While some of Donald Trump’s more notable personnel decisions took a long time, he wasted little time in announcing that Fox News contributor Janette Nesheiwat would be his choice for surgeon general: Trump made his choice just two weeks after winning a second term.
While most of the president’s early personnel choices have already been confirmed by the Republican-led Senate, Nesheiwat, a family medicine physician, has waited months for a confirmation hearing.
This week, the doctor’s wait was supposed to be over: The Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee was scheduled to hear directly from Nesheiwat this week. Now, there’s no need for that hearing to proceed.
The president announced by way of his social media platform that Nesheiwat’s nomination is no more — he failed to explain why — adding that he will instead nominate Dr. Casey Means for the position. The Associated Press describes Means as a “wellness influencer with close ties to Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.”
Trump’s missive went on to claim that his first choice for surgeon general will work at the Department of Health and Human Services in “another capacity.”
For advocates of science and public health, the demise of Nesheiwat’s nomination is not exactly discouraging. A HuffPost report from the fall detailed her background and noted the physician’s record as a Trump loyalist with little public health experience — presumably a prerequisite for a surgeon general — who made highly problematic on-air comments about hydroxychloroquine during the pandemic.
Just as notably, Nesheiwat sold dietary supplements, featuring her image on the bottle, which included the highly dubious claim that customers’ immune system would be “strengthened” within weeks.








