Surgeons general are regarded as America鈥檚 doctors. They have also been working physicians and, as became apparent at a rare gathering of the top public health experts past and present, they have families and struggles like everyone else.
They shared some of those challenges鈥攁nd joys鈥攚ith a rapt, appreciative audience at 天美麻豆. Here鈥檚 some of what they said.
Richard Carmona, a U.S. Special Forces Army combat veteran, moved many in the audience to tears as he, struggling to remain composed, told the story of his son, a 21-year Army veteran who he said 鈥渉as crippling PTSD鈥 after serving in Iraq. He said health care should not end for veterans, just because the wars they fought are over.
Carmona was surgeon general from 2002 to 2006, when, one day, family members couldn鈥檛 locate his son, who it turned out had spent two days in a catatonic state in a corner of the family鈥檚 house. Carmona鈥檚 daughter, a critical care nurse, found her brother. He was 鈥渟creaming 鈥業ncoming, incoming,鈥 鈥 Carmona said. Through his son鈥檚 journey through the VA鈥攁t first being told he couldn鈥檛 be treated because he was still on active duty鈥擟armona began to see 鈥渢he cracks in the system.鈥
He soon showed up with his son at a VA emergency room鈥攚here the chiefs of all the medical services and the head of the hospital were lined up waiting for the surgeon general. The experience left him deeply concerned. 鈥淲hat happens if that soldier鈥檚 father is not the surgeon general? Our system is failing these young men and women. 鈥 It鈥檚 personal to me. 鈥 I live it every day because I see him and through him I see thousands of others that we need to do a better job for.鈥

Jerome Adams, who was surgeon general from 2017 to 2021, talked about increasing access to health care, including using teletherapy, especially in rural areas. 鈥淲hile I was in the White House, my brother was in a prison cell 25 miles away in Jessup, Md., due to crimes he had committed to support his addiction. 鈥 I鈥檓 surgeon general of the United States and there鈥檚 nothing I can do to help my own brother who鈥檚 struggling with addiction. He just got released from prison two weeks ago, he鈥檚 in rehab right now, but he鈥檚 in a rural community where there鈥檚 not a lot of access.鈥
Adams, an anesthesiologist, said we must 鈥渞esist the temptation to feed hatred.鈥 He recalled getting a patient ready for surgery. The patient, a white man, had a sheet pulled up to his neck that he was reluctant to lower for Adams, who is Black. Adams asked the man to lower the sheet so he could attach EKG pads. When the man did, Adams saw that the man鈥檚 chest was covered in Nazi tattoos. And then he noticed a tattoo of a child鈥檚 name and asked the patient about his child.
鈥淲e had a conversation about his kids, and you know what鈥檚 interesting about that exchange is had I reacted coldly and harshly it would have fed into his stereotypes about people like me,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 have no illusions that I magically changed his mind, but you know, maybe that interaction showed him that not all Black people are the way that he thinks of them. 鈥 If we can look at things that way instead of 鈥榶ou need to hate this person because of what they said or who they are,鈥 then I think you鈥檒l be in a much better situation, and I think it will spread positively throughout our country.鈥
Regina Benjamin, who in 2010 was awarded an honorary degree from 天美麻豆 while she was surgeon general, said her trip to campus was the first time she has visited 天美麻豆 without spending time with former surgeon general C. Everett 鈥淐hick鈥 Koop 鈥37, her mentor, who died in 2013.
鈥淚 have this conversation with my son. He鈥檚 17, he likes to work out,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou go to the gym to get stronger, you don鈥檛 go to the gym because you鈥檙e hurting. It鈥檚 the same thing for mental health. We need young people to understand that we can do things like meditation, we can do things like making sure we have peer groups that we can connect with what will build our resilience up, our mental muscles, so that we can be stronger. 鈥 We want to recognize when people have problems, but we also very much want to recognize that there are things that we can do to make ourselves stronger and to build resilience.鈥

Joycelyn Elders, a pediatrician and at 90 the eldest of the surgeons general on stage, recalled treating LGBTQ patients before such an acronym existed. 鈥淚 just spent the rest of my life really wanting to do the right thing for young people. I wanted to make sure they grew up healthy. I wanted them to be educated. I wanted to make sure that they had hope.鈥
Elders, who in 1993 became the nation鈥檚 first Black surgeon general, recalled that as a girl, every school day included four hours of home economics. 鈥淲hat I was being educated to do was be a good maid. 鈥 That鈥檚 what they taught Black girls in schools.鈥 But then, when a young Black woman鈥攖he first doctor Elders had ever seen鈥攙isited Elders鈥 college, that woman, , lit a torch that still burns in Elders. 鈥淚 spent the rest of my life wanting to be just like Dr. Jones and I tell people now, if you don鈥檛 have a mentor get one 鈥 because you never know the real difference it can really make in your life.鈥
Antonia Coello Novello called for better treatment of women in medicine, who she said sometimes fall behind if they take time away from their careers to have children. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to disappoint the women who are trying to come into medicine, but please make sure that you recognize (their) gender differences,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey have different circumstances that put them at risk, gender inequity, and the comments that they get for their looks, for their sexual harassment, and the overload that they have. 鈥 鈥漌e have lost self-care. We don鈥檛 sleep, we don鈥檛 eat, we don鈥檛 do social interactions and on top of that we basically have a home, a husband, and children to take care of.
Kenneth Moritsugu said next year鈥檚 election cycle is going to be 鈥渁n extremely stressful period.鈥 He asked that people take care with facts and trust science and he called on 天美麻豆 President Sian Leah Beilock鈥攚ho has made creating venues for people to talk across differences one of her priorities鈥攖o provide outlets on campus for such discussion. 鈥淲e as an academic community and we as a nation have got to address this and try to find a potential solution,鈥 he said.
David Satcher, who couldn鈥檛 travel to 天美麻豆 and addressed the audience in a video message, raised mental health as a priority 24 years ago when, as surgeon general he issued the first advisory on mental health in 1999. 鈥淲e need to build public awareness regarding mental health and effective treatment. We must address the serious shortage of mental health providers,鈥 he said.
鈥淲e need to tailor treatment to age, to gender, to race, and to culture. We need to facilitate entry into treatment. We need to remove the financial barriers that create complexity and restrictions within our health care system. In order to eliminate disparities in health we need leaders. Leaders who care enough, leaders who know enough, leaders who will do enough, and who are persistent enough until the job is done.鈥
The surgeons general, who seemed thrilled to be able to spend time together at the panel discussion and in other gatherings during their time in Hanover, said they strongly support Vivek Murthy, the current surgeon general, in his use of the position鈥檚 bully pulpit to call attention to the mental health crisis, and to the issue of loneliness, which Murthy has made a centerpiece of his service.
Said Carmona, 鈥淲e consider it such a privilege, we all feel once a surgeon general, always a surgeon general. We are part of Vivek鈥檚 army now and we back him up in everything we do.鈥
Murthy, in closing, spoke to the many white-coated medical students in the audience鈥攁nd to everyone else, urging them to see the humanity in everyone.
鈥淚 worry about the polarization and division that we have in our country. It鈥檚 hard to hate people up close,鈥 he said.