At the time, Holsinger declined
the committee's invitation to be included in a minority report on the
subject.
Since that time, Holsinger has consistently supported forces in the
denomination opposed to the acceptance of gay, lesbian, bisexual and
transgender people. He has served previously on the board of the
Indianapolis-based Confessing Movement within The United Methodist
Church, a 15-year-old unofficial organization dedicated to ``preserving
the apostolic faith,'' according to a statement on its Web site.
Current Confessing Movement board members include Asbury Seminary
chancellor Dr. Maxie Dunnam and layman David W. Stanley, also a
director of the Institute on Religion and Democracy.
Holsinger was elected to the Judicial Council at the 2000 General
Conference in Cleveland, OH. He was nominated from the floor along with
Judicial Council members Mary A. Daffin, an attorney from Houston, TX,
and Rev. Keith D. Boyette of Spotsylvania, VA, in one of the most
successful political campaigns launched by the combined forces of the
Confessing Movement and the Good News caucus.
During Holsinger's term on the Judicial Council, the church's
``supreme court'' has ruled consistently against acceptance of
homosexual people. In 2005, the council upheld the defrocking of Rev.
Beth Stroud, a lesbian, affirming the church's prohibition against
ordaining GLBT people. Also that year, the Judicial Council set off a
wave of debate in the church by siding with a Virginia pastor who
refused membership to an openly gay man in Decision 1032. Several
annual conferences this year have adopted resolutions challenging the
views expressed in Decision 1032.
Holsinger currently serves in two other faith-based capacities, as
treasurer of the World Methodist Council based in Lake Junaluska, NC,
and as chairman of the Good Samaritan Foundation in Kentucky.
DEATHS AT VETERANS' HOSPITALS
According to a 1991 New York Times report, congressional
investigator Mary Ann Curran testified before a House subcommittee that
she found shoddy care at veterans hospitals, including several cases
during 1989 and 1990 in which incompetence and neglect led to the
deaths of patients. Curran visited six hospitals and studied the
records of another 30 facilities in her investigation.
At the time, Holsinger testified to the House Government Operations
Subcommittee on Human Resources and Intergovernmental Relations that
the VA was ``obviously not perfect,'' but said that he had begun
management changes intended to improve quality. At a briefing prior to
the hearing, Holsinger denied that there were systemic problems in the
Veterans Affairs' medical system.
However, 3 months later, the government ruled that the unit
Holsinger directed was responsible for 6 of 15 documented deaths at a
North Chicago veterans' hospital. Veterans' Affairs subsequently
negotiated confidential settlements with the patients' families.
POOR HEALTH IN KENTUCKY
After a stint as chancellor of the medical center at the University
of Kentucky, Holsinger was tapped in 2003 by Gov. Ernie Fletcher, also
a physician, to serve as the commonwealth's secretary of health.
Holsinger's term reached a low point in July 2005 when the
Louisville Courier-Journal published a special report showing that
Kentucky citizens had the worst health in the United States, primarily
through poor individual health habits such as smoking, bad nutrition
and lack of exercise. Kentucky ranked second worst nationally for
cancer deaths, fifth worst for cardiovascular deaths and seventh worst
for obesity, according to the paper.
Major chronic diseases cost the Kentucky Medicaid program $611
million for diabetes, $422 million for cancer, $372 million for
coronary artery disease and $728 million for chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease in the fiscal year ending June 2003.
At the time of the Courier-Journal report, Holsinger said that
Kentucky had ``some big mountains to climb'' in terms of promoting
better health among its citizens. Although he is credited with
initiating changes in the State's Medicaid system to save taxpayers
money, Holsinger left his position halfway through his term, 5 months
after the newspaper report, reportedly to spend more time with his
family. He joined the teaching staff of the University of Kentucky
College of Public Health.
$20 MILLION LAWSUIT
While Holsinger's political and academic colleagues praised his
nomination, United Methodist leaders in the Kentucky Annual Conference
were notably silent. The frigid reception to Holsinger's nomination as
Surgeon General most likely stems from a lawsuit still under way
between the conference and the Good Samaritan Foundation that Holsinger
chairs.
In January, Holsinger, on behalf of the foundation, said he planned
to launch a second appeal of a decision by Fayette Circuit Judge Gary
Payne. The judge ruled in 2003 that the Kentucky Annual Conference is
the rightful owner of an estimated $20 million from the foundation's
1995 sale of Good Samaritan Hospital in Lexington, KY, to Columbia/HCA
Healthcare Corp. The conference had filed suit in 2000, claiming it
owned the hospital through its historic relationship with the
foundation, which until Holsinger's chairmanship reported regularly to
annual conference sessions, according to the Rev. Chris Morgan's blog,
``Assembled Reflections.''
Under Holsinger's leadership, the foundation put the $20 million
into an endowment that typically provides $1 million in annual grants
for health care and health education. Judge Payne has ruled the
hospital was held in trust for the conference by the foundation, and
that the Kentucky Conference rightfully owns the money. An appeals
court upheld his ruling and returned the case to Payne, who last
December reaffirmed his earlier decision and ordered the foundation's
trustees to turn the money over to the conference. The appeal is still
pending.
PRAISE AND CRITICISM
Holsinger was unavailable for comment because the White House
instructed the doctor and his wife, Barbara, not to talk with
reporters, as is typical for a nominee prior to confirmation hearings.
However, the Holsingers' enforced silence did not stop both friends
and foes from discussing the doctor's nomination to serve as America's
chief health educator.
National Public Radio interviewed Holsinger's colleague, Dr.
Stephen Wyatt, head of the University of Kentucky's College of Public
Health. Wyatt commended Holsinger as ``a gentle man, with a sense of
humor, but very serious'' about public health. Wyatt said Holsinger
``cut through academic and financial barriers'' while chancellor of the
university's health care center.
The Rev. George Freeman, executive director of the World Methodist
Council, told United Methodist News Service: ``This is an honor for Dr.
Holsinger and a fitting acknowledgement of his competency as a
physician, administrator, teacher and leader.''
``Dr. Holsinger is a proven leader who has dedicated his career to
improving health education and services in Kentucky and across the
Nation,'' Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) told the
Louisville Courier-Journal. ``He is an excellent choice for surgeon
general, and I look forward to his quick confirmation.'' [According to
public records, Holsinger has given $1,500 to McConnell's campaigns
since 2001].
Meanwhile, the liberal site Buzzflash.com, after reporting on his
past performance, sniped:
``Dr. Holsinger seems like a great choice for the VP to take
hunting, but he hardly seems like the best candidate out of all
the doctors in America to become our next surgeon general.''
Also on Buzzflash, a reader who identified himself as a doctor
wrote about Holsinger's lack of board certification: ``While this
probably matters less for someone who has chosen to make their life as
a political hack than someone who actually takes care of patients, this
is certainly something of note. As a physician, I take it to mean that
he is someone who didn't care enough about his clinical training to
demonstrate competence according to national standards.''
Ultimately, the questions about Holsinger's performance,
qualifications and political connections may not hamper his Senate
confirmation.
The previous surgeon general, Dr. Richard Carmona, kept such a low
profile that most people hardly knew his name compared to his more
popular predecessors such as C. Everett Koop, Joycelyn Elders, a United
Methodist from Arkansas, and David Satcher, formerly president of UMC-
related Meharry Medical School in Nashville, TN.
Carmona, like Holsinger, has a controversial past. Among
allegations about Carmona made during his confirmation hearing: he was
an ineffective personnel manager, he had required three attempts to
pass the board certification test for general surgery and he
misrepresented the number of hours he actually had worked in the
emergency room on an application for an emergency medicine board
certification.
As a result, the consumer group Public Citizen opposed Carmona's
nomination, but the Senate dismissed the allegations against him, and
he was confirmed unanimously.
______
Cambridge Health Alliance,
Cambridge, MA.
Senator Edward M. Kennedy,
Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions,
Hart Senate Building,
Washington, DC. 20510.
Sandra M. Gallardo,
Senior Counsel, Oversight & Investigations.
Dear Ms. Gallardo: I have been asked to respond to the paper by Dr.
James W. Holsinger, Jr., entitled: ``Pathophysiology of Male
Homosexuality,'' written in 1991 for the Committee to Study
Homosexuality of the United Methodist Church. For the record, I am an
Associate Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and the
Director of Adult Psychiatry Residency Training at the Cambridge Health
Alliance, one of the Harvard Medical School residency programs in the
Department of Psychiatry. I have been studying gender and sexuality for
over 25 years and have written on this topic and taught sexuality at
professional association annual meetings for many years.
At the outset, before I list the specific objections to this paper,
let me state that current scientific thinking about sexuality in
general, and the development of homosexuality in particular has
continued to shift since 1991 to a more affirmative model of sexual
identity development, with every major medical and mental health
professional association now considering homosexuality as a normal
variant of human sexual development. There is no scientific evidence
that homosexual orientation itself is pathological, and the Diagnostic
and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders removed homosexuality from
the nomenclature in 1973.
Thus, my comments that follow are based on the fact that this paper
would not pass muster as a medical piece of writing, This is NOT a
scientific piece of writing. Without a doubt, this would never be
published in a peer review journal. It is inaccurate, unsupported by
current research findings, and draws conclusions which are illogical at
best. As a reviewer of refereed journals, I can say that this would not
even be considered for review by any of the mainstream medical
journals.
That being said, the very title of the paper does not make sense.
The title suggests the paper will explore the scientific
(pathophysiology) of male homosexuality. This is not at all what the
paper does, nor does it use the word pathophysiology as it is used in
science:
``Pathophysiology is the study of the disturbance of normal
mechanical, physical, and biochemical functions, either caused
by a disease, or resulting from a disease or abnormal syndrome
or condition that may not qualify to be called a disease.''
Two problems exist: (1) none of the existing medical associations
(American Psychiatric association, AMA, American Association of
Pediatrics, OBGYN) and (2) none of the mental health associations
(American Psychological Association, National Association of Social
Workers) consider homosexuality a ``disease of abnormal syndrome'' and
therefore the word ``pathophysiology'' is inaccurate. Furthermore, it
is not appropriate for a physician to express a personal opinion, which
in this case rests on religious principles rather than science, to
misuse a medical term.
The entire article rests on an assumption that somehow because we
do not have a cloaca, but have separate alimentary and genitourinary
tracts, that there is something inherently wrong with anal sex,
although it is practiced by all populations throughout the world.
Following this logic, oral sex, which uses the alimentary tract, would
also be ``abnormal'' making the vast majority of humans diagnosable as
``abnormal,'' including heterosexuals who engage at least as frequently
in oral sex as homosexual men.
Furthermore, if the principle that one orifice be used only for the
expressed purpose, it would follow logically that those who eat with
their mouths should refrain from talking with them as well, a very
distinct and biologically developed function as well.
The entire premise of this paper is based on the blaming of sexual
orientation for physical illness associated with biological organisms
passed from person to person. Kissing transmits infectious agents all
the time, as do almost all types of human intimate contact. The
participation of a relatively small number of people in more fringe
sexual behavior does not justify the determination that the sexual
orientation itself is pathological. After all, from a purely
statistical point of view, heterosexuality is responsible for 95
percent of HIV cases in the world, through so called ``normal
heterosexual behavior.'' The author also confuses sexual lifestyle
which may enhance the risk for certain sexually transmitted diseases
with sexual orientation. The articles quoted are taken out of context.
One might even make the point that the marginalization of
homosexuality oriented people promotes the development of
counterculture behavior. Two gay men, for example, in a mutually
monogamous relationship arc at less risk for STD's than heterosexuals
with multiple partners. This then reduces the authors point to the
basics; he is opposed to anything but a sanctified, monogamous
heterosexual relationship in which penile vaginal intercourse is the
ONLY permissible behavior to preserve his principle that one organ can
only be used for one purpose.
He further conflates historical use of the words male and female to
a discussion of ``pipe fittings.'' For thousands of years people
believed the earth was the center of the universe and that the earth
was flat. We still talk about the ``Salt Lake Flats, or as flat as
Nebraska'' when in fact we can not simply discern with the human eye
the ever so minimal curvature of the earth which is scientifically now
known.
To reduce a discussion of the complexity of human sexuality to a
discussion of pipe fittings is hardly a scientific argument supported
by either research or logic.
Homosexuality is known in almost all species and cultures across
throughout recorded time. Cave drawings, ancient paintings, have all
indicated homosexual behavior in many cultures and religions. This
author is conflating Christian religious doctrine with science, a
shameful excuse for the lack of scientific understanding. The author
conveniently leaves out the evidence that so called ``primitive
cultures'' knew about the separation of the alimentary and reproductive
systems--and yet there is much evidence to show that homosexual
behavior and anal sex between men and women occurred and continues to
occur frequently, with estimates of anal intercourse ranging from 5-40
percent.
This is not a scientific paper. It is an opinion piece by a
physician who has allowed personal religious beliefs to distort what
the body of scientific literature provides as our best understanding to
date of the great range of human gender identity and sexual orientation
development. The prevalence of homosexuality and the current knowledge
of the interplay of genetics, early development and complex biological
events in human development suggest that homosexual orientation is a
normal variant of the human condition.
Please let me know if I can be of further help in elucidating the
issues above.
Respectfully submitted,
Marshall Forstein, M.D.,
Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School,
Director, Adult Psychiatry Residency Training.
______
National Gay and Lesbian Task Force,
June 14, 2007.
Senator Edward Kennedy, Chairman,
Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, DC. 20510.
Dear Senator Kennedy: On behalf of the National Gay and Lesbian
Task Force--the oldest national organization advocating for the rights
of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people--we urge you to
oppose the nomination of Dr. James Holsinger to be the Surgeon General
of the United States. His record on LGBT issues causes us serious
concern.
In 1991, in his capacity as a medical professional, Dr. Holsinger
authored a troubling report filled with misconceptions and medical
inaccuracies. In a paper prepared for the Committee to Study
Homosexuality of the United Methodist Church, Dr. Holsinger argued that
male homosexuality is an abnormal function, a theory considered
unscientific by the medical community. Dr. Holsinger has also supported
reparative therapy, another theory discredited by mainstream medical,
psychiatric and psychological communities, including the American
Medical Association and the American Psychiatric Association. This
record indicates that Dr. Holsinger is unable to separate ideology from
science.
As America's doctor, the Surgeon General is required to consider
the health interests of all Americans. Dr. Holsinger's record shows
that his own biases will not allow him to look objectively at
scientific information. Consequently, he is not qualified to be Surgeon
General and we call upon the Senate to promptly reject his nomination.
Please feel free to contact Becky Dansky, Federal Legislative Director,
at (202) 639-6315 or [email protected] if you have any
questions.
Sincerely,
Matt Foreman,
Executive Director.
______
June 4, 2007.
Human Rights Campaign'--Working for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual
and Transgender Equal Rights
holsinger's anti-gay views make him ``unworthy'' of surgeon general
post
(``It is essential that America's top doctor value sound science over
anti-gay ideology,'' said Human Rights Campaign President Joe
Solmonese.)
Washington.--The Human Rights Campaign spoke out today in
opposition to President Bush's nomination of Dr. James Holsinger to the
position of Surgeon General. Among other things, the U.S. Surgeon
General is charged with educating Americans about public health.
``Dr. Holsinger has a record that is unworthy of America's
doctor,'' said Human Rights Campaign President Joe Solmonese. His
writings suggest a scientific view rooted in anti-gay beliefs that are
incompatible with the job of serving the medical health of all
Americans. It is essential that America's top doctor value sound
science over anti-gay ideology.
In a document titled Pathophysioloqy of Male Homosexuality,
Holsinger opined, in his capacity as a physician, that biology and
anatomy precluded considering gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender
equality in his denomination. The opinion very clearly states that this
is his scientific view, stating that theological views are separate.
Additionally, Holsinger and his wife were founders of Hope Springs
Community Church which, according to the church's pastor, ministers to
people who no longer wish to be gay or lesbian. The pastor, the Rev.
David Calhoun, said that the church has an ``ex-gay'' ministry. ``We
see that as an issue not of orientation but a lifestyle,'' Calhoun
said. ``We have people who seek to walk out of that lifestyle.'' This
type of ``ex-gay'' conversion therapy has been condemned by almost
every major, reputable medical organization--including the American
Psychological Association, which issued a condemnation more than 10
years ago.
``Although the church's theology isn't being nominated, this
discredited practice purports to be a psychological and medical
service, and if Dr. Holsinger is involved in any way, it conflicts with
his duty to accept and promote sound science in the interest of public
health,'' continued Solmonese.
``We are hopeful that during the hearing process Congress will
fully examine Dr. Holsinger's background and part of that examination
will include issues affecting our community, including his stance on
conversion therapy. Too often, we have seen President Bush send
nominees to Congress that have proven their inability to separate their
personal beliefs from their professional duties. As the Nation's chief
medical doctor, the Office of Surgeon General is an extremely important
position that has an impact on the lives of gay and lesbian Americans
and the hearing process should involve a discussion about where Dr.
Holsinger stands on medical issues relating to our community,''
Solmonese concluded.
(The Human Rights Campaign is America's largest civil rights
organization working to achieve gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender
equality. By inspiring and engaging all Americans, HRC strives to end
discrimination against GLBT citizens and realize a nation that achieves
fundamental fairness and equality for all.)
______
June 5, 2007.
Truth Wins Out.--Holsinger Does Too Much Harm
(By Wayne Besen)
With an approval rating hovering at Nixonian levels and Rush
Limbaugh firing spitballs from the right over immigration, it didn't
take a brain surgeon to guess that George W. Bush would try to appease
conservatives by nominating a Neanderthal for Surgeon General.
Out from the cave ambled James W. Holsinger, the most homophobic
doctor since Isaiah Washington--the Grey's Anatomy's star who had to go
to rehab for dropping F-bombs. But Washington was a make believe
doctor, while Holsinger is very real and has the potential to inflict
great harm on the GLBT community.
The Lexington Herald-Leader reported that Holsinger started Hope
Springs Community Church in Kentucky. Rev. David Calhoun, the pastor of
the big aluminum trailer church said that Hope Springs has an ``ex-
gay'' ministry.
``We see that as an issue not of orientation but a lifestyle,''
Calhoun said. ``We have people who seek to walk out of that
lifestyle.''
Holsinger also served on the Judicial Council for the United
Methodist Church where he opposed a decision to allow a lesbian to be
an associate pastor. He was even so extreme that he endorsed a pastor
who tried to prohibit an openly gay man from joining a church.
Clearly, Holsinger is an ideologue whose medieval medical views on
gay and lesbian people resemble sorcery more than sound science. The
last thing America needed was another deplorable nominee who isn't up
to the job, but this is exactly what Bush delivered.
When this Nation required a humble Secretary of Defense--we got
Rumsfeld. When we wanted a legal scholar at the Justice Department, we
got the ``tort-meister of torture,'' Alberto Gonzales. When a soothing
voice was necessary to repair America's tattered image, Bush sent John
Bolton--a man with the diplomatic touch of Napalm--to the United
Nations. Now, Bush is poised to make us the laughingstock of the world
by nominating Dr. Discrimination as the Nation's top doctor.
It appears Holsinger is the latest example of affirmative action
for religious zealots in the Bush administration. The President has
stocked the ranks with fundamentalist Christian cronies, such as Monica
Goodling, whose only notable achievement was covering a naked statue at
the Justice Department with a drape. Indeed, The Boston Globe reported
in May that 150 Regent University alumni had been hired to Federal
Government positions since Bush took office in 2001. That's right, the
fate of our Nation has been put in the hands of graduates of Pat
Robertson U.
Of course, the fact that Holsinger is a person of faith is not the
problem. The issue is his archaic views about gay and lesbian people
that are rejected by every respected medical and mental health
organization in America. Just because he is religious does not give
Holsinger a ``get out of reality free card'' when it comes to outdated
ideas that are incompatible with modern medicine. There are many highly
qualified people of faith Bush could have nominated who choose to live
in the 21st Century and reject religion-based discrimination--but he
elected to nominate a retrograde relic who must be defeated in the
Senate.
Holsinger's nomination has drawn howls from my organization, Truth
Wins Out, as well as the Human Rights Campaign, The National Gay and
Lesbian Task Force, SoulForce and the Gay and Lesbian Anti-Violence
Project in Boston. This chorus of heated opposition will only grow in
the coming weeks, as people learn more about Holsinger.
``For the last 20 years, James Holsinger has been the worst kind of
bully inside the United Methodist Church,'' said Rev. Troy Plummer,
Executive Director of Reconciling Ministries Network of United
Methodists. ``As a member of a sexuality study team in 1991, he used
his position as a medical doctor to promote skewed and inaccurate
information regarding gay men.''
Holsinger's nomination will go before the U.S. Senate Committee on
Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions, chaired by Senator Edward M.
Kennedy (D-Mass.) Presidential candidates Senators Barack Obama (D-IL),
Hillary Clinton (D-NY) and Christopher Dodd (D-CT) sit on this
committee. It will be interesting to see what they do about this
troubling nomination and if they ask Holsinger questions about his
anti-gay activities.
These Senators must be made to understand how deeply offensive this
nomination is for GLBT people. Our history is littered with those who
endured shock treatment, lobotomies and other forms of torture in the
name of medicine. At Truth Wins Out, I often deal with victims of ``ex-
gay'' psychological abuse who are scarred for life by people who
operate ministries--like the one reportedly run by Holsinger's church.
If doctors live by the dictum ``first do no harm,'' Holsinger in no
way can reconcile his suitability for Surgeon General, with the often-
catastrophic consequences caused by ``ex-gay'' programs.
______
June 6, 2007.
Soulforce* Issues Statement on the Nomination of Dr. James Holsinger
for Surgeon General
international conference june 29--july 1 to address ex-gay ministries
(Austin, TX--Soulforce today expressed deep concern over the
nomination of Dr. James Holsinger for United States Surgeon General.)
``As the leading spokesperson for matters of public health, the
Surgeon General should be guided by sound medical science, not anti-gay
views rooted in religion-based bigotry,'' said Soulforce Executive
Director Jeff Lutes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Soulforce is a national civil rights and social justice
organization. Our vision is freedom for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and
transgender people from religious and political oppression through the
practice of relentless nonviolent resistance. For more information go
to www.soulforce.org.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dr. Holsinger is the current president of the United Methodist
Judicial Council. As a member of the council, he opposed the 2004
decision to allow Rev. Karen Dammann, a lesbian, to continue serving as
a minister. He also upheld the 2004 defrocking of Rev. Beth Stroud,
another lesbian minister, and sided with a Virginia pastor who denied
church membership to an openly gay man. Soulforce stood in solidarity
at the trials of Rev. Dammann and Rev. Stroud, challenging the unjust
policy that bars gay men and lesbians from ordination in the United
Methodist Church and the false doctrine that homosexuality is
``incompatible with Christian teaching.''
Holsinger co-founded Hope Springs Community Church, in Lexington,
Kentucky, which operates an ``ex-gay'' ministry aimed at changing
homosexuals to heterosexuals. Recent events have brought national
attention to the existence of programs intended to modify same-sex
desires, which continue to multiply in spite of the consensus of the
major medical and mental health organizations that sexual orientation
is not a disorder and is, therefore, not in need of a cure. The
American Psychological Association identifies ``depression, anxiety,
and self-destructive behavior'' among the possible risks associated
with ex-gay therapies.
Later this month, on June 29-July 1, Soulforce will sponsor an
international convention in Irvine, California, for those who have
attended ex-gay ministries or reparative therapy, but ultimately
concluded that the programs did more harm than good. The Ex-Gay
Survivor Conference will feature the testimonies of former ``ex-gays,''
including men and women who founded and directed ex-gay programs but
are now speaking publicly about the injury the programs can cause. For
more information about the conference, go to www.soulforce.org/article/
1226.
Soulforce Executive Director, Jeff Lutes, is a licensed
psychotherapist in private practice and has treated dozens of victims
of so-called ``ex-gay ministries'' and ``reparative therapy.'' In a
statement released Wednesday, Lutes said ``America doesn't need a
Surgeon General who supports ``reparative therapy'' and anti-gay dogma
masquerading as science. If Holsinger bars gays and lesbians from his
own church, how will he treat them as the Nation's chief physician?
What America needs now is some ``reparative theology''--a force of
fair-minded people of faith who will take an unwavering stand against
religion gone bad and choose instead to welcome and affirm gay and
lesbian people into full citizenship.
______
July 11, 2007.
SIECUS Opposes Holsinger for Surgeon General
PREJUDICE AND BIAS MAKE NOMINEE UNFIT FOR POSITION
Washington, DC.--The Sexuality Information and Education Council of
the United States (SIECUS) today announced its opposition to the
nomination of Dr. James W. Holsinger for the post of U.S. Surgeon
General. Dr. Holsinger's confirmation hearings are taking place
tomorrow in front of the U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education,
Labor, and Pensions.
``Dr. Holsinger has a record showing prejudice towards and bias
against gays and lesbians,'' said William Smith, vice president for
public policy at SIECUS. ``HIV/AIDS continues to be a devastating
public health epidemic, heavily impacting the gay community. Dr.
Holsinger's efforts to put a scientific veneer on his prejudices puts
his ability to advocate for the better health of all those living with
and at risk for HIV/AIDS into serious question.''
Dr. Holsinger is a member of the United Methodist Judicial Council,
the denomination's ``Supreme Court.'' In his role on the Council, Dr.
Holsinger opposed a decision to allow a lesbian to be an associate
pastor and supported a pastor who would not permit an openly gay man to
join the church. More disturbingly, as a member of the United Methodist
Church's Committee to Study Homosexuality, Dr. Holsinger authored a
paper titled ``Pathophysiology of Male Homosexuality,'' in which he
equates homosexuality with disease and argues that homosexuality runs
counter to anatomical and physiological truths. His record also shows
his support for reparative therapy to ``cure'' gays and lesbians, an
approach widely discredited by mainstream medical and scientific
organizations.
The hearing falls only 2 days after an appearance by former Surgeon
General Richard H. Carmona before the House Oversight and Government
Reform Committee. In his testimony Dr. Carmona said that officials
within the Bush administration time and time again had made decisions
on public health issues based on politics, not science, including
dismissing global warming as a liberal cause and working to suppress a
report on the dangers of second-hand smoke. Dr. Carmona was also
suppressed when he tried to promote sex education that included
discussions of contraceptives because such programs have been
scientifically proven to be effective. ``However, there was already a
policy in place that did not want to hear the science but wanted to
preach abstinence only, but I felt that was scientifically incorrect,''
Carmona said.
``Given the testimony of the former Surgeon General, we see even
more clearly the urgent need to have a candidate for this position who
will not sacrifice the public health for political considerations and
who will not kowtow to the Bush administration's ideological agenda,''
continued Smith. ``We need a Surgeon General who is committed to
science, not anti-gay bigotry that clouds and distorts scientific
judgment.''
If Dr. Hoslinger is confirmed, the government risks further
marginalizing and stigmatizing gay people, which will hinder its
ability to effectively battle the U.S. HIV/AIDS epidemic.
For more information, please contact Patrick Malone at (212) 819-
9770 ext. 316 or at [email protected].
______
Society for Public Health Education,
Washington, DC.,
July 11, 2007.
Hon. Edward Kennedy,
U.S. Senate,
317 Russell Senate Office Bldg.,
Washington, DC. 20510.
Hon. Michael Enzi,
U.S. Senate,
379 Russell Senate Office Bldg.,
Washington, DC. 20510.
Dear Chairman Kennedy and Ranking Member Enzi: President George W.
Bush has nominated Dr. James Holsinger, Jr., to become the next U.S.
Surgeon General. In the May 24th White House press release announcing
his nomination, Dr. Holsinger was described as ``America's chief health
educator'' (http://www.whitehouse.gov/newsreleases/2007/05/20070524-
2.html).
The Society for Public Health Education (SOPHE), which represents
more than 4,000 health education specialists, has serious reservations
about his nomination, particularly given his past record with regard to
gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender (LBGT) populations. We are
writing to strongly urge you to address this issue during his
nomination hearing before the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and
Pensions Committee this week.
The U.S. Surgeon has responsibility to:
Protect and advance the health of the Nation through
educating the public; advocating for effective disease prevention and
health promotion programs and activities; and, provide a highly
recognized symbol of national commitment to protecting and improving
the public's health.
Articulate scientifically based health policy analysis and
advice to the President and the Secretary of Health and Human Services
(HHS) on the full range of critical public health, medical, and health
system issues facing the Nation. (http://www.surgeongeneral.gov/).
The U.S. Surgeon General also has responsibility for overseeing the
accomplishment of the DHHS Objectives for the Nation. Healthy People
2010: Objectives for the Nation recognizes the need to eliminate health
disparities, regardless of race/ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation,
geographic location, income level, and other factors. Healthy People
2010 also clearly states that all people are entitled to the same level
of health and the best health outcomes that can be achieved. \1\
SOPHE has serious reservations about whether Dr. Holsinger will
vigorously pursue the Healthy People objectives related to LBGT persons
given his past public record.
Dr. Holsinger was described in the June 2007 United Methodist Nexus
as a ``[s]taunch anti-gay leader . . . [who] has consistently supported
forces in the denomination opposed to the acceptance of gay, lesbian,
bisexual and transgender people.'' \2\
The same article states that Dr. Holsinger helped establish the
Hope Springs Community Church, which operates a program for gays and
lesbians, who ``seek to walk out of that lifestyle.'' The American
Psychological Association (http://www.apa.org/pi/lgbc/policy/
diagnoses.html), the American Medical Association (http://www.ama-
assn.org/ama/pub/category/14847.html), and many other scientific
authorities do not support therapies or treatments whose purpose it is
to ``convert'' people to heterosexuality.
Three years ago, as one of nine members of the Judicial Council of
the United Methodist Church, Dr. Holsinger voted to expel a lesbian
associate pastor from the clergy. In 2006, as president of the Council,
he voted to support a pastor who blocked a gay man from joining his
congregation.
Dr. Holsinger also wrote a report in 1991 for the United Methodist
Church with the title ``Pathophysiology of Male Homosexuality.'' \3\
The report has been widely criticized for misrepresenting scientific
evidence and wrapping Dr. Holsinger's biases and prejudices toward GBLT
people in the cloak of pseudoscience.
Thus, SOPHE urges you to pursue the following questions with Dr.
Holsinger during his hearing related to the U.S. Surgeon General's
responsibility to promote and protect the health of all people,
including LBGT populations.
______
Questions Submitted by the Society for Public Health Education
for Dr. Holsinger
Openly lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender (LGBT) people risk
being considered ``sinful, immoral, repugnant, and abhorrent'' by some
health care providers.\4\
Question 1. As U.S. Surgeon General, will you advocate for greater
understanding and tolerance of LGBT patients by all health
professionals? Will you advocate for public health and health care
policy based on scientific evidence and not on religious beliefs or
ideology?
Insurance companies, businesses, government institutions,
hospitals, and health clinics often deny LGBT families the same
privileges granted to married heterosexual couples and families. These
barriers are impediments to access to health care and to honest
disclosure of identity necessary for the provision of quality health
care.\5\
Question 2. As U.S. Surgeon General, will you advocate for
increased protection of LGBT people against discrimination based upon
sexual orientation in matters of health care access, employment,
housing, and public services?
Approximately 20 to 30 percent of LGBT youth attempt suicide
compared to 10 percent of the general adolescent population.\6\ \7\
LGBT youth, despite their proportionately smaller number, account for
up to 30 percent of completed suicides each year.\6\
Question 3. As U.S. Surgeon General, how will you address the
public health problem of suicide for LBGT youth? How will you address
stigmatization of LBGT youth and advocate for better mental health care
for LGBT youth?
Young lesbians (under the age of 35) across all education levels
are less likely to receive Pap smears relative to the general U.S.
population, with percentages of lesbians receiving Pap smears ranging
from 37 percent to 52.1 percent compared to 70.2 percent or 76.2
percent for heterosexual women.\8\ Lesbian and bisexual women are more
likely to use tobacco and consume more alcohol than the general female
population.\9\ \10\
After 15 years of HIV prevention efforts, rates of new HIV
infection of gay men in San Francisco and other AIDS epicenters are
increasing, along with alarming rates of infections in urban African-
American men who have sex with men.\11\ Gay males are at higher risk
for lung cancer and heart disease than heterosexual males due to higher
rates of smoking. Gay bisexual men are at increased risk for anal
cancer, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and Hodgkin's disease.\12\
Question 4. If appointed as U.S. Surgeon General, how will you
address the issues of HIV/AIDS, smoking, cancer and, other major health
problems among LGBT populations?
We request that you and other members of the Senate Health,
Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee ask these questions of Dr.
Holsinger during his testimony. And we further request that you
carefully evaluate whether his responses to these important health
policy and health care questions are direct, candid, and convincingly
positive.
As ``America's chief health educator,'' the U.S. Surgeon General
must pursue the health and well-being of all people, regardless of
their sexual orientation, gender, race/ethnicity, geographic location,
income level, or other factors.
Thank you very much for your consideration of this matter and for
your commitment to protecting and defending all people of this Nation.
Sincerely,
Elizabeth H. Howze, ScD, CHES,
President, Society for Public Health Education.
References
1. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (2000). Healthy
People 2010. Washington, DC.: U.S. Government Printing Office.
2. Astle, Cynthia B. (June 2007). ``Bush Taps Judicial Council Head
for Surgeon General,'' United Methodist Nexus, June 2007, (http://
www.umnexus.org/commentary.php?Article=347).
3. Holsinger, J.W. (1991). ``Pathophysiology of male
homosexuality.'' Unpublished manuscript prepared for the Committee to
Study Homosexuality of the United Methodist Church. (http://
www.tugsa.net/holsinger.homosexuality.pdf, Appendix A).
4. Ungvarski, P.J., & Grossman, A.H. (1999). Health problems of gay
and bisexual men. Nursing Clinics of North America, 34(2), 313-331.
5. O'Hanlan, K., Cabaj, R.B., Schatz, B., Lock, J., & Nemrow, P.
(1997). A review of the medical consequences of homophobia with
suggestions for resolution Journal of the Gay and Lesbian Medical
Association, 1(1): 25-40.
6. Harrison, A.E. (1996). Primary care of lesbian and gay patients:
Educating ourselves and our students. Family Medicine, 28(1), 10-20.
7. Baker, J.A. (1993). Is homophobia hazardous to lesbian and gay
health? American Journal of Health Promotion, 7(4), 255-256, 262.
8. Diamant, A.L., Wold, C., Spritzer, BA., Gelberg, L. (2000).
Health behaviors, health status, and access to and use of health care:
a population-based study of lesbian, bisexual, and heterosexual women.
Archives of Family Medicine, 9: 1043-51.
9. Diamant, A.L., Schuster, M.A., & Lever, J. (2000). Receipt of
preventive health care services by lesbians. American Journal of
Preventive Medicine, 19(3), 141-148.
10. Valanis, B., Bowen, D.J., Bassford, T., Whitlock, E., Chaney,
P., and Carter, R. (2000). Sexual orientation and health: Comparison in
the women's health initiative samples. Archives of Family Medicine,
9:843-853.
11. Laird C (2001). HIV infections on rise in S.F. Bay Area
Reporter. January 25.
12. Koblin, B.A., Hessol, N.A., Zauber, A.G., Taylor, P.E.,
Buchbinder, S.P., Katzh, M.H., & Stevens, C.E. (1996). Increased
incidence of cancer among homosexual men, New York City and San
Francisco, 1978-1990. American Journal of Epidemiology, 144:916-923.
[Whereupon, at 12:00 p.m., the hearing was adjourned]