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A pair of health policy advisers
— one representing John McCain and the other Barack
Obama — took
part in a forum (one might say mild-mannered debate)
this afternoon at George Washington University. Through this event, they became
the public faces of the committees counseling the candidates on health issues.
Health-policy analyst Jay
Khosla parried questions about John McCain’s stance; physician Dora Hughes did
the same for Barack Obama.
Before joining the McCain
campaign, Khosla served as a counsel on health issues for the Senate Budget Committee and held a similar
position for former Senate Majority Leader — and
surgeon — William H. Frist.
Hughes, herself a physician,
formerly worked for Sen. Edward M. Kennedy as Deputy Director for Health on the
Senate Committee on Health. Before that, Hughes was the senior program officer
at the Commonwealth Fund, a national health foundation based in New York City.
But when a question from the audience asked
who the candidates’ other health and research advisers were, both Khosla and
Hughes demurred.
It wasn’t even clear from his
somewhat strained response whether Khosla knows who the others are. He
mentioned that many excellent people are advising McCain, but when pushed for
names, he eventually could name only Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former Congressional Budget Office director who’s also
advising the candidate on science. For more names, Khosla asked the debate’s
moderator, National Public Radio correspondent Julie Rovner, to contact others
on the candidate’s campaign staff.
He did offer that a health-care
professionals coalition — physicians, dentists, nurses,
pharmacists, optometrists, and others — participates
weekly in a conference call to discuss health problems and policy
recommendations. Members of this coalition identify, from the “ground level,” emerging
issues, Khosla said, and a synthesis of their comments gets “funneled to Sen.
McCain.”
Khosla did give up a few
additional names as being in the McCain inner circle: Grace-Marie Turner,
founder of the Galen Institute, a Washington,
D.C.-based think tank, and health-care analyst Gail Wolensky, who ran the
Medicare/Medicaid programs in the George H. Bush administration.
Hughes did acknowledge knowing who Obama’s other health advisers are, but noted that their services in many cases were being provided confidentially, so she thought it inappropriate to name them. However, she did offer up that the 1989 Nobel Prize winner Harold Varmus, a former director of NIH, was among them. Other names that she mentioned: David Blumenthal, a health care analyst with an endowed chair at Harvard Medical School and David Cutler (presumably the one that’s a renowned software engineer behind a number of projects, including several of Microsoft’s more recent operating systems).
Today's forum was organized by the nonpartisan Scientists & Engineers for America. A recording of today's event is slated to become available at their website this evening.Found in: Biomedicine and Science & Society
- Innovation and the Elections: Presidential Perspectives on Health. 2008. Scientists & Engineers for America Forum (Sept. 18). [Go to]

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