Current:Home > ContactRochelle Walensky, who led the CDC during the pandemic, resigns -Clarity Finance Guides
Rochelle Walensky, who led the CDC during the pandemic, resigns
View
Date:2025-04-13 20:28:16
Dr. Rochelle Walensky is stepping down as director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, citing the nation's progress in coping with COVID-19.
Walensky announced the move on the same day the World Health Organization declared that, for the first time since Jan. 30, 2020, COVID-19 is no longer a global public health emergency.
"I have never been prouder of anything I have done in my professional career," Walensky wrote in a letter to President Biden. "My tenure at CDC will remain forever the most cherished time I have spent doing hard, necessary, and impactful work."
Walensky, 54, will officially leave her office on June 30.
Biden selected Walensky to lead the CDC only a month after winning the 2020 presidential election. At the time, Walensky, an infectious disease physician, was teaching at Harvard Medical School and working at hospitals in Boston.
In response to Walensky's resignation, Biden credited her with saving American lives and praised her honesty and integrity.
"She marshalled our finest scientists and public health experts to turn the tide on the urgent crises we've faced," the president said.
The announcement came as a surprise to many staffers at the CDC, who told NPR they had no inkling this news was about to drop. Walensky was known as charismatic, incredibly smart and a strong leader.
"She led the CDC at perhaps the most challenging time in its history, in the middle of an absolute crisis," says Drew Altman, president and CEO of KFF.
She took the helm a year into the pandemic when the CDC had been found to have changed public health guidance based on political interference during the Trump administration. It was an extremely challenging moment for the CDC. Altman and others give her credit for trying to depoliticize the agency and put it on a better track. She led the agency with "science and dignity," Altman says.
But the CDC also faced criticism during her tenure for issuing some confusing COVID-19 guidance, among other communication issues. She told people, for instance, that once you got vaccinated you couldn't spread COVID-19. But in the summer of 2021 more data made it clear that wasn't the case, and that made her a target for some criticism, especially from Republican lawmakers and media figures.
On Thursday, the CDC reported that in 2022, COVID-19 was the fourth-leading cause of death in the U.S., behind heart disease, cancer, and unintentional injuries, according to provisional data. And on May 11th the federal public health emergency declaration will end.
"The end of the COVID-19 public health emergency marks a tremendous transition for our country," Walensky wrote in her resignation letter. During her tenure the agency administered 670 million COVID-19 vaccines and, "in the process, we saved and improved lives and protected the country and the world from the greatest infectious disease threat we have seen in over 100 years."
President Biden has not yet named a replacement.
NPR's Selena Simmons-Duffin contributed to this report.
veryGood! (6261)
Related
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello’s New PDA Pics Prove Every Touch Is Ooh, La-La-La
- Biden’s $2 Trillion Climate Plan Promotes Union Jobs, Electric Cars and Carbon-Free Power
- The Texas Lawyer Behind The So-Called Bounty Hunter Abortion Ban
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Woman sentenced in baby girl's death 38 years after dog found body and carried her back to its home
- University of New Mexico Football Player Jaden Hullaby Dead at 21 Days After Going Missing
- Dangerously high temperatures hit South as thousands remain without power
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- DNC to raise billboards in Times Square, across U.S. to highlight abortion rights a year after Roe v. Wade struck down
Ranking
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Keystone XL Wins Nebraska Approval, But the Oil Pipeline Fight Isn’t Over
- Schools ended universal free lunch. Now meal debt is soaring
- Meet The Ultimatum: Queer Love's 5 Couples Who Are Deciding to Marry or Move On
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Cleveland Becomes Cleantech Leader But Ohio Backtracks on Renewable Energy
- College Graduation Gift Guide: 17 Must-Have Presents for Every Kind of Post-Grad Plan
- See Robert De Niro and Girlfriend Tiffany Chen Double Date With Sting and Wife Trudie Styler
Recommendation
Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
Worldwide Effort on Clean Energy Is What’s Needed, Not a Carbon Price
California’s Low-Carbon Fuel Rule Is Working, Study Says, but Threats Loom
First U.S. Nuclear Power Closures in 15 Years Signal Wider Problems for Industry
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Florida deputy gets swept away by floodwaters while rescuing driver
Rep. Jamie Raskin says his cancer is in remission
Eli Lilly says an experimental drug slows Alzheimer's worsening