Dr. James Holsinger: Surgeon General to be...or not to be?
When the Bush Book of Cronies is written, will Holsinger receive a full chapter or merely a passing mention? Most of the early stories about Holsinger focused on his controversial history of anti-gay remarks, decisions and communications -- particularly through his work with the United Methodist Church. A deeper look, however, also reveals a controversial tenure as chief medical officer for the Department of Veterans Affairs and a Kentucky real estate deal gone sour. After the announcement of his nomination, White House spokesperson Emily Lawrimore said that Holsinger "has dedicated his life to the care of others and public service and his respect for all is evidenced by his actions and his career. On numerous occasions, he has taken up the banner for under represented populations and he will continue to be a strong advocate for these groups and all Americans. Dr. Holsinger is a highly respected, well-qualified physician and educator. His impressive medical background, which includes leading one of the Nation's largest healthcare systems, decades of service in the armed forces, along with his commitment to combating childhood obesity, will serve him well as Surgeon General. We urge the Senate for a swift confirmation." When the Bush Book of Cronies is written, will Holsinger receive a full chapter or merely a passing mention? Holsinger and homosexuality Cynthia B. Astle of the United Methodist Nexus points out that Holsinger "rose to national prominence" in the United Methodist Church "through his membership on the 1989-92 churchwide Committee to Study Homosexuality." Astle notes that Holsinger "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." According to reporter Max Blumenthal, in a 1991 paper written by Holsinger titled "The Pathophysiology of Male Homosexuality" he "describes homosexual sex in sickeningly lurid language. 'Fist fornication,' 'sphincter injuries,' 'lacerations,' 'perforations' and 'deaths seen in connection with anal eroticism,' are some of the terms Holsinger concocted to describe acts with which he suggests at least medical familiarity ..." During the course of a recent editorial calling Holsinger an "outstanding choice," the Louisville Courier-Journal pointed out that his "paper on gay sex is ... problematic. In addition to being needlessly cruel, his remarks ran against mainstream medical and psychological thought -- that sexual orientation is an innate (and, thus, in a sense 'natural') quality." Holly Babin, a spokeswoman for the Department of Heath and Human Services -- the agency that evidently will take the lead on trying to get Holsinger confirmed -- put her spin on the paper: "That paper was a survey of scientific peer-reviewed studies that he was asked to compile by the United Methodist Church, it's not that he was saying 'this is what I believe,'" Babin said. "It's a reflection of the available scientific data from the 1980s. It should be noted that in 1991, homosexuals were banned from the military and several years before that, homosexuality and Haitian nationality were considered risk factors for HIV/AIDS. Over the last 20 years, a clearer understanding of these issues has been achieved." But as Astle points out, this wasn't an isolated incident:
... 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 tries to pocket the money from hospital sale According to the blog Assembled Reflections, Holsinger, who is president of the United Methodist Church's Judicial Council, also serves as chairman of the Good Samaritan Foundation, "a philanthropic organization dedicated to serving the health care needs of Kentucky's poor and disadvantaged," which claims on its website to have "no political, religious, institutional, or other affiliations."
Assembled Reflections has a different take:
Déjà vu all over again On November 22, 1991, the New York Times reported that congressional investigator Mary Ann Curran testified before a House subcommittee "that she found shoddy care at veterans hospitals, including several cases in which incompetence and neglect led to the deaths of patients." Curran, a health-care investigator for the General Accounting Office, told the House Government Operations Subcommittee on Human Resources and Intergovernmental Relations that "We discovered several cases of patients who had died because of errors made by unsupervised interns or residents."
Curran visited six hospitals and studied the records of another 30 facilities in her investigation. At a briefing prior to the hearing, Holsinger denied that there were systemic problems in the VA medical system. "However, three months later," Cynthia Astle noted, "the government ruled that the unit Holsinger directed was responsible for six of 15 documented deaths at a North Chicago veterans' hospital. Veterans' Affairs subsequently negotiated confidential settlements with the patients' families." Up from Kansas Born in Kansas City, Kansas, 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, Kentury. According to Astle, while Holsinger was "trained in general surgery and cardiology, and [was] described in President Bush's announcement as a cardiologist, [he] has no national board certification in any speciality, according to the web site 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 nine years, and directed the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Lexington, KY, from 1993 to 1994. Newsmeat.com reports that Holsinger has contributed more than $17,000 to Republican Party candidates and causes. The Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions -- chaired by Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-MA) -- will determine whether the Holsinger nomination will move on to the full Senate for a vote.
If confirmed, Holsinger would succeed Richard H. Carmona, who resigned at the end of his term in July 2006.
Dr. James Holsinger: Surgeon General to be...or not to be? | 2 comments (2 topical, 0 hidden)
Dr. James Holsinger: Surgeon General to be...or not to be? | 2 comments (2 topical, 0 hidden)
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