Miami Herald

Florida’s surgeon general picks a fight with the CDC, and DeSantis scores political points

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The feds took on Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo last week in a highly critical letter responding to the state’s top doctor’s fear-mongering claims about COVID vaccine risks.

Good. Voters across the country need to understand more about the fringe views of the man Gov. DeSantis chose to carry out his politicall­y motivated, anti-vaccine message in Florida — before they have to evaluate DeSantis as a potential Republican nominee for the presidency.

Ladapo has put his anti-vaxx views on display for years. Before DeSantis picked him, he wrote opinion pieces in The

Wall Street Journal and USAToday raising fears about COVID vaccine risks and touting hydroxychl­oroquine as a treatment — though it has been shown over and over to have no benefit to COVID patients.

He appeared in a 2020 video at an event organized by a group calling itself America’s Frontline Doctors — organized, in part, by the Tea Party Patriots — pushing hydroxychl­oroquine as a possible COVID treatment. One of the doctors appearing with him was Stella Immanuel, a Houston physician who reportedly has claimed that ailments like cysts and endometrio­sis are caused by sex dreams about demons and witches, among other prepostero­us ideas.

Ladapo, who is Harvard University trained, also refused to don a mask in the office of Florida Sen. Tina Polsky, who had been diagnosed with breast cancer. That crossed the line even for Republican leaders. Then-Senate President Wilton Simpson called his behavior “unprofessi­onal” and said it would “not be tolerated in the Senate.”

Ladapo’s excuse offered later, that he couldn’t communicat­e with the mask on, was utter nonsense. Surgeons wear masks during operations and somehow manage to communicat­e just fine.

His former supervisor at UCLA’s Department of Medicine recommende­d him for a post at the University of Florida, but said he shouldn’t become surgeon general, telling Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t agents that Florida “would be better served by a surgeon general who grounds his policy decisions and recommenda­tions in the best scientific evidence rather than opinions.”

POLITICAL VIEWS

But Ladapo’s political views — and his willingnes­s to pick a fight — were probably exactly why DeSantis chose him in 2021, despite his complete lack of experience in public-health administra­tion. Florida’s governor, adept at seeing which way the Republican wind was blowing, was being talked about as a White House contender. If he wanted to court the anti-vaxxers of the extreme right, he’d have to find a way to get past his public statements that COVID vaccines were “saving lives” and “reducing mortality.”

Hiring a doctor with extreme views and a hunger for the spotlight was a perfect way to divert attention.

VACCINE HESITANCY

So now we have a scathing letter from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion last week, calling Ladapo out on his claims that the COVID vaccine poses a health risk and criticizin­g a lower-than-average vaccinatio­n rate for seniors in the state.

“As the leading public health official in the state, you are likely aware that seniors in Florida are under-vaccinated, with just 29% of seniors having received an updated bivalent vaccine, compared to the national average of 41% coverage in seniors,” the letter said. “It is the job of public health officials around the country to protect the lives of the population­s they serve, particular­ly the vulnerable. Fueling vaccine hesitancy undermines this effort.”

They’re saying, essentiall­y, that the top public health official in Florida isn’t protecting seniors, a particular­ly vulnerable population. Unfortunat­ely, he’s doing the opposite.

The letter from the federal agencies was in response to one Ladapo wrote last month saying Florida had seen a big spike in “adverse” medical events reported to the national Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System after the release of COVID vaccines. “To claim these vaccines are ‘safe and effective’ while minimizing and disregardi­ng the adverse events is unconscion­able,” Ladapo wrote.

But the CDC and FDA said the Florida surgeon general was the one misinterpr­eting the informatio­n. In their letter last week, they noted that an increase in reported events was expected because, under the COVID vaccine Emergency Use Authorizat­ion, vaccine providers are required to report those events, most of which aren’t caused by the vaccine but are tied to pre-existing or underlying medical conditions.

Ladapo spoke at a meeting of the Senate Committee on

Health Policy Monday and vowed to respond to the CDC and FDA letter, which he called “misleading” and, at times, “factually incorrect.”

That all sounds very official and medical, but what’s really happening here is actually just political. DeSantis talks about being anti-woke and anti-extremism, yet he has installed an extremist as Florida’s surgeon general.

That no longer surprises us in Florida, where DeSantis’ “I’mnot-an-extremist, you’re-anextremis­t” attacks are coming at us at a furious pace as the 2024 election gets closer.

But for Republican­s in other parts of the country who may not have been paying close attention to Florida, the Ladapo/DeSantis fight with the CDC and FDA should sound a serious warning note. The last time we had a guy in national office who cared more about being known as “a fighter” than about actually governing the country, it didn’t turn out so well.

 ?? JOSE A IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com ?? Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo, left, at Broward Health Medical Center with Gov. Ron DeSantis in January 2022.
JOSE A IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo, left, at Broward Health Medical Center with Gov. Ron DeSantis in January 2022.

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