PAST, PRESENT, FUTURE — It’s CDC Director Rochelle Walensky’s last day at the agency, but she’s still thinking a lot about the agency’s work ahead. She’s been working to smooth potential bumps in a transition, in contact with her successor, Mandy Cohen — an Obama administration alum and formerly North Carolina’s top public health official. And she looks to stay in the game, telling Pulse she’s “eagerly wanting to champion health and public health from a new perch,” though she’s been vague about what that might be. Her reflection on her time at the agency — through the height of the government’s pandemic response — points to the challenges that remain, along with the CDC’s post-pandemic trajectory beyond this administration. Need for speed: Walensky told Pulse that she thinks the agency needs to be faster — in its response, data-gathering and research publishing. That means the CDC’s push for more authority from Congress is likely to continue. “If we are going to be a FEMA-like agency, where we respond in FEMA-like ways to infectious and noninfectious threats, then we need to have FEMA-like authorities,” Walensky said. “Our budgetary authorities, our workforce authorities and our data authorities limit us, tie our hands, in terms of our ability to be nimble.” Building the public’s trust: The CDC’s ability to be nimble in its communication will be key in securing credibility with the public, Walensky said. Getting science out faster, clearly communicating with public and health experts and getting ahead of misinformation are among the changes she holds up as lessons learned from the pandemic. What would she have done differently to build trust? “What I don’t think I articulated as loudly, and perhaps the public didn’t realize — although we as scientists do — is that science will change,” she said. “We underestimated bad actors who would take those moments and try and turn them for political gain.” History’s view: Walensky expects those looking back on her tenure to focus not just on Covid but also on the elevated level of disease hazards, including mpox, polio, fungal meningitis and malaria. “The density of public health threats that we have seen — in addition to Covid — have been ones that we have not previously seen,” she said. And Cohen, like Walensky, will face the historic challenge of trust in public health. “We all want the same thing. We all want people to live well, to live healthy,” Walensky said. “My advice [to Cohen] would really just be to focus on those areas where we agree — there are so many areas where we agree.” WELCOME TO FRIDAY PULSE, where we’re thankful for the holiday weekend. Make next week a little easier by sending a good tip my way today. Reach out at dpayne@politico.com. TODAY ON OUR PULSE CHECK PODCAST, host Alice Miranda Ollstein talks with Daniel Payne about his chat with CDC Rochelle Walensky, whose last day at the agency is today. They spoke about what's next for the future of the CDC and her successor.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment