Pandemic readiness leader chosen
Biden selects surgeon, retired general to head new office
WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden has picked Dr. Paul Friedrichs, a military combat surgeon and retired Air Force major general who helped lead the covid-19 response at the Pentagon, to head a new White House office created by Congress to prepare for and manage future biological threats.
The White House announced the appointment Friday and said it would take effect Aug. 7. It will then be up to Friedrichs to set up the new office, the Office of Pandemic Preparedness and Response Policy, although the administration has christened it with a shorter Washington acronym: OPPR.
The appointment comes after a lengthy search for a director that ended where it began — at the White House, where Friedrichs recently joined the staff of the National Security Council as the senior director for global health security and biodefense. Before that, he served as the Joint Staff surgeon at the Pentagon, providing medical advice to the chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. His planned selection was reported this month by The Washington Post.
WHY IT MATTERS
The coronavirus pandemic has often been described as the worst public health crisis in a century. But experts agree that given current migration patterns and the way humans intersect with animal life, it will not be a century — and it might not even be a decade — before the next pandemic arrives.
The era of covid “czars” is over. Biden’s first White House coronavirus response coordinator, Jeffrey Zients, is now the White House chief of staff. The second coordinator, Dr. Ashish Jha, has gone back to his position as dean of the Brown University School of Public Health.
Covid-19 made clear that a biological health threat does not respect boundaries — including the boundaries that divide federal agencies. The appointment of Friedrichs signals a more permanent and coordinated effort to prepare for and respond to pandemics — one that will last beyond the Biden administration and will be centralized within the White House.
BACKGROUND
In a February speech, Friedrichs, who retired from the military in June, reflected on his 37-year career in the Air Force and shared a bit about himself. His father served in the Navy at the end of World War II, and his mother was a Hungarian freedom fighter whose parents were killed by the Russians. His wife was an Army doctor when they met.
He also reflected on the role of the military in fighting covid-19, an effort that included helping develop and distribute vaccines and providing medical support to struggling hospitals.
“The military health system became the pinch-hitter that stepped in to help our civilian partners as we collectively struggled to work through that pandemic,” he said.
WHAT’S NEXT
Friedrich’s new position gives him authority to oversee domestic biosecurity preparedness. He will need to work on the development of next-generation vaccines, ensure adequate supplies in the Strategic National Stockpile and ramp up surveillance to monitor for new biological threats.
He will also have to work with Congress to secure funding for preparedness efforts. Lawmakers created the new White House office as part of a government spending package enacted late last year.
“When President Biden came into office, we inherited a once-in-a-generation public health and economic crisis but no plan to get us out of it,” Zients said in a statement. “This office — under the strong and capable leadership of Maj. Gen. Friedrichs — will lead the charge to ensure that never happens again.”