Crusading NY health chief picked to head CDC

May 15, 2009 By DAVID B. CARUSO , Associated Press Writer Crusading NY health chief picked to head CDC (AP)

Enlarge

Thomas Frieden, newly named director of the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) by President Barack Obama speaks at a press conference in the Queens borough of New York Friday, May 15, 2009, about a further Swine Flu outbeak in New York, with schools being the hardest hit. Frieden, currently New York City Health Commissioner spoke with Mayor Michael Bloomeberg in the parking lot of a Queens dinner about the outbreak, the city's response and his new post. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)

(AP) -- For seven years, Dr. Thomas Frieden has been the nagging conscience of the nation's biggest city, the man who made sure New Yorkers couldn't smoke in bars or eat french fries cooked in artery-clogging trans fats.

Now, the city's health commissioner will be taking his crusade against unhealthy living national as the head of the U.S. .

President announced Friday that he has picked the 48-year-old Frieden to lead the public health agency, where he will be faced with some immediate decisions on how to deal with the swine , including whether to produce a vaccine. Frieden also may play a role in health care reform.

The selection reunites Frieden with an agency where he worked as an infectious-disease detective at the beginning of his career.

New York's health commissioner is not usually a household name, but many New Yorkers quickly got to know Frieden after his appointment in 2002, when he began a series of not-so-gentle campaigns to get the city to live healthier.

In 2003 he pushed through a ban on smoking in almost all workplaces, a rule that instantly transformed nightlife in the big city.

Big increases in cigarette taxes followed, aimed at making the habit so expensive people would give it up. This spring the average price of a pack in New York topped $9.

Smokers were outraged, but the backlash was short-lived and the city claims the effort is working: About 350,000 fewer adult New Yorkers smoke now than in 2002.

"There is probably nothing any person will ever do to save as many lives as that one act of our legislature getting together here in the city and passing the , and Tom deserves the credit," said Friday.

Frieden followed that up with a pair of new rules aimed at obesity.

One banned restaurants from cooking with artificial trans fats, substitutes for natural fats such as lard. Fast-food companies all over the country wound up altering their recipes. Even McDonald's had to change the way it cooked .

The city also began requiring thousands of chain restaurants to post the calorie content of their foods on the menu, saying diners deserve to know before they order that a blooming onion can have four times the caloric punch of a Whopper.

Critics complained that he was fostering a nanny state and infringing on privacy rights.

"This is like no-fun city," one smoker complained.

Frieden is unapologetic. Illnesses such as heart disease, he said, are now leading killers, cost taxpayers billions of dollars, and should be treated with the same urgency as an outbreak of a contagious illness like tuberculosis.

In a 2004 editorial in the American Journal of Public Health, he chided most public health agencies for being "asleep at the switch" on chronic disease.

"Local health departments generally do a good job of monitoring and controlling conditions that killed people in the United States 100 years ago," while doing little about modern-day threats like diabetes, he wrote.

It is unclear how Frieden's approach will play in the rest of America.

His support of needle exchange programs and condom distribution to help prevent the spread of AIDS (he distributed tens of millions of free condoms, proudly stamped with the city's NYC logo and the slogan "Get Some!") may not sit well with conservatives.

Civil libertarians have chafed at his attempts to force changes in our diets, including, most recently, a push to get restaurants to use less salt.

New York magazine's Web site greeted the news of Frieden's appointment with the headline, "Health Commissioner Thomas Frieden to Take Fun-Hating National."

The Center for Consumer Freedom, a group funded by restaurants and , put out a statement decrying his selection, saying he was "an overzealous activist who doesn't give any consideration to the importance of personal responsibility or privacy."

But advocates praise Frieden as someone who lets science, not politics, guide his decision-making.

Jeff Levi, executive director of Trust for America's Health, called him someone "who has the courage to shake up the status quo if science and evidence show that change needs to happen."

News of Frieden's appointment came as he was dealing with a flare-up in the swine flu virus in several city schools.

Thousands of people have become ill in the past few weeks, but Frieden has been reminding citizens in televised briefings that this flu, so far, appears no more or less dangerous than the garden-variety strains that sicken people each winter.

The outbreak has allowed Frieden to call on some of his earlier experience. After graduating from Columbia University's medical school, he worked in the CDC's epidemiologic intelligence service, then led New York's attempt to contain the spread of drug-resistant TB in the mid-1990s.

Frieden spent five more years fighting TB in India before his appointment as city health commissioner.

He will begin at the CDC in June. His appointment does not require Senate confirmation.

©2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


print this article email this article download pdf blog this article bookmark this article     Stumble it Digg this share on Facebook retweet share on Reddit add to delicious
Rate this story - not rated yet


May 15, 2009 all stories

Comments: 0

not rated yet
  • Stumble this up

  • Digg this

  • share this

  • hide
  • Related Stories

  • Report: Obama selects Frieden as CDC director
    created May 15, 2009 | popularity not rated yet | comments 0
  • NYC mayor says 28 swine flu cases from 1 school
    created Apr 26, 2009 | popularity not rated yet | comments 0
  • New York moves toward trans fat ban
    created Sep 27, 2006 | popularity not rated yet | comments 0
  • At least 7 hospitalized in US with swine flu
    created Apr 28, 2009 | popularity not rated yet | comments 0
  • 80 percent of NYC trans-fat free
    created Jul 01, 2007 | popularity not rated yet | comments 0



  • hide
  • Relevant PhysicsForums posts

Other News

Lawmaker wants probe of E. coli and school lunches

Medicine & Health / Diseases

created 14 minutes ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 0

(AP) -- The chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee wants an investigation into the risk of deadly E. coli getting into school lunches.


House passes health care bill on close vote (AP)

Landmark health bill passes House on close vote

Medicine & Health / Health

created 23 hours ago | popularity 3.8 / 5 (10) | comments 3

(AP) -- The Democratic-controlled House narrowly passed far-reaching health care legislation, handing President Barack Obama a hard-won victory on his chief domestic priority though the road ahead in the ...


Developmental delay could stem from nicotinic receptor deletion

Medicine & Health / Genetics

created 15 hours ago | popularity 4.5 / 5 (2) | comments 0

The loss of a gene through deletion of genetic material on chromosome 15 is associated with significant abnormalities in learning and behavior, said a consortium of researchers led by Baylor College of Medicine in a report ...


Expanding drug treatment: Is US ready to step up? (AP)

Expanding drug treatment: Is US ready to step up?

Medicine & Health / Other

created 10 hours ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 0

(AP) -- Based on the rhetoric, America's war on drugs seems poised to shift into a more enlightened phase where treatment of addicts gains favor over imprisonment of low-level offenders. Questions abound, ...


Children who often drink full-fat milk weigh less

Medicine & Health / Health

created Nov 03, 2009 | popularity 5 / 5 (4) | comments 5

Eight-year-old children who drink full-fat milk every day have a lower BMI than those who seldom drink milk. This is not the case for children who often drink medium-fat or low-fat milk. This is one conclusion of a thesis ...