Three people directly involved in its preparation
said its publication was blocked by William R. Steiger, a specialist
in education and a scholar of Latin American history whose family
has long ties to President Bush and Vice President Cheney. Since
2001, Steiger has run the Office of Global Health Affairs in the
Department of Health and Human Services.
Richard H. Carmona, who commissioned the "Call to
Action on Global Health" while serving as surgeon general from 2002
to 2006, recently cited its suppression as an example of the Bush
administration's frequent efforts during his tenure to give
scientific documents a political twist. At a July 10 House committee
hearing, Carmona did not cite Steiger by name or detail the report's
contents and its implications for American public health.
Carmona told lawmakers that, as he fought to
release the document, he was "called in and again admonished . . .
via a senior official who said, 'You don't get it.' " He said a
senior official told him that "this will be a political document, or
it will not be released."
After a long struggle that pitted top scientific
and medical experts inside and outside the government against
Steiger and his political bosses, Carmona refused to make the
requested changes, according to the officials. Carmona engaged in
similar fights over other public health reports, including an
unpublished report on prison health. A few days before the end of
his term as the nation's senior medical officer, he was abruptly
told he would not be reappointed.
Steiger did not return a phone call seeking his
comment. But he said in a written statement released by an HHS
spokesman Friday that the report contained information that was
"often inaccurate or out-of-date and it lacked analysis and focus."
Steiger confirmed that he sharply disagreed with
Carmona on the issue of how much the report should promote Bush
administration policies. "A document meant to educate the American
public about health as a global challenge and urge them to action
should at least let Americans know what their generosity is already
doing in helping to solve those challenges," Steiger said in the
statement.
Steiger said that "political considerations" did
not delay the report; "sloppy work, poor analysis, and lack of
scientific rigor did." Asked about the report's handling, an HHS
spokeswoman said Friday that it is still "under development."
The draft report itself, in language linking
public health problems with violence and other social ills, says "we
cannot overstate . . . that problems in remote parts of the globe
can no longer be ignored. Diseases that Americans once read about as
affecting people in regions . . . most of us would never visit are
now capable of reaching us directly. The hunger, disease, and death
resulting from poor food and nutrition create social and political
instability . . . and that instability may spread to other nations
as people migrate to survive."
In 65 pages, the report charts trends in
infectious and chronic disease; reviews efforts to curb AIDS,
tuberculosis and malaria; calls for the careful monitoring of public
health to safeguard against bioterrorism; and explains the
importance of proper nutrition, childhood immunizations and clean
air and water, among other topics. Its underlying message is that
disease and suffering do not respect political boundaries in an era
of globalization and mass population movements.
The report was compiled by government and private
public-health experts from various organizations, including the
National Institutes of Health, the Catholic Medical Mission Board
and several universities. Steiger's global health office provided
the funding and staff to lead the effort because the surgeon
general's office has no budget and few staff members of its own.
"It covered all of the contemporary issues of
public health, from environmental health through infectious disease
transmission," said Jerrold M. Michael, a former assistant surgeon
general and a former longtime dean of the University of Hawaii
School of Public Health, who worked on the report.
A few of the issues it focuses on, such as AIDS
treatment and research, have been public health priorities for the
Bush administration. But others — including ratifying the
international tobacco treaty and making global health an element of
U.S. foreign policy — are more politically sensitive. The report
calls on the administration to consider spending more money on
global health improvement, for instance. And it warns that "the
environmental conditions that poison our water and contaminate our
air are not contained within national boundaries. . . . The use of
pesticides is also of concern to health officials, scientists and
government leaders around the world."
Three people involved in the preparation of an
initial draft in 2005 said it received largely positive reviews from
global health experts both inside and outside the government,
prompting wide optimism that the report would be publicly released
that year. The Commissioned Officers Association, a nonprofit group
representing more than 7,000 current and retired officers of the
U.S. Public Health Service, organized a global health summit in June
2005 in Philadelphia where Carmona was expected to unveil the report
in a keynote address — but he was not cleared to release it there.
Richard Walling, a former career official in the
HHS global health office who oversaw the draft, said Steiger was the
official who blocked its release. "Steiger always had his political
hat on," he said. "I don't think public health was what his vision
was. As far as the international office was concerned, it was a
political office of the secretary. . . . What he was looking for,
and in general what he was always looking for, was, 'How do we
promote the policies and the programs of the administration?' This
report didn't focus on that."
On June 30, 2006, a Steiger aide sent an e-mail
saying that the report should not be cleared for public
distribution: "While we believe the subject matter of the draft is
important, we disagree with the style, tone and messaging," wrote
the aide, Mark A. Abdoo, according to a copy of the e-mail. "We
believe this document should be focused tightly on the
Administration's major priorities in global health so the American
public can understand better why these issues should be important to
them. As such, the draft should be a policy statement, albeit one
that is evidence based and draws on the best available science."
Steiger, 37, is a godson of former president
George H.W. Bush and the son of a moderate Republican who
represented Wisconsin in the House and hired a young Dick Cheney as
an intern. The elder Bush appointed Steiger's mother to the Federal
Trade Commission in 1989. A biographical sketch of her on the
American Bar Association's Web site states that Steiger's parents,
now deceased, were "lifelong friends" of many members of the same
congressional class, including the Rumsfelds and the Bushes.
According to a résumé Steiger supplied to
Congress, he obtained a doctorate in Latin American history from the
University of California at Los Angeles before teaching at a
university in the Philippines and consulting in Angola for the
International Republican Institute — a nonprofit group that is
associated with the party and promotes democracy around the world.
He was an education adviser to then-Gov. Tommy G. Thompson (R) of
Wisconsin and came to Washington when Thompson became HHS secretary.
He is now awaiting a Senate vote on his nomination as Bush's
ambassador to Mozambique.
Bill Hall, an HHS spokesman, said Steiger promoted
interest in global health at the department while more than doubling
the number of expert staff members overseas and participating in
international negotiations on issues such as avian influenza. "You
have to look at his skills as an executive leader in spite of the
fact that he doesn't have a medical degree or a public health
degree," Hall said.
Public health advocates have accused Steiger of
political meddling before. He briefly attained notoriety in 2004 by
demanding changes in the language of an international report on
obesity. The report was opposed by some U.S. food manufacturers and
the sugar industry.
According to Walling and three other public health
officials familiar with the current dispute, Carmona at one point
suggested that Steiger release the global health report in tandem
with a separate report of the sort Steiger wanted, but Steiger
rejected the idea. An appeal by Carmona to Health and Human Services
Secretary Mike Leavitt and his staff produced no relief, a former
HHS official said.
"I fought for my last year to try to get it out
and couldn't get it past the initial vetting," Carmona testified
earlier this month. "I refused to release it [with the requested
changes] . . . because it would tarnish the office of the surgeon
general when our colleagues saw us taking a political stand."
Thomas Novotny, a former assistant surgeon general
who ran the global health office before Steiger, said, "It's
embarrassing, just ridiculous that the report hasn't come out."
Novotny, who served at HHS in the Clinton and in both Bush
administrations, said that many nations have made health issues
central to their foreign relations and trade policies, but that the
United States has been reluctant to embrace that idea.
"It made perfect sense for the surgeon general to
take up the issue because the U.S. used to be a leader in this
field," Novotny said. "For the nation's top doctor to be unable to
release the report shows that leadership is gone."
The global health document was one of several
reports initiated by Carmona that top HHS officials suppressed
because they disliked the reports' conclusions, according to a
former administration official. Another was a "Call to Action on
Corrections and Community Health." It says — according to draft
language obtained by The Post — that the public has a large stake in
the health of the 2 million men and women who are behind bars, and
in the health care available to them in their communities after
their release.
The report recommends enhanced health screenings
for those arrested and their victims; better disease surveillance in
prisons; and ready access to medical, mental health and substance
abuse prevention services for those released.
But the report has been bottled up at HHS, said
three public health experts who worked on it. John Miles, a
consultant and former Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
official who helped draft it, said he suspects that the proposed
health screenings and other recommendations are seen as a
potentially burdensome cost. "Maybe they just don't feel it's a
priority," Miles said.
Hall, the HHS spokesman, responded in a statement
Friday that the Bush administration has always believed that public
health policy should be rooted in science. "While we appreciate and
respect Dr. Carmona's service as surgeon general, we disagree with
his statements," Hall said.