Current:Home > FinanceNew American Medical Association president says "we have a health care system in crisis" -Clarity Finance Guides
New American Medical Association president says "we have a health care system in crisis"
View
Date:2025-04-17 17:32:16
Washington — Dr. Jesse Ehrenfeld — an anesthesiologist, Navy veteran and father — made history this week when he was inaugurated as the new president of the American Medical Association, becoming the first openly gay leader of the nation's largest group of physicians and medical students.
"So after three years of experiencing so much stress, with COVID, you know, we've had a 'twindemic:' a pandemic of the disease, plus a pandemic of misinformation, and bad information," Ehrenfeld told CBS News of some of the top issues facing physicians today.
Facing doctor burnout, soaring medical costs and an influx of legislation targeting the LGBTQ community, Ehrenfeld is taking over at a difficult time.
"We have a health care system in crisis, I hear that from my physician colleagues," Ehrenfeld said.
"Today, there are so many backseat drivers telling us what to do...You know, we've got regulators that are discarding science and telling physicians how to practice medicine, putting barriers in care," he explains.
He says those barriers include what he considers the criminalization of health care.
"Well, in at least six states, now, if I practice evidence-based care, I can go to jail," Ehrenfeld said. "It's frightening. When a patient shows up in my office, if I do the right thing from a scientific, from an ethical perspective, to know that that care is no longer legal, criminalized and could wind me in prison."
He says that criminalization has occurred in areas including gender-affirming care and abortion services.
"Health care has been a target as of late in a way that has been deeply damaging, not just to the health of patients who are seeking specific services, but to every American," Ehrenfeld said. "So we see patients who no longer can find an OB-GYN because OB-GYNs are leaving a state where they have criminalized certain aspects of care. That affects all women in the state."
Ehrenfeld hopes to improve health equity for all underserved groups and be a role model for any young doctors, as well as for his own sons.
"I hope that they learn that they shouldn't let anything get in their way of following their dreams," Ehrenfeld said. "And for anybody who's different out there, I hope that they see themselves, my children, the example that I've set, that they shouldn't let anybody tell them that they can't just because of who they are."
- In:
- Transgender
- Abortion
- LGBTQ+
- Health Care
Norah O'Donnell is the anchor and managing editor of the "CBS Evening News." She also contributes to "60 Minutes."
TwitterveryGood! (138)
Related
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Alec and Hilaria Baldwin Bring All 7 of Their Kids to Hamptons Film Festival
- The auto workers’ strike enters its 4th week. The union president urges members to keep up the fight
- UK Supreme Court weighs if it’s lawful for Britain to send asylum-seekers to Rwanda
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Remnants of former Tropical Storm Philippe headed to New England and Atlantic Canada
- Louisiana officials seek to push menhaden fishing boats 1 mile offshore after dead fish wash up
- Rio de Janeiro’s security forces launch raids in 3 favelas to target criminals
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Oklahoma, Brent Venables validate future, put Lincoln Riley in past with Texas win
Ranking
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- German far-right leader says gains in state election show her party has ‘arrived’
- Spoilers! How 'The Exorcist: Believer' movie delivers a new demon and 'incredible' cameo
- Two Husky puppies thrown over a Michigan animal shelter's fence get adopted
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- What survivors of trauma have taught this eminent psychiatrist about hope
- AP PHOTOS: Fear, sorrow, death and destruction in battle scenes in Israel and Gaza Strip
- US raises the death toll to 9 of Americans killed in the weekend Hamas attacks on Israel
Recommendation
This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
Jimbo Fisher too timid for Texas A&M to beat Nick Saban's Alabama
Investigators: Pilot error was cause of 2021 plane crash that killed 4 in Michigan
Parked semi-trucks pose a danger to drivers. Now, there's a push for change.
Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
California Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoes bill aimed at limiting the price of insulin
Senior Taliban officials visit villages struck by earthquake that killed at least 2,000 people
Is Indigenous Peoples' Day a federal holiday? What to know about commemoration