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Regina Benjamin, Obama's Pick For Surgeon General

DESIREE HUNTER and LAURAN NEERGAARD   07/13/09 07:03 PM ET   AP

Regina Benjamin

BAYOU LA BATRE, Ala. — When Hurricane Katrina wrecked the little clinic here in the coastal backwaters of Alabama, Dr. Regina Benjamin laid out medical charts to dry in the post-storm sun and hopped in a pickup truck to check on her patients.

When she had trouble treating the growing influx of Southeast Asian immigrants in the shrimping community because she could not understand them, she went to a nearby Vietnamese pool hall to find an interpreter.

Benjamin, 52, was nominated by President Barack Obama on Monday to be U.S. surgeon general, pledging to take her fight from a rural, impoverished outpost to the top tier of American medicine so that "no one falls through the cracks."

She said she would combat preventable diseases. Her father died with diabetes and high blood pressure, her only brother of HIV. Her mother died of lung cancer because as a girl "she wanted to smoke just like her twin brother," an uncle now on oxygen.

"I cannot change my family's past. I can be a voice in the movement to improve our nation's health care and our nation's health," Benjamin said. "I want to be sure that no one falls through the cracks as we improve our health care system."

Pushed by the diverse patient mix of Bayou La Batre _ white, black and, increasingly, immigrants from Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos _ Benjamin has emerged as a national leader in the fight to close gaps in health.

She became the first black woman and the first doctor under age 40 elected to the American Medical Association's board of trustees, and in 2002 became the first black woman to head a state medical society.

"For all the tremendous obstacles that she has overcome, Regina Benjamin also represents what's best about health care in America, doctors and nurses who give and care and sacrifice for the sake of their patients," Obama said in the White House Rose Garden.

After Katrina ruined the clinic in Bayou La Batre, Benjamin pointed out the need for electronic records that would be invulnerable to hurricanes.

It was rebuilt by volunteers _ then burned down just as it was about to reopen. Her patients were so desperate for it to reopen that Benjamin later recalled a woman handing her an envelope containing $7.

"If she can find $7, I can figure out the rest," Benjamin said last fall as she received a $500,000 MacArthur Foundation "genius grant" and promised to use the money to help finish the job.

Today, the clinic is a small brick building next to City Hall with a wooden ramp leading to its door. Alice Gallops, who started going there after moving to the bayou last year, said she was shocked Monday to turn on the television and see Benjamin was the nominee.

"I think it's wonderful, after Katrina destroyed so many people's homes and their lives, this lady went around helping people at their homes and making house calls," she said. "She does so many great things from her heart."

If confirmed by the Senate, Benjamin would assume a job as the people's health advocate, a bully-pulpit position that can be tremendously effective when paired with an effective personality.

Dr. James Holland, CEO of Mostellar Medical Center in nearby Irvington, where Benjamin spent about three years in the early 1980s as a National Health Service Corps scholar, said Benjamin has always been "very ambitious from a political standpoint."

Toward the end of her service at Mostellar, she went to Tulane University to work on a master's degree in business administration, signaling bigger plans, Holland said.

"It is unusual and it's also an indicator when you see a physician working on an MBA, especially from a good school like that, you're expecting that they have desires to advance in the political field," he said.

Medical groups welcomed her ability for straight talk, whether to patients or politicians, about the dire health needs of the country.

"We want to emphasize prevention, primary care and early intervention, and we have somebody now who does that for a living," said Dr. Georges Benjamin, no relation to the nominee, of the American Public Health Association.

American Medical Association President Dr. James Rohack, who has known Benjamin for more than two decades, said Benjamin recognizes "if you don't have health insurance, you live sicker and you die younger.

"She can bring the real-world perspective as surgeon general of the things as a nation we need to do to keep ourselves healthy," he said.

___

AP Medical Writer Lauran Neergaard reported from Washington.

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08:28 AM on 07/15/2009
What a great choice...kudos to Dr. Benjamin!
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01:25 AM on 07/15/2009
Dr. Regina Benjamin is exactly the sort of person I want Obama to appoint to every post.
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BlueZoo
Independent voter, Independent thinker!
06:19 PM on 07/14/2009
What a superb choice! If you have ever had the opportunity to visit Bayou La Batre, you would have seen the poverty there. It is beyond anything I've seen in this country. This woman has been profiled numerous times on national television and her story is just inspiring. The only thing that bothers me is who will fill her shoes at her clinic if she accepts this post. Dr. Benjamin is such a rarity in the medical profession and she is sorely needed in this backwater. I really do feel for the residents who have depended on her for their medical needs!
MHT73
words matter
03:25 PM on 07/14/2009
I think it's just great that he picked a doctor who's worked in primary care, and who cares so much about her patients that she would rebuild a clinic after Katrina. And, would anyone be focusing on her weight if she were a man??
02:20 PM on 07/14/2009
I live in Mobile,Alabama, and have followed Dr. Benjamin's career with great admiration. She is the most selfless human being I have read about in my life. I wish I had half of her energy, ability, compassion, and diligence.

Our local daily, the Mobile Register, is the most Republican, conservative, newspaper you have ever read. If there was anything remotely controversial about Dr. Benjamin, believe me, we would have heard about it. Even the Register has nothing but praise for her.

Sometimes, people who seem too good to be true actually are that good. Dr. Benjamin is that person.

To those who criticize her and say she is underqualified--she won the MacArthur Award. Did you?

I always wanted to drive down to Bayou La Batre and meet Dr. Benjamin. I regret that I never did.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
nippyfan
11:11 AM on 07/14/2009
She's not fat. People and their prejudices and idea of what's over and underweight are misguided and wrong.
11:55 AM on 07/14/2009
Thanks for defending her, but don't defend her on this ground. It's like people saying that it's okay to discriminate against someone because they're black, and you say, "She's not really black at all."
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
nippyfan
02:21 PM on 07/14/2009
The REAL reason they are complaining is what you just said anyway. If she was white we wouldn't be having this conversation.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chroma601
09:39 AM on 07/14/2009
I can't believe all the comments about her weight. Size is the last bastion of discrimination. We know better than to denigrate people because of their color or height. Let's open our minds a little more and add weight to the list. We live in a time when the pressure to be skinny is everywhere; driven by fashion and supported by a host of sylph-like actresses we are constantly bombarded with the notion that only one type of body is beautiful.

As for health, recent studies have indicated that being overweight (not morbidly obese!) is healthier than being underweight or even normal weight: http://longevity.about.com/od/lifelongnutrition/a/overweight.htm

Let us judge people for what they do, not how they look.
10:55 AM on 07/14/2009
the nay-sayers have to dig pretty deep to find something to criticize about someone when all they can come up with is her weight
11:56 AM on 07/14/2009
Great point.
08:31 AM on 07/14/2009
She doesn't look fat to me. Yes she as a round face, yes she has big boobs, but overall I have not seen any evidence that she is soooo overweight.
11:56 AM on 07/14/2009
Okay, so if she were overweight, we'd be justified to ignore all her amazing accomplishments and pick a big-pharma stooge.
11:51 PM on 07/13/2009
Question ? Why was not Oprah appointed ? Just wondering, his home girl you know. Shoes been under her bed ? Sorry Shellie.
01:56 PM on 07/14/2009
When did Oprah get her medical degree?
11:35 PM on 07/13/2009
It is not logical to let this overweight woman be the surgeon general. I am optimistic for Obama, but have been troubled with these flawed people he picks. First Sotomayor, now this person. People must not fall prey to human emotions that do not correspond to logic and reason, which seems to be the basis of these people's imperfections.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Weirdwriter
12:52 AM on 07/14/2009
Blather. Nonsense. Sore loser spewings.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chroma601
09:59 AM on 07/14/2009
Have you seen what she has accomplished with her life, or is it just that you can't get by those extra pounds?

Look at this: http://www.dbtechno.com/health/2009/06/24/fatter-people-outlive-skinny-people/
11:00 PM on 07/13/2009
What an inspiration- a true humanitarian!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DnDCfromChi-town
10:14 PM on 07/13/2009
I’m really disheartened that the majority of the posts have chosen to discuss Dr. Benjamin's "health" (which no one can accurately determine unless you are her physician). This woman has lived through extraordinary circumstances only to rise up to become a superior human being. Dr. Benjamin endured insurmountable hardships to provide a helping hand to her fellow Americans for FREE. We should be celebrating her and not ripping her into shreds. Regina U are remarkable HERO. My fellow countrymen you are missing the point once again, by overlooking a great American story. Superficial mediocrity survives!!!!
11:39 PM on 07/13/2009
Nope, I'm offended from your narrow-minded post. I don't think this woman has modeled AT ALL, because of the simple laws of supply and demand, and there is not a high demand for designer apparel and fashion accessories being worn on unfit people.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chroma601
01:34 PM on 07/14/2009
Are you talking about this article? What does modeling have to do with anything? What do you mean by "unfit"? Out of shape? Are all plus size women automatically out of shape? Do they not buy clothing and accessories?

This is truly blather!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Weirdwriter
12:54 AM on 07/14/2009
Forget the spite and sneers. They're from Sore Losers driven crazy by the permanent taste of sour grapes.
10:11 PM on 07/13/2009
Below is the link to the former Surgeon general's qualification. I guess we dot mind our doctors w/ GEDs as long as they r not blk.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Carmona
10:09 PM on 07/13/2009
Hey guys, you remember the last Surgeon General, the one Bush appointed??? He was a high school drop out who earned his GED in the army, attended Community college, and went on to get his MD at USC. And u guys r questioning this woman's qualification?
nilotic
Proud progressive, heckling backbencher
10:57 PM on 07/13/2009
I think the article could have done a better job of listing her qualifications. I read them on CNN's website earlier.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
nippyfan
10:56 AM on 07/14/2009
It's because she is black. Point blank.
09:12 PM on 07/13/2009
So what reason will the far right come up with to hate this women?
09:42 PM on 07/13/2009
i would guess extreme obesity.
10:02 PM on 07/13/2009
Along with extreme skin pigmentation.