Dr. Regina Benjamin is Obama’s surgeon general choice
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WASHINGTON (CNN) -- President Obama announced his choice for surgeon general -- Dr. Regina Benjamin, a 52-year-old family practice doctor who has spent most of her career tending to the needs of poor patients in a Gulf Coast clinic in Alabama. "When people couldn't pay, she didn't charge them," Obama said. "When the
clinic wasn't making money, she didn't take a salary for herself." Benjamin cited the toll of preventable illness as the reason her family was not with her at the announcement: Her father died with diabetes and high blood pressure; her older brother and only sibling died at age 44 of an HIV-related illness; her mother died of lung cancer after taking up smoking as a girl; her mother's twin brother could not attend because he is at home "struggling for each breath" after a lifetime of smoking. "I cannot change my family's past, but I can be a voice to improve our
nation's health for the future," she said. Watch for more on Benjamin » She completed her residency in family practice at the Medical Center of
Central Georgia in 1987. Benjamin founded the Bayou La Batre Rural Health Clinic in 1990 in the
fishing village of Bayou La Batre, Alabama, and has served as its CEO since. Many of her family practice patients are immigrants from Vietnam,
Cambodia and Laos who make up a third of Bayou La Batre's population, and
many of them are uninsured. Benjamin said she has worked for years to scrape together the resources needed to keep the clinic doors open and found "it has not been an easy road. ... It should not be this hard for doctors and other health care providers to care for their patients." She praised Obama "for putting health care reform at the top of your
domestic agenda," and said she hopes, if confirmed by the Senate, "to be
America's doctor, America's family physician." A call to the clinic, where Benjamin was working last week, found it in full swing. "We are just packed in with patients right now, and I'm the only one at the front office," said a breathless woman who then hung up. Benjamin has served as the associate dean for rural health at the
University of South Alabama's College of Medicine and as president of the
State of Alabama Medical Association, from 2002-2003. |