The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Voters look for medical expertise

Georgia candidates with M.D.s or R.N.s get lots of attention.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

A few months ago, Dr. Rich McCormick was another face in the crowded Republican race for a suburban congressio­nal district. But the coronaviru­s pandemic has sent the emergency room physician’s profile soaring.

McCormick logs scores of views with his social media posts urging a speedier reopening of the U.S. economy. Fox News and other conservati­ve outlets lean on his experience in TV interviews. And President Donald Trump retweeted one of his videos accusing Democrats of not letting a “crisis go to waste.”

“I didn’t become an ER doctor because I want to be a politician,” McCormick said. “I didn’t time this to the pandemic. But it just so happened that this is who I am.”

He’s among a small group of doctors, nurses and public health scientists who are competing for state and federal office in Georgia at a time when public attention is transfixed on a pandemic that’s transforme­d the state’s politics — and just about every facet of everyday life.

The same issues that typically shape elections, such as taxes and social divides, haven’t stopped resonating with voters. But polls show the pandemic has quickly become the top issue in the June 9 primary — and candidates with M.D.s and R.N.s are fast finding they’re

inundated with attention.

Whether that translates into votes is not yet clear. Some have struggled to balance virtual campaigns with their mounting profession­al obligation­s. Others host online gatherings to answer voter questions — and remind them of their medical background­s.

Even spouses have come into play: U.S. Senate candidate Jon Ossoff ’s debut ad features his wife, an OB-GYN.

“People now know what an epidemiolo­gist does. They understand the rules of health care, the graphs and models that we use. They’re diving into these issues in their living rooms,” said Dr. Michelle Au, an anesthesio­logist who is running for an open suburban state Senate seat.

She was among the first candidates in Georgia to suspend in-person activities as the outbreak spread. Suddenly, she was juggling shifts at Emory St. Joseph’s Hospital with virtual events for her campaign and scattered appearance­s on CNN and MSNBC as a medical analyst.

“Now it’s framed in vivid relief. Everyone’s lives are upended in this effort to contain this global pandemic, and it makes it more digestible,” Au said.

‘A useful skill set’

Georgia has a long history of physicians or those with medical background­s serving in key political roles. Sonny Perdue was a veterinari­an before becoming Georgia’s first Republican governor since Reconstruc­tion. Tom Price, a former congressma­n, was briefly Trump’s health secretary.

And Dr. Paul Broun, a family physician, is attempting a comeback bid after serving four terms in the U.S. House. He recently tried to grab attention with an ad warning of “looting hordes from Atlanta” descending on rural North Georgia in “uncertain times,” though he’s mostly focused on economic and social issues.

He’s among a half-dozen candidates with medical background­s competing for Georgia’s 14 U.S. House seats. And at least seven physicians are running for state legislativ­e seats in November, along with five other contenders with background­s in nursing.

Not surprising­ly, they’re leaning heavily on their experience. Dr. John Cowan, a Rome neurosurge­on running in Georgia’s deeply conservati­ve 14th Congressio­nal District, starts his first TV ad in full hospital scrubs. He ends it at a shooting range with a burst from an assault rifle that shreds a mock coronaviru­s target.

The Republican’s campaign was focused on health care from the get-go, with dire warnings about how rising health care costs could imperil national security. He said the pandemic’s spread has vindicated those fears by demonstrat­ing how a “microbe can cripple our economy.”

His campaign has been flooded with questions from voters. At first, he said, most asked about disease symptoms and safety precaution­s. Now the questions involve how to restart the economy. He plugs himself as someone who understand­s the “dilemmas our president and our governor have to deal with.”

On the virtual campaign trail, Democrat Rebecca Mitchell takes the opposite approach. An epidemiolo­gist with a doctorate in infectious disease modeling, she has forcefully criticized Gov. Brian Kemp’s decision to reopen parts of the economy as she runs for a Gwinnett County-based state House seat.

“I wish that this weren’t a useful skill set right now. Every day I hope we’re wrong,” she said. “Every day we’re wrong is a good day.”

Au, the anesthesio­logist, said she’s noticed another side effect of the pandemic.

“People are very distrustfu­l of politics and institutio­ns in a way we haven’t seen before,” she said. “But they still trust doctors, nurses and medical profession­als.”

‘Doing my job’

When state Sen. Renee Unterman jumped into the race for Georgia’s 7th Congressio­nal District — a stretch of Forsyth and Gwinnett counties — news coverage focused on how the race could be shaped by her role as a main sponsor of Georgia’s anti-abortion law.

But now the retired nurse is more likely to be questioned about her medical background and experience as the onetime head of the state Senate’s health care panel — a role that helped her shape state health care policy and influence the budget for mental and behavioral health programs.

“It has crystalliz­ed the importance of health care policy,” she said. “I’ve been flooded with calls about high costs of prescripti­ons. People are cutting back, whether they’re working in restaurant­s or they’re elderly.”

Her top rival appears to be McCormick, the emergency room physician who is leading in several internal polls of the Republican contest. A U.S. Marine veteran, McCormick spoke of harrowing night-vision landings as a helicopter pilot in combat zones and unimaginab­le split-second decisions in the ER.

But as he spoke, shortly before his usual overnight shift at Gwinnett Medical Center, McCormick allowed that this campaign has challenged him in other ways.

“The real stress is not being able to fight back. I’m working a full-time job as an ER doc during a pandemic and running a fulltime campaign,” he said. “It’s not benefiting me like people claim it did. It’s highlighte­d my role — but I’m just doing my job.”

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