By April Ryan
NNPA NEWSWIRE โ โWhen you erode trust you lose your democracy because it is based on trust,โ according to Barack Obama administration Surgeon General Regina Benjamin.
The former โNationโs Doctorโ was responding to the U.S. Senateโs confirmation of Robert Kennedy Jr. as the new face of healthcare in America. Kennedy, an anti-vaxxer, was confirmed as the new secretary of health and human services by the Senate in a vote split along party lines, 52-48. Kentucky Republican Sen. Mitch McConnell voted with Democrats opposing the nomination.
Kennedy is among a growing number of Americans who oppose vaccinations, which for decades was the widely accepted means of preventing the spread and reducing cases of infectious diseases such as smallpoxโwhich is believed to be eradicatedโmeasles, polio and tetanus.

โWeโve had anti-vaxxers for years, but they became prominent during COVID,โ Benjamin, the Alabama-based former surgeon general, says. โThatโs when we started to see people not trust science.โ
From Benjaminโs professional understanding, as health matters changed over time so did the medical responses.
While controversy swirls around Kennedyโs anti-vaccination stance, however, he is lauded for his posture on preventative medicine. Benjamin is hopeful Kennedy will focus on prevention as she denotes it asโthe key to solving many problems in our healthcare system.โ
When Benjamin was the nationโs top doctor from 2009 to 2013, the Obama administration released a national prevention strategy, which she deemed โa roadmap.โ During that job, she worked to move Americans โfrom sickness and disease to one of health and wellness.โ Benjamin is hopeful that this new administration will โfocus more on prevention.โ
One of the pressing issues Secretary Kennedy will face is the shortage of healthcare professionals.
โWeโve had workforce issues for a long time. The number of doctors, the number of nurses and we donโt have enough to cover everyone,โ Benjamin says. She adds, โYou see those decreases particularly in rural areas.โ
There is a short-term fix, according to Benjamin, โWe have to turn to telemedicine because we donโt have [enough] doctors.โ She cautions, โIt will get worse before it gets better.โย
With February being American Heart Month, Benjamin recommends particularly for those in the Black community to โbe as healthy as you canโฆso you can be resilient and respond to things.โ But the first step to doing that, she adds, is โwe have to train ourselves where to go for trusted information.โ

