Casey Means and the Empty Guardrails Around “America’s Doctor”
Disease is not partisan. The office that speaks for science should not be either. The Means nomination is a stress test of what happens when that line breaks.
On February 25, in a wood-paneled Senate hearing room, a Republican doctor tried to get a straight answer to a simple question. Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, a gastroenterologist by training and the ranking Republican on the Senate health committee, asked Donald Trump’s nominee for Surgeon General whether she would recommend that children receive the routine measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine.
Dr. Casey Means smiled. She talked about “parental choice” and “conversations with pediatricians.” She did not say yes.
Means, a Stanford-trained physician and leading face of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s “Make America Healthy Again” movement, is Trump’s second pick to serve as “America’s doctor.” His first nominee, urgent-care physician and Fox News contributor Janette Nesheiwat, was pulled in May 2025, one day before her own confirmation hearing, after questions about her résumé and an orchestrated backlash from far-right influencers who accused her of being too aligned with mainstream vaccine science.
On the surface, Means’ path can sound merely unconventional. She has elite degrees, a polished media presence, and a knack for talking about chronic disease and “root-cause” health. Yet her nomination and her performance at the hearing raise deeper questions than one résumé can answer.
The more closely you look at this nominee, the clearer it becomes that the problem is not only Casey Means. It is the system that makes a nomination like this possible.
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Who is Casey Means?
Education
On paper, Casey Means’ story begins in very familiar territory. She graduated from Stanford University in 2009 and from Stanford University School of Medicine in 2014. She entered an otolaryngology–head and neck surgery residency at Oregon Health and Science University, a demanding five-year training program that typically ends with board certification and a career in complex surgical practice.
During those years, she held research positions, published papers, and, by her own telling, began to grow disillusioned with what she describes as “sick-care” medicine that treats symptoms rather than underlying causes. In 2018, six months before the end of her residency, she quit the program entirely. Colleagues told reporters they were shocked to see a nearly finished resident walk away from a coveted slot.
Practice
In 2019, she opened Means Health, a small functional medicine practice in Portland. That practice focused on “root-cause” approaches to metabolic health rather than standard specialty care. She received an Oregon medical license in late 2018, then allowed it to lapse to inactive status in 2024.
Entrepreneurial Efforts
Alongside that shift in practice came a shift in identity. Means co-founded Levels, a metabolic-health startup that uses continuous glucose monitors and an app to sell “insights” and lifestyle coaching to largely healthy, affluent consumers. She became an investor and adviser in Truemed, a company started by her brother that works with physicians to certify fitness programs, nutrition plans, and “advanced health tech” as medically necessary expenses for tax purposes. She built a newsletter, a social media following, and a “Good Energy” brand, culminating in a bestselling 2024 book on metabolism by the same name.
None of this is inherently disqualifying for public life. Many physicians decide that they do not want to spend their careers rounding in hospitals or navigating insurance billing and instead move into startups, writing, or teaching. If Means were being nominated as a health-tech adviser or a panelist at a wellness conference, this background might simply make her an interesting, if polarizing, choice.
However, the job she has been tapped for is not “resident disillusioned with the system.” It is the Surgeon General of the United States. That title carries expectations that go well beyond a medical diploma and an entrepreneurial streak.
What we used to mean by “Surgeon General”
The statute that governs the office of Surgeon General is surprisingly thin. It says the Surgeon General must be an officer in the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps and must have “specialized training or significant experience in public health programs.” That is essentially the whole list. There is no requirement in law that the Surgeon General complete a residency, achieve board certification, hold an active license, or lead a major public health institution.
In practice, though, we have treated the role as something far more demanding. For most of the past half-century, the people who have held this megaphone have had long, conventional careers in medicine and public health before they ever donned the uniform.
Who has previously held the position
C. Everett Koop spent more than three decades as surgeon-in-chief at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and a professor of pediatric surgery before Ronald Reagan nominated him in 1981. Joycelyn Elders was the first person in Arkansas to be board-certified in pediatric endocrinology and served as director of the Arkansas Department of Health before Bill Clinton brought her to Washington. David Satcher was president of Meharry Medical College and director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Regina Benjamin founded and ran a rural clinic in Bayou La Batre, Alabama, treating mostly poor and uninsured patients. Jerome Adams practiced as an anesthesiologist and then ran Indiana’s state health department, managing HIV and opioid crises at the state level.
They were not simply people with “M.D.” after their names. They were physicians who had completed full training, practiced for years, and led large institutions responsible for the health of real populations. When they spoke about vaccines, HIV, tobacco, or teen pregnancy, they did so with the weight of decades of experience and established public-health practice behind them.
By comparison
Even if you read Casey Means’s timeline in the most generous light, her path looks very different. From 2014 to 2018, she was in surgical training. By 2019, she was in a one-doctor functional medicine practice. Within a few years, she had pivoted most of her energy into startups, speaking, and content. As of her nomination, she had never completed a residency, never been board-certified, never run a hospital or health department, and never held a leadership role in a major public-health agency.
You do not normally become Surgeon General with what amounts to a residency’s worth of clinical experience and a short stint in boutique practice, especially when the rest of your recent work has been in private wellness ventures. Yet because the statute is so vague, none of that technically matters. If a president wants someone in the job and a bare Senate majority agrees, the law does not distinguish between a former CDC director and a wellness influencer with a medical degree.
The wellness brand and the conflicts it brings
The word “influencer” can sound dismissive, yet in this case, it is descriptive. The Associated Press, Reuters, and other outlets have all described Means as a wellness influencer and entrepreneur, not simply as a doctor. That distinction matters because the way she has built her platform raises real conflicts of interest for a role that is supposed to speak for the public, not for products.
After leaving residency, Means founded Levels alongside other tech entrepreneurs. Levels sells subscription packages that combine access to its app with continuous glucose monitors, lab panels, and lifestyle coaching. It markets itself to people worried about “metabolic health” and promises personalized insights and “optimization.” The underlying devices are FDA-cleared for use in diabetes management, but the broader program is an unregulated wellness service layered on top.
Her brother’s company, Truemed, operates in the gray zone between care and commerce. It connects consumers with clinicians who certify that certain fitness programs, nutrition plans, or wellness technologies are medically necessary, enabling reimbursement through health savings accounts or other tax-advantaged mechanisms. Means has described herself as an investor and adviser there.
On top of that equity and startup work, she has made significant money as a public figure. Reporting by the Associated Press and others documents that Means has promoted supplements, powders, teas, probiotics, prepared meals, and other wellness products through her newsletter and social media channels, sometimes without clearly disclosing her financial ties to the companies involved. Under questioning at the hearing, she told senators she would divest from Levels and Truemed and follow federal ethics rules if confirmed, but she rejected the suggestion that her past behavior had crossed any ethical lines.
There is nothing unusual about a public figure writing a book or charging for speeches. There is also precedent for former Surgeons General becoming attached to products later in their careers. C. Everett Koop lent his name to drkoop.com and appeared in Life Alert commercials years after leaving office. Richard Carmona joined Herbalife's board and later advised a CBD company. Those choices have been debated, yet they came after long, mainstream careers and after their tenures as public officials.
Casey Means arrives from the opposite direction. The wellness products and ventures do not follow a public-health career. They are what she has instead of one. The very brand that makes her attractive to Trump and Kennedy is built on monetizing health advice in a lightly regulated space.
That inversion changes how the Surgeon General’s office functions. Historically, the job has looked like the culmination of decades in medicine and public health, a capstone role from which the officeholder might later write a memoir or sit on a few boards. For Means, it looks much more like an accelerant. Three years with a national title and constant exposure would send her back into the private market as a young, charismatic “former U.S. Surgeon General” with a ready-made audience and a proven track record of turning wellness narratives into income. The temptation to think in terms of “what comes next,” rather than “what is best for public health right now,” is baked into that trajectory.
Even if she divests formally, it is difficult to unsee the incentives and worldview that shaped the last several years of her career. It is even harder for ordinary people, who will never read an ethics disclosure, to know when the person at the podium is speaking purely from evidence rather than from a mindset honed in the business of selling “optimizing” solutions.
“America’s doctor” without a license
A more technical, yet even more unsettling, fact surfaced during the nomination process. Casey Means does not currently hold an active license to practice medicine in any state, and she has told interviewers that she does not plan to reactivate a license even if she is confirmed.
That choice might sound like a formality. In reality, it has large implications for accountability. In the United States, medical licenses are overseen by state medical boards. Those boards have the power to investigate complaints, sanction physicians who commit fraud or gross misconduct, and, in extreme cases, suspend or revoke licenses. The possibility of discipline is one way the profession enforces basic standards.
Most past Surgeons General have kept active licenses while in office. That meant they were answerable not only to the president and, indirectly, to voters through Congress, but also to the same professional bodies that govern ordinary doctors. If a Surgeon General had used their platform to promote outright quackery or to make dangerously false claims about established treatments, a state board could at least, in theory, take up the case.
Means has chosen to step outside that system. Her Oregon license is inactive. No board can revoke what does not exist. She will still be subject to federal ethics rules and to discipline as an officer in the Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, yet those regimes focus on corruption, abuse of office, and internal conduct, not on whether what she tells the public meets contemporary standards of medical practice.
In other words, if she is confirmed, the person the public is told to trust as “America’s doctor” will be someone who has deliberately chosen not to live under the same licensing and disciplinary framework that governs their own pediatrician or family physician.
For most viewers, that distinction will be invisible. When the Surgeon General appears on television with the insignia of the Public Health Service on their shoulders, the title carries an implicit message that this person speaks for mainstream medicine. If the profession itself has no direct lever to pull when that person misleads, the aura of credibility is doing much of the work for someone accountable mainly to politics.
That is not a criticism of Means’ character. It is a description of the position she has chosen to place herself in and of the system that allows it.
Vaccines, birth control, and the missing plain language
All of this would still feel abstract if it did not match what we saw when Means finally sat at the witness table. The hearing provided the first real test of how she would talk about high-stakes, emotionally charged topics in public. On the two that may matter most in the current moment, vaccines and birth control, her answers did not meet the moment.
Vaccines
On vaccines, the question was not whether she could recite the phrase “vaccines save lives.” She did that repeatedly. The question was whether she would clearly and on the record say that children should receive routine immunizations in accordance with the schedule that has sharply reduced measles, polio, and other preventable diseases over the decades.
Senators asked about measles and hepatitis B in particular, in the context of real measles outbreaks and a politically driven effort inside the current Department of Health and Human Services to roll back parts of the childhood vaccine schedule. Means acknowledged that vaccines have saved countless lives and said she accepted the evidence that they do not cause autism, while also arguing for more research so “no stone is unturned”. She then pivoted back to the line that “parents should talk to their pediatricians” and that “every medication that goes into a child’s body” should be the subject of a conversation. She declined to say that she would use the office to actively promote routine childhood vaccination.
There is nothing wrong with encouraging parents to talk to their pediatricians. That is standard advice. Yet “ask your doctor” is not an answer to the factual question senators were actually posing: Does the MMR vaccine prevent measles, and should children receive it unless they have a specific medical contraindication? From a Surgeon General, the answer should begin with “yes.” Only then should it move on to nuance, caveats, and individual circumstances.
Birth control
The pattern repeated when the hearing turned to contraception. Sen. Patty Murray, the Democratic former chair of the committee, read back Means’ own previous words: that birth control pills are a “disrespect of life,” that Americans “use birth control pills like candy,” and that hormonal contraception carries “horrifying health risks,” language that flatly contradicts the large body of evidence supporting the safety and effectiveness of FDA-approved contraceptive methods for most users.
Murray asked a straightforward question. Should women trust the Food and Drug Administration, which has rigorously evaluated 18 different contraceptive methods and continues to monitor them, or should they trust Means’ rhetoric about disrespect and horror? Means could have used that moment to clarify her remarks. She could have said that her concern was about informed consent and side effects, that she chose her words poorly, and that as Surgeon General, she would speak in terms of evidence, not moral judgment.
She did not. She shifted to a general statement about being passionate about women’s health and about wanting women to understand possible side effects, without ever explaining whose “life” she believed was being disrespected or acknowledging that her language had gone far beyond what the evidence supports.
Again, the issue is not whether readers of this piece personally favor or oppose birth control. It is whether the nominee for Surgeon General can, when confronted with their own provocative words, give a direct, medically grounded answer in plain language. She had time to prepare. She knew, or should have known, that senators would question her on vaccines and contraception. She had every opportunity to craft clear responses that aligned her public role with the best available science. She chose not to.
The bigger picture
Regardless of how we feel about these two topics, the biggest issue is the failure to answer the question directly and clearly. Imagine if, during COVID-19, the Surgeon General of the United States could not bring themselves to firmly state that decades of scientific research show that spread can be limited by social distancing and the wearing of protective items such as N95 masks. What would have happened if, instead, the megaphone of the federal health agencies had talked about metabolic function, suggested supplements, or given platitudes about caring about the life of the medically fragile without clearly stating how to best protect them based on established science?
When you put those moments next to her résumé and business history, a pattern emerges. On the two topics where the country most needs clarity and reassurance grounded in decades of research, she opted for ambiguity and pleasing multiple audiences at once. That may be a savvy move for an influencer trying to keep her future options open. It is the opposite of what we should want from a Surgeon General.
The vice admiral part no one is talking about
There is another dimension to this job that gets lost when we talk about the Surgeon General only as a spokesperson. It is not just a communications role in a white coat. It is, on paper, a command position in a uniformed service.
What it means to be emergency response
The Surgeon General is the operational head of the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, one of the 8 uniformed services of the United States. The office holds the rank of vice admiral and sits atop a force of roughly 6,000 to 8,000 active-duty health officers who can be deployed for emergencies, much the same way the National Guard is sent into a disaster zone.
These officers are the people who turn up when a hurricane flattens a coastal town and a federal medical station has to be set up in a gym. They staff Indian Health Service facilities, federal prisons, refugee operations, and long-term public health missions in places that are chronically short on care. They are called into anthrax responses, Ebola units, COVID wards, and shelters after wildfires. The Commissioned Corps organizes them into rapid deployment teams and expects them to be ready to move within 48 hours when the call comes.
Inside that system, the Surgeon General is not simply a talking head. The office oversees the day-to-day operations of the Corps, sets readiness expectations, and represents those officers to political leadership at the Department of Health and Human Services. This is closer to a service chief role than to a cable news contributor slot. It demands some familiarity with the chain of command, crisis planning, and what it means to send people into extremely difficult situations and back them up when things go wrong.
How a wellness influencer fits this role
That is where Casey Means’ background looks even thinner. Most of her leadership experience has come in founder-driven startups and personal brand building. She has overseen a boutique practice and co-founded private companies, not large public systems that deploy personnel into harm’s way. There is no record of her managing a health department, running a hospital, or leading a complex emergency response. The culture she comes from rewards disruption, individual voice, and a healthy skepticism of institutions. The culture she would be stepping into relies on discipline, coordination, and a shared sense of mission among officers who have spent years doing unglamorous work in under-resourced settings.
That mismatch is not about age. A relatively young Surgeon General with 10 or 15 years of frontline outbreak work or state-level emergency command would raise different questions. It is about the type of experience. The situations in which the Corps is deployed are not workshops for “optimizing metabolic health.” They are places where chronically ill people have lost refrigeration for their insulin, where infection control in a shelter will determine whether a respiratory virus burns through a vulnerable population, and where the failure to get logistics right means running out of dialysis slots or oxygen.
Officers in those spaces do not need a vice admiral who can talk about tracking glucose on an app. They need someone who knows how to move people and supplies, who understands the realities of field hospitals and austere care, and who can stand in front of cameras during a crisis and say, in calm, unambiguous language, what hard measures are necessary and why. When we remember that this is the other half of the job, the gap between what the role requires and what this nominee has actually done becomes even harder to ignore.
The deeper problem and the fix
At the time of writing, Means’ confirmation is not guaranteed. Democrats have lined up against her. A handful of Republican senators, including Cassidy, have signaled discomfort with her lack of experience and her hedging on vaccines. Public-health leaders across the ideological spectrum have called her the least qualified nominee in the modern history of the office.
It is entirely possible that the Senate will, in the end, reject this particular nomination. If that happens, it will be tempting to treat the episode as a near miss and move on. That would be a mistake. The risk she represents is not a fluke of personality. It is the predictable result of leaving a critical public-health role almost entirely at the mercy of presidential whim and Senate partisanship.
The Constitution gives presidents the power to nominate and, with the advice and consent of the Senate, to appoint principal officers of the United States. It does not require Congress to leave every office undefined. Legislators have already imposed specific qualifications in other sensitive areas. The Secretary of Defense, for example, is generally required to have been out of active military service for several years, a rule meant to preserve civilian control. There is no constitutional reason Congress could not establish equally sensible baselines for the Surgeon General.
Those baselines do not need to be elaborate. They could simply require that the Surgeon General hold an active, unrestricted medical license in good standing for the duration of their term, that they have completed an accredited residency and achieved board certification in a relevant specialty, and that they have a minimum number of years of clinical practice or public-health leadership. Congress could also bar officeholders from owning equity in or receiving marketing income from health and wellness companies whose products might be affected by federal health messaging while they are in office.
None of these rules would tell a president which qualified person to pick. They would not prevent a conservative administration from choosing a Surgeon General with conservative views on culture and policy, nor stop a liberal administration from choosing someone with a very different philosophy. They would simply raise the floor so that whoever holds the title “America’s doctor” has actually lived under the same professional standards as other doctors, and so that the office is not used primarily as a springboard for the next wellness brand.
The canary in the coal mine
What this nomination has exposed is how fragile our assumptions have been. Many assumed that no president would nominate a wellness influencer with an inactive license and a short, unconventional medical career to run public health messaging for the entire country, that the informal norms of seriousness and expertise would hold. Those norms have eroded. In their place, we have learned that the legal guardrails are almost nonexistent.
Disease does not care who is in the White House. Viruses and chronic conditions do not switch parties every 4 or 8 years. The science that tells us how measles spreads or how hormonal contraception works is not perfectly static, yet it does not flip on and off with each election. A representative democracy that wants to survive needs at least a few institutions whose job is to describe that reality plainly, even when it is politically inconvenient.
The impact of an unqualified, ideologically-aligned nominee in the position could have truly devastating impacts on public trust in medicine and science, erode the authority of the office, and result in the preventable death or injury of many.
The Surgeon General is supposed to be one of the institutions that informs the public, regardless of politics, of the health risks in society. If this episode has shown us anything, it is that we can no longer rely on vibes and good faith to keep it that way.
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Sources:
“Surgeon general nominee faces sharp questions about vaccines, birth control and qualifications” — AP News, February 25, 2026.
“Surgeon general nominee Casey Means grilled on vaccines, pesticides in hearing” — The Washington Post, updated February 25, 2026.
“Trump’s surgeon general pick dodges vaccine questions at Senate hearing” — The Guardian, February 25, 2026.
“U.S. Surgeon General nominee Means says she backs vaccines, with parental conversations” — Reuters, February 25, 2026.
“U.S. Senate panel sets Feb. 25 hearing for Trump surgeon general nominee” — Reuters, February 18, 2026.
“Surgeon general nominee won’t say she urges vaccination” — Axios, February 25, 2026.
“Trump’s surgeon general pick questioned birth control. Here’s why women take it” — Axios, February 26, 2026.
“Online influencer faces confirmation hearing for surgeon general in U.S.” — Scientific American, February 25, 2026.
“Senate Grills MAHA Influencer Pick for Surgeon General Over Vaccines, Autism, and Financial Ties” — Gizmodo, February 25, 2026.
“Trump withdraws Dr. Janette Nesheiwat’s surgeon general nomination, picks Dr. Casey Means instead” — CBS News, May 7, 2025.
“White House withdraws nomination of a former Fox News contributor for U.S. surgeon general” — STAT, May 7, 2025.
“Trump nominates Kennedy ally Casey Means as new US surgeon general” — Reuters, May 8, 2025.
“Trump taps wellness influencer Casey Means for surgeon general” — Axios, May 7, 2025.
“Influencer pick for surgeon general marks new era in health messaging” — Axios, May 15, 2025.
“What to Know About Casey Means, Trump’s Surgeon General Nominee” — People, February 25, 2026.




We Americans are used to a government that works for the people. The Trump administration works for the rich only. This way they all make lots of money. To pull this off they need votes. So they poll in advance and find out there’s a lot of anti-vax voters. The administration tells them what they want to hear and then make that policy to secure their loyalty and vote. It makes little sense to discuss their credentials, their biases, etc. You can argue, appeal to reason, appeal to science, etc. and it makes no difference. We are in a pay to play society. It’s not any deeper than that!
Fascinating and terrifying---thank you for such a detailed explanation!