President-elect Barack Obama has asked neurosurgeon and CNN medical correspondent Dr Sanjay Gupta (pictured) to be surgeon general. -- PHOTO: ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT-ELECT Barack Obama has approached CNN's chief medical correspondent, Dr Sanjay Gupta, about becoming the country's next surgeon general, the cable network said on Tuesday.
CNN said it has kept Dr Gupta from reporting on health care policy and other matters involving the incoming Mr Obama administration since learning he was under consideration for the post.
Busy Gupta performs brain surgery, reports for CNN
NEW YORK - IF Barack Obama wants a surgeon general with visibility to promote health issues in his administration, it can't hurt to hire a CNN correspondent called one of People magazine's 'sexiest men alive'.
Dr Sanjay Gupta, a practicing neurosurgeon and one of CNN's busiest personalities, is under consideration by the president-elect for the job. Should the offer come, CNN said Dr Gupta has indicated he is likely to take it. Mr Obama will have a man who has interrupted a TV assignment to perform emergency brain surgery and gotten into an argument on air with leftist filmmaker Michael Moore.
Two Democrats with knowledge of the discussions over the surgeon general spot said Dr Gupta was under consideration but cautioned there was not yet a final decision on who would fill the post. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to speak to the media on the matter.
Mr Obama's transition office did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Dr Gupta hosts 'House Call' on CNN, contributes reports to CBS News, and writes a column for Time magazine. He is a neurosurgeon and is on the faculty at Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta. During the Clinton administration, he was a White House fellow and special adviser to then-first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton.
The surgeon general has a tiny staff, must rely on other agencies for a budget and holds little power. The surgeon general typically is not heavily involved in shaping an administration's policy, but the position has proven over the years to be a powerful platform for disseminating public health information. Past surgeons general have proved instrumental in battling tobacco and Aids.
Having such a well-known TV personality could bring the surgeon general attention not seen since C. Everett Koop help the position under President Ronald Reagan. Mr Koop is best known for pushing to make Aids a public health issue rather than a moral issue, and Reagan faced pressure to fire him. Koop has said Reagan never interfered.
CNN said Dr Gupta would not comment on the discussions and released a statement that said, 'Since first learning that Dr Gupta was under consideration for the surgeon general position, CNN has made sure that his on-air reporting has been on health and wellness matters and not on health care policy or any matters involving the new administration.'
Dr Gupta declined to speak to an Associated Press reporter who visited his home in an Atlanta suburb. He did not return phone calls.
CBS News is a unit of CBS Corp.; CNN is owned by Time Warner Inc. -- AP