The Boston Globe

Walensky: needing a break part of leaving CDC

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NEW YORK — The outgoing head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Tuesday her reasons for stepping down were complicate­d, driven in part by a desire to take a break from the frenetic pace of the job during a pandemic.

Dr. Rochelle Walensky surprised many in public health circles last month by announcing her departure after two years and five months — one of the shortest tenures for a CDC director in recent decades. She resigned as the pandemic’s national public health emergency was winding down.

“I did what I came to do — which was get us through the darkest days of a pandemic,” she said in an interview.

Walensky, 54, described her time at the agency as intense, but stopped short of saying she was burned out.

She said she had looked for a quiet moment to withdraw from a job that gave her a sense of pride and accomplish­ment but also led to criticism, protests outside her home, and threats of violence.

“That (the threats) wasn’t the straw that broke the camel’s back,” she emphasized. But it also wasn’t something she anticipate­d when she took the job — her first time running a government public health agency.

She spent the first year of the pandemic treating COVID-19 patients as an infectious disease doctor at Massachuse­tts General Hospital. She became CDC director in January 2021, on the first day of the Biden administra­tion. It was near the beginning of a national COVID-19 vaccinatio­n campaign that was expected to turn the tide, but saw additional waves of illness and death as new versions of the coronaviru­s emerged.

There were also a variety of other outbreaks and crises, including an unexpected mpox outbreak last year.

Counting her time at MGH during the pandemic, “it was 3½ years at that pace — an extraordin­ary pace,” she said.

Walensky’s last day at CDC is June 30. She does not have a new job or other role lined up, she said, saying she wanted to spend some time with her family, living at a slower pace.

Walensky said she was extremely proud of what the CDC and other public health workers had accomplish­ed in the last couple of years, citing the 676 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine given to Americans. She also initiated a reorganiza­tion of the 12,000-employee health agency in Atlanta.

Last week, the White House announced it had chosen Dr. Mandy Cohen, a former North Carolina health official, to be the next CDC director. Walensky said she has known Cohen for years and has had several conversati­ons recently about the job and the challenges ahead.

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