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File photo: General Richard Carmona speaks at the 15th annual National Managed Health Care Congress March 11, 2003 in Washington, DC. Carmona discussed the need to reduce racial and cultural disparities in health care.
File photo: General Richard Carmona speaks at the 15th annual National Managed Health Care Congress March 11, 2003 in Washington, DC. Carmona discussed the need to reduce racial and cultural disparities in health care.
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Washington – President Bush’s most recent surgeon general accused the administration today of muzzling him for political reasons on hot-button health issues such as emergency contraception and abstinence-only education.

Dr. Richard Carmona, the nation’s 17th surgeon general, told lawmakers that all surgeons general have had to deal with politics but none more so than he.

For example, he said he wasn’t allowed to make a speech at the Special Olympics because it was viewed as benefiting a political opponent. However, he said was asked to speak at events designed to benefit Republican lawmakers.

“The reality is that the nation’s doctor has been marginalized and relegated to a position with no independent budget, and with supervisors who are political appointees with partisan agendas,” said Carmona, who served from 2002 to 2006.

Responding, the White House said Carmona was given the authority and had the obligation to be the leading voice for the health of all Americans.

“It’s disappointing to us if he failed to use his position to the fullest extent in advocating for policies he thought were in the best interests of the nation,” said Deputy Press Secretary Tony Fratto. “We believe Dr. Carmona received the support necessary to carry out his mission.”

Confirmation hearings are slated Thursday for James Holsinger Jr., the Kentucky cardiologist that Bush nominated as the nation’s 18th surgeon general. The nomination has been criticized by gay-rights groups because Holsinger has argued that homosexuality is unnatural and dangerous as and that sexual orientation is a lifestyle choice.

Carmona testified today at a hearing of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. Also appearing were Drs. C. Everett Koop, who served as surgeon general from 1981-1889, and David Satcher, who served from 1998-2001.

“Political interference with the work of the surgeon general appears to have reached a new level in this administration,” said committee chairman Henry Waxman, D-Calif.

Koop is probably the most recognized former surgeon general. During his tenure, he talked about AIDS as a public-health issue rather than a moral issue, which won him many admirers and some critics. He said President Reagan was pressed to fire him every day, but Reagan would not interfere.

Koop said that after he left office, he had more access to the secretary of Health and Human Services than his successor, Satcher, and that embarrassed him. “Dr. Carmona was treated with even less respect than Dr. Satcher,” Koop said.

A report condemning secondhand smoke was a hallmark of Carmona’s tenure.

Another report, on global-health challenges, was never released after the administration demanded changes that he refused to make, Carmona said.

“I was told this would be a political document or you’re not going to release it,” Carmona said. “I said it can’t be a political document because the surgeon general never releases political documents. I release scientific documents that will help our elected officials and the citizens understand the complex world we live in and what their responsibilities are.”

He refused to identify the officials who sought the changes.

Carmona said he believed the surgeon general should show leadership on health issues. But he said his speeches were edited by political appointees and that he was told not to talk about certain issues. For example, he supported comprehensive sex education that would include abstinence in the curriculum, rather than focusing solely on abstinence.

“However, there was already a policy in place that didn’t want to hear the science but wanted to ‘preach’ abstinence, which I felt was scientifically incorrect,” Carmona said.

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