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Dr. Anthony Fauci is the gold standard

America’s lucky to have him at this critical time

- David M. Rubenstein David M. Rubenstein is the co-executive chairman of The Carlyle Group.

Some viewers of the daily White House coronaviru­s briefings may wonder why everyone increasing­ly defers to a diminutive, Brooklyn-accented 79year-old doctor, Anthony Fauci.

They do because, as I have learned over many years of talking with and more recently interviewi­ng this man, he is without doubt the world’s leading authority on infectious diseases. In any area of human activity or knowledge, there always seems to be one person who is the global gold standard.

In the world of infectious diseases, that person is Tony Fauci.

The American people — in- deed, people around the globe — should be grateful that Tony has dug into this crisis with the same workaround-the-clock, just-the-facts-ma’am style that he has used while serving under and working with six U.S. presidents. Political criticisms of Tony at this time are very unfortunat­e: He is as apolitical as anyone can be. I have no idea whether he is registered with any political party; I suspect though that he is rabidly independen­t. His only focus is getting the facts out, providing the best health care treatment possible, and saving lives.

Tony Fauci joined the National Institutes of Health in 1968, after completing his medical training at Weill Cornell Medical Center, and he has led the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease since 1984 — 36 years. Hard to believe anyone can run anything that long and still be at the top of his game. But Tony is. During this period, he has dealt with every serious infectious disease challenge — malaria, tuberculos­is, HIV/AIDS, the Middle East respirator­y syndrome, the severe acute respirator­y syndrome, dengue fever, Ebola, to name a few — and now what seems to be the most serious pandemic since the 1918 flu, COVID-19.

On the case, from AIDS to Ebola

Among Tony’s best known accomplish­ments, beyond simply running the institute and training dozens of the world’s top infectious disease profession­als, has been helping to discover how HIV leads to AIDS and leading the effort to create (at President George W. Bush’s direction) the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, which has transforme­d the treatment of HIV/ AIDS in Africa and other parts of the developing world. Millions of lives have been saved by this program alone.

More recently, he has been an architect and powerful advocate of President Donald Trump’s plan for ending the AIDS epidemic in the United States through HIV antiretrov­iral therapy targeted to disease hot spots.

In his spare time, Tony has been involved with writing or editing more than 1,100 scholarly articles and several textbooks, and, in the process, has become one of the most cited authoritie­s of the entire medical profession.

For these breakthrou­gh activities and his dedicated service (at a government salary) for more than a half-century, Tony has received, and earned, the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom and a Lasker Award (called the American Nobel by many).

With this long service and universal acclaim, one might think Tony would let it get to his head, at least a little bit. Not the case, though.

He is readily accessible to those who need treatment — he still runs a lab at NIH — or need informatio­n. Tony still lives in the same house he bought when he first moved to Washington, and it is there that he and his wife, Dr. Christine Grady, have raised their three talented daughters (though none of them chose to attend medical school).

Until the latest crisis, Tony has often commuted to NIH by Metro, typically after running 3 miles for his daily exercise. And when he has been invited to make speeches in the Washington area or on Capitol Hill, he invariably turns down a car and driver for the Metro. (This practice has had to change of late for the obvious reasons.)

Selfless commitment

There are, of course, many other dedicated federal servants who also view their commitment to the country and its people over financial rewards. But surely no federal civil servant, in any area, can exceed Tony Fauci’s longterm and selfless commitment to this country and the health of its people.

I tried years ago, when Tony was approachin­g a normal retirement age, to see whether he might want after a normal lifetime of federal service to take some of his considerab­le skills and knowledge to the private sector. He quickly said no. Money did not motivate him; serving the country did. And he stayed at NIH — to the country’s good fortune.

If there is any one medical profession­al who can help the country deal with the COVID-19 crisis, it is Tony Fauci, an example of the best this country has to offer.

He is not a miracle worker. No one is. Nonetheles­s, Tony Fauci has the decades of experience needed to understand infectious disease problems and prescribe a treatment that should, in time, provide the requisite comfort — even if in the short term, the medicine is painful and inconvenie­nt.

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