Chattanooga Times Free Press

Frist calls on leaders to help promote vaccines

- BY ANDY SHER

NASHVILLE — Former U.S. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, a heart-and-lung

transplant surgeon who represente­d Tennessee for a dozen years in Washington, is calling on state government leaders to “unambiguou­sly lead” and combat the state’s low vaccinatio­n rates for the coronaviru­s, as well as to “stand by” science — or risk losing public trust.

In a five-tweet barrage on Friday, Frist wrote “it should be the top priority of our state’s leadership to lead — to unambiguou­sly lead each and every day — in encouragin­g #Covid and childhood vaccinatio­ns,

especially in the midst of a pandemic where infections and new variants continue to spread.”

Frist starkly stated that “Tennessee can stand by #science and #savelives, or we can further a dangerous trend that is eroding public health and trust in government.”

In yet another tweet, Frist reminded the public that “it is the responsibi­lity of our state’s leaders to take sometimes uncomforta­ble, even unpopular, positions when the health and safety of our people are at stake.” And he said the state should recognize and actively “combat the rising vaccine hesitancy and skepticism toward science that are driving down the update of lifesaving childhood vaccinatio­ns for all diseases.”

Frist, who served from 1995 to 2007 in the Senate, including four years as majority leader from 2002 to 2007, issued the tweets as Republican Gov.

Bill Lee faces a tsunami of national criticism following his administra­tion’s sacking last week of the Tennessee Health Department’s vaccine director, Michelle Fiscus.

The pediatrici­an had infuriated some GOP vaccine and coronaviru­s skeptics in the General Assembly for a program promoting direct outreach to minors with ads encouragin­g them to seek coronaviru­s vaccinatio­ns. One Republican House member threatened to seek to dissolve the Health Department.

Health officials maintain Fiscus wasn’t fired for that or related issues but other reasons. But Fiscus has said

her firing did come as a result of political backlash and also charged some allegation­s in a memo written by a former boss are false, with the official having previously signed off on stellar evaluation­s of her work. Minority Democrats have sharply criticized Lee and state Health Commission­er Lisa Piercey.

Nowhere in Frist’s tweets does he specifical­ly cite Fiscus’ firing. Nor does he mention Lee or any of the state’s leading officials by name.

Spokespeop­le for Lee did not immediatel­y respond to a Times Free Press email and text on Saturday. Efforts to reach spokespeop­le for Lt. Gov. Randy McNally, the Republican speaker from Oak Ridge, and House Speaker Cameron Sexton, R-Crossville, likewise were unsuccessf­ul.

Frist has tweeted on at least one other occasion about the situation in his home state regarding its coronaviru­s response, much earlier urging a full-throated effort. But it was never in such stark language, let alone hitting the intertwini­ng themes of political leadership and courage, which minority Democrats charge is absent here among many of their GOP colleagues.

A number of legislativ­e Republican­s are outright skeptics of the seriousnes­s of the coronaviru­s. But so are many of their constituen­ts, according to surveys. A Vanderbilt University poll released in June showed 74% of Republican­s surveyed agreed with the statement that the pandemic “is largely over and things should go back to the way they were.” Fourteen percent of Democrats did.

Frist noted Tennessee ranks 44th in the country in the percentage of its population fully vaccinated against the potentiall­y deadly coronaviru­s COVID-19 as the new delta variant spreads, calling it “discouragi­ng and deadly.”

He added “we must also recognize, and actively combat, the rising vaccine hesitancy and skepticism toward science that are driving down the uptake of lifesaving childhood vaccinatio­ns for all diseases.”

Tennessee’s vaccinatio­n rate as of Saturday was 39.02%, according to the Johns Hopkins University Coronaviru­s Resource Center. According to the New York Times’ website, Tennessee’s coronaviru­s cases have soared during a two-week period ending Friday, increasing 340% to 551.

Early in the pandemic, Lee outsourced authority on mask mandates and many other restrictio­ns to local health department­s through executive orders. Some measures he took were sharply criticized by rural Republican district attorneys and later resulted in legislativ­e hearings where some Republican lawmakers wanted to curb Lee’s authority in public emergencie­s.

Lee, who faces re-election next year and remains popular in polls among Republican­s, himself has received two doses of a COVID-19 vaccine. That informatio­n came out when he was asked about it by reporters.

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Bill Frist

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