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Mandy Cohen, who led NC’S covid response, likely to be President Biden’s next CDC leader

- By Dawn Baumgartne­r Vaughan and Michael Wilner

Dr. Mandy Cohen, who led North Carolina’s public health response to the coronaviru­s pandemic, could become a national health leader in President Joe Biden’s administra­tion.

The Washington Post reported Thursday that Cohen is Biden’s pick for head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Cohen was secretary of the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services before stepping down about a year and a half ago to go into the private sector.

A source familiar with the matter told Mcclatchy that the decision is not final, as Cohen still must complete paperwork for the role. But the president chose Cohen because of her experience as an executive at the federal level while serving as a senior advisor and chief of staff at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, as well as at the local level throughout the coronaviru­s pandemic in North Carolina.

Cohen ushered the state through the COVID-19 response, standing alongside Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper for regular media briefings in 2020 and 2021 as they talked about the latest number of cases and restrictio­ns. North Carolina closed and put restrictio­ns on in-person schools, restaurant­s, gyms, bars, sports and entertainm­ent venues, playground­s, public spaces and businesses for many months as they navigated the pandemic.

Cohen was known for repeatedly urging North Carolinian­s to follow the “three Ws” of wearing a mask, waiting six feet apart from each other and washing their hands to control the spread of COVID-19. As vaccinatio­ns became available, she gave updates on who would be eligible as each wave of vaccine distributi­on carried through the state.

Cooper’s state of emergency lasted for more than two years, with a continuous issuing of executive orders that both eased and imposed restrictio­ns.

Cohen announced she was leaving her job at N.C. DHHS at the end of 2021 to go into the private sector as executive vice president of Aledade, a health IT company, and the chief executive officer of its new health services unit, Aledade Care Solutions.

Cohen went to Cornell, Yale and Harvard universiti­es and spent 15 years in the public sector, including working in the Obama administra­tion as chief operating officer and chief of staff at the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, before coming to North Carolina. She spent five years leading N.C. DHHS.

Cohen, an internal medicine physician, said then she would stay in Raleigh for her new job. In one recent public appearance, she watched the bill signing for Medicaid expansion held in April at the Executive Mansion. Cohen had long pushed for expanding Medicaid, which is predicated on the North Carolina state budget becoming law this summer.

When Cohen left DHHS in early 2022, Cooper told reporters that he and Cohen had “been in the trenches together” and her work during the pandemic “saved countless lives.”

“I deeply appreciate your service and your steady hand in times of crisis,” Cooper said to Cohen then.

Cohen has not responded to a message from The N&O asking her if she could confirm the appointmen­t. Cooper’s office did not confirm, either.

 ?? Ethan Hyman/the Raleigh News & Observer/tns ?? Dr. Mandy Cohen, former secretary of the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, speaks during a briefing on the coronaviru­s pandemic at the Emergency Operations Center in Raleigh, North Carolina, in 2020.
Ethan Hyman/the Raleigh News & Observer/tns Dr. Mandy Cohen, former secretary of the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, speaks during a briefing on the coronaviru­s pandemic at the Emergency Operations Center in Raleigh, North Carolina, in 2020.

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