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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Surgeon general chosen

President nominates doctor from Alabama

Dr. Regina Benjamin, of Alabama, speaks following President Barack Obama’s announcement Monday he will nominate her to be the next U.S. surgeon general.  (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Desiree Hunter And Lauran Neergaard Associated Press

BAYOU LA BATRE, Ala. – When Hurricane Katrina wrecked the little clinic here in the coastal backwaters of Alabama, Dr. Regina Benjamin laid out medical charts to dry in the post-storm sun and hopped in a pickup truck to check on her patients.

When she had trouble treating the growing influx of Southeast Asian immigrants in the shrimping community because she could not understand them, she went to a nearby Vietnamese pool hall to find an interpreter.

Benjamin, 52, was nominated by President Barack Obama on Monday to be U.S. surgeon general, pledging to take her fight from a rural, impoverished outpost to the top tier of American medicine so that “no one falls through the cracks.”

She said she would combat preventable diseases. Her father died with diabetes and high blood pressure, her only brother of HIV. Her mother died of lung cancer because as a girl “she wanted to smoke just like her twin brother,” an uncle now on oxygen.

“I cannot change my family’s past. I can be a voice in the movement to improve our nation’s health care and our nation’s health,” Benjamin said. “I want to be sure that no one falls through the cracks as we improve our health care system.”

Pushed by the diverse patient mix of Bayou La Batre – white, black and, increasingly, immigrants from Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos – Benjamin has emerged as a national leader in the fight to close gaps in health.

She became the first black woman and the first doctor under age 40 elected to the American Medical Association’s board of trustees, and in 2002 became the first black woman to head a state medical society.

“For all the tremendous obstacles that she has overcome, Regina Benjamin also represents what’s best about health care in America, doctors and nurses who give and care and sacrifice for the sake of their patients,” Obama said at the White House.

After Katrina ruined the clinic in Bayou La Batre, Benjamin pointed out the need for electronic records that would be invulnerable to hurricanes.

It was rebuilt by volunteers – then burned down just as it was about to reopen. Her patients were so desperate for it to reopen that Benjamin later recalled a woman handing her an envelope containing $7.

“If she can find $7, I can figure out the rest,” Benjamin said last fall as she received a $500,000 MacArthur Foundation “genius grant” and promised to use the money to help finish the job. Today, the clinic is a small brick building next to City Hall with a wooden ramp leading to its door.

American Medical Association President Dr. James Rohack, who has known Benjamin for more than two decades, said “she can bring the real-world perspective as surgeon general of the things as a nation we need to do to keep ourselves healthy.”