Keynote
Address
Speaker:
Dr. David Satcher (click here for
biography)
Primetime
Summit 1
Transcript
of Proceedings
June 4, 1999
SONNY FOX: Dr. Satcher is the Surgeon General and the Assistant
Secretary For Public Health. He's only the second Surgeon General in the
history of Surgeons General who has borne both titles. The first was Dr.
Julius Richmond in the 1970s. Dr. Satcher is the 16th in the line of Surgeon
Generals, going back to 1872. The Public Health Service is a commissioned,
uniformed service. Dr. Satcher's rank is that of a four stripe admiral.
He has special responsibilities for the Public Health Service office of
Population Affairs, Minority, Health, Women's Health, the President's
Council On Physical Fitness, the office of Research Integrity, the office
of Emergency Preparedness, the office of HIV/AIDS Policy, the office of
International And Refugee Health, the office of Disease Prevention And
Health Promotion, and the office of Military Liaison And Veterans' Affairs.
Dr. Satcher
was the Director of the Centers For Disease Control And Prevention in
Atlanta. He is a spokesperson, making us aware and helping us cope with
many of the issues that we're all facing, including violence, which is
viewed by Dr. Satcher's office as a public health issue. I am delighted
that he has chosen to be with us tonight. It is my pleasure to introduce
the Surgeon General Of The United States, Dr. David Satcher.
DR. SATCHER:
Thank you very much, Sonny, for that very kind introduction, and I'm delighted
to be here and to see all of you distinguished people. Let me begin by,
by bringing you greetings from, from Washington, especially the Department
Of Health And Human Service, and the office of the Surgeon General. I
want to commend the Population Communication International for hosting
this Prime Time Summit and for your ongoing efforts to foster dialogue
and to promote responsible and safe television.
And some
of you probably remember that it's been about three years since Secretary
Donna Shalala spoke to this group. In her speech, she said she did not
come to preach, and neither did she come to say that nothing needed to
change. Rather, she challenged you to take a larger role in a great national
drama, to improve the health and lives of all of our citizens. She challenged
you to think about the responsibility each of you has to public health,
and the need to show the consequences of risky and unhealthy behavior.
And she offered ways that our Department Of Health And Human Services
could help by providing you with timely and accurate data on relevant
health and social issues. Like a good soap opera, I want to pick up where
she left off. We feel very strongly about the opportunity to work with
you in the interest of the public health. We believe that among other
things, you are the storytellers. Stories have always been important,
and no matter what the tradition or the culture, stories have set the
stage for how society would be defined. Aside from simply being entertaining,
stories also have helped to define the traditions, the roles, and the
morals of our community. People have depended upon them to help them to
understand how to build communities. I think a major challenge which we
face in this country today is a challenge of building communities. But
also, storytellers have had a revered place in the community as the keeper
of the message. Storytellers have had responsibility to maintain and uphold
the tradition, through application, accuracy, and relevancy. You here
tonight serve as our storytellers, whether it's a drama or a prime time
sitcom, or saga. And as a storyteller, the deliverer of the message, you
still hold that revered place in society and that awesome responsibility
to help us build community through the stories that you tell. I'll share
a brief story with you. It's about Mrs. Young's eighth grade science class
in Anniston, Alabama where I grew up. When it was announced in 1993 that
I had been selected to head the Centers For Disease Control And Prevention,
I received letters from people all over the country. Some of them I knew,
some of them I didn't, congratulating me for this appointment. I was busy
travelling as president of a medical college, and the letters just kept
coming. I remember one evening, I returned home and I was exhausted, and
my wife, Nola, who is here, said "Honey, you have 50 letters here
that you need to read." And I said I don't want to see another letter.
She said, "But these letters are special." And it turned out
that they were. They were from Mrs. Young's eighth grade science class.
When it was
announced that I had been selected as director of CDC, there was a rookie
reporter in Anniston who had been there only a short period of time, was
not impressed with Anniston, didn't want to be there, and was really surprised
to hear that somebody from Anniston had been selected to head CDC. So
he decided to go out and study my background. He met with everybody he
could find who knew me. He met with my sister, my brother, my high school
chemistry teacher. And then he wrote this story about my growing up in
Anniston.
He wrote the story about how at the age of two, I had almost died of whooping
cough and pneumonia, and how out of that experience I decided that I wanted
to be a physician. He wrote about my growing up on a farm, and the fact
that neither of my parents finished elementary school, and that we had
neither electricity or running water. He wrote in great detail about our
struggles and our triumphs. And when he finished writing, his story appeared
on the first page, the front page of the Anniston Star.
Mrs. Young
was, was struggling to get her students interested in science, and she
decided that she was going to take a week and have them to read this story.
And she did. And at the end of the week, she said I want you to write
Dr. Satcher and congratulate him, and, and invite him to visit. And these
were the letters that were waiting for me that night. Just to give you
a couple of samples, one young man wrote and said, "Dear Dr. Satcher,
I decided a few weeks ago to get in a gang because, you know, I have arrived
at the age when that's the thing to do. But after reading your story and
how you were successful, I decided to get out of that gang, because if
you could be successful then so could I." A young lady wrote
and said, "Dear Dr. Satcher, I've always been a good student,
but I've had trouble deciding just what I wanted to do with my life. And
she says, now I know, I'm going to be director of the CDC." But
then there was another young man who, who reminded me a little bit of
myself when I was in middle school. It was obvious that he was not paying
attention when the teacher was talking. So he wrote and he said, "Dear
Dr. Satcher, I want to commend you for this great honor which has been
bestowed upon you, and now l just hope you can find a cure for the CDC."
Well, I know
we can never take anything for granted in terms of our communication,
and I know that you can't. My earliest experience with television in fact
came late, because I grew up with battery operated radios. But it was
about the time of the Civil Rights Movement and some of you remember the
Montgomery bus boycott, and Dr. King's leadership.
I must say
that if it had not been for the media, I don't think Dr. King would have
been successful. Had it not been for the media bringing the six o'clock
news about the dogs, and the water hoses, I don't believe we would have
had a Civil Rights Act or Voting Rights Act. So the media was really critical
to the success of the civil rights movement. And I've always remembered
that and valued that in terms of the difference that the media can make.
I also remember
the story of the young African-American actress whose role as Lieutenant
Uhura, a member of the famed crew of Star Trek, the Starship Enterprise
played such a very important role, and an unusual role for blacks at that
time in terms of television. At one point, she was thinking of quitting
the show, and she had a chance meeting with Dr. King who changed her mind.
There was a young child who was watching that show, and who loved Star
Trek.
And because
of the role that was played by Nichele Nichols had, she decided that she
just wanted to be an actress like Nichele Nichols. And later on she became
one. Her name was Whoopi Goldberg. Television can have a tremendous impact
on our lives. I'm sure there are countless other stories reflecting how
Hollywood has changed attitudes and given hope to hopeless situation.
But we need more. And I'm here tonight, because I believe that public
health is all of our business. And I believe that a little hope can go
a long ways in turning things around.
So I come
here to solicit your input and your feedback. You know that I've been
asked to prepare a Surgeon General's Report on youth violence, and I plan
to do that. I want that process to be as transparent as possible, and
I certainly want your involvement. But I'm here tonight to point fingers.
I know that people have been saying that we should not point fingers,
but I'm here to point fingers. Not just fingers of blame, but fingers
of responsibility and fingers of opportunity which we have to work together.
We cannot
be lulled into thinking that the recent tragedy of Littleton, Colorado
is an anomaly. It is, in fact, reflective of a larger, persistent problem
we face in this country. While it is truly a tragedy that 12 children
and an adult were killed and the two assassins killed themselves at Columbine
High School, the fact is that violence claims the lives of that many children
virtually everyday in communities throughout this country. Violence has
acquired a unique American flavor.
When you
compare youth violence in the United States to that of other, we are off
the chart. In 1996, when 15 children died in Japan from firearms, 30 died
in Britain, 105 in Canada, there were 9,500 gun deaths in our country.
Comparatively speaking, America is an unsafe place for children. It is
human nature to put distance between ourselves and the perpetrators of
horrendous acts. That has certainly taken place in the area of youth violence.
When eight year old Yami Sanders was killed by gang members in Chicago
a few years ago, the media was full of reports about the violent pathology
of black families. When shootings took place at schools in Jonesboro,
Arkansas, Paducah, Kentucky, and Pearl, one of leading news anchors decried
the violence culture of the South. But then something happened. A shooting
in an idyllic suburbs in Colorado, a place where this was never supposed
to happen. Suddenly, the distances didn't work, the stereotypes didn't
apply.
Suddenly,
people began thinking maybe this isn't just about them, whomever they
are. Maybe it's about us and our communities. Maybe it's time to look
at our communities and to see how we can prevent such things from happening.
But today, violence is the second leading cause of death among persons
in this country between the ages of 15 and 24. And for African-Americans
and Hispanics, it is the leading cause of death.
When we hear
reports like that, nobody can escape the aim of finger pointing. This
is not a no-fault circumstance that we are experiencing. It must be viewed
as everyone's responsibility if we are to rectify it. Yes, together we
must limit access to weapons of violence, there is no question about it.
And it's not about the right to bear arms, it's about the right of parents
to send their children to school without worrying about them being shot.
It's about the right of parents to send their children out to play without
worrying that a child will have a gun on the playground.
We must limit
access to weapons for children and for criminals. We must reduce the gratuitous
violent content of television, movies, and video games while improving
their content. And we must strengthen the role of parents and mentors
in helping children to deal with anger, and resolve conflict, and to have
empathy with others. So how can you help? First, we know that your role
is to entertain. But we believe that you can entertain as well as educate,
as many of you have demonstrated.
As director
of the CDC, I appreciated the opportunity to work on ER in helping
to bring to America the true face of HIV/AIDS. And more recently as Surgeon
General, to work with ER in Hepatitis C. And I know you will hear
something tomorrow from Dr. Ostroff about that. Like HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis
C, violence is a public health problem. Violence is preventable. And while
we know that violence is entertaining, we also believe that it is important
to point out that violence has consequences.
Those consequences
are real and lasting for the victims, for the perpetrators, and certainly
for the people who work in the Criminal Justice system. We see those consequences
everyday in the health care system, not only in the form of death, but
also in the form of unnecessary pain and suffering, chronic disabilities,
and chronic dependency. So we want to work with you in educating the American
public about these consequences and the preventable nature of them. We
want to help to, you to show the American people that violence is learned
and that violence can be unlearned.
We must work
together to implement the public health agenda. President Clinton recently
responded to this as you know by asking that there be a Surgeon General's
report on Youth Violence. And there will be, but I want to point out that
this will not be the first Surgeon General's report on violence. In 1972,
a panel of experts put together a report to the Surgeon General demonstrating
the impact that television violence has on children. They found for many
studies that some children imitate the violence they see, and some may
even be provoked to violence.
And while not all children respond the same way to violence, there are
some that do respond in violent ways. We have difficulty distinguishing
among those children. I also want to agree with the 1985 workshop report
by Surgeon General Koop which concluded that it is time to reduce the
violent content of our television shows and movies as well as youth access
to violence. As we work on this latest report I hope that we can work
together. Now, violence is not the only public health problem with which
I need your help.
I know you
think I just came here to talk about violence, so let me just take a few
minutes and say that there are other very important public health problems
that I hope we can join together in seeking to ameliorate. We are trying
to create a Balanced Community Health System, a system which emphasizes
health promotion, disease prevention, early detection, and universal access
to care. A Balanced Community Health System, which requires the participation
of all of the institutions within our community, including the home, the
school, the church, other faith-based organizations, criminal justice,
entertainment, not just the health care system.
Public health
is everybody's business. There are several ways that you can help to jump
start this effort. We know that a Balanced Community Health System cannot
achieve it's goals unless we insure that every child, every child has
the opportunity for a healthy start in life. And that means parents who
are ready to be parents, and you've done such a great job in this arena.
Safe pregnancies, access to quality pre-natal care, and safe and nurturing
environments, the absence of domestic violence, which you will hear about
tomorrow from Dr. Rosenberg, and the absence of environmental toxins.
But a Balanced
Community Health System can also promote healthy lifestyles. Now, there
have been 28 Surgeon General's reports on smoking and health since Dr.
Terry's report in 1964. And we've made some progress among adults, reducing
the percentage of smokers from nearly 50 percent in 1964 to about 25 percent
today. However, we're moving in the wrong direction with our teenagers,
and everyday in this country, everyday, 3,000 new children begin to smoke.
Half of them will be addicted before they are 18 years of age, before
they are legally old enough to purchase tobacco.
A third of
them will die of some smoking-related illness. We would like to see a
decrease in smoking in television programs and movies that is at least
comparable to the reduction in smoking that we've seen since 1964, at
least. And especially for children, we would like to see more emphasis
on the consequences of smoking. 430,000 deaths per year in this country,
65,000 deaths from second hand smoking, 25,000 cases of asthma having
an onset from smoking exposure to smoke, and thousands of deaths from
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome related to smoking.
Childhood
obesity is at an all time high in this country, it is at epidemic levels.
Adult obesity is at an all time high. We can prevent 50 percent of deaths
from cardiovascular disease through a combination of physical activity
and good nutrition. We can prevent the onset, a third of Type Two Diabetes
through a combination of physical activity and good nutrition. And yet
we spend 1.5 trillion dollars a year in the health care system in this
country, most of it to treat diseases in their later stages, including
complications of diseases that we can prevent. So we need your help in
terms of lifestyle.
The third
point is to avoid toxins such as tobacco, illicit drugs, and the abuse
of alcohol. And finally, responsible sexual behavior. Obviously, your
business is not public health, but human behavior has consequences. We
hope that working together we can demonstrate the consequences, but also
the positive consequences of healthy lifestyles. I know that's asking
a lot of you, but public health is all about business.
Let me close
by mentioning mental health. A very important area where we would like
to work together with you to destigmatize mental health. Mental health
impacts every area of our lives in relationships. Mental health problems
are as common as physical health problems, yet for too long in this country,
our attitude toward them has been one of stigmatization and blame, instead
of caring and support. And it's time for a change. There will be a White
House Conference on mental health Monday, June seven, and I hope that
all of you will, will tune into that.
And before
the end of this year, there will be the first ever Surgeon General's report
on mental health. But in the area of mental health the area of destigmatization
and the challenge to destigmatize mental health problems, there's one
that we're really concerned about. Sometimes Hollywood depicts people
with mental illness as wacky or zany and amusing, like Jack Nicholson's
character in One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest. Sometimes it portrays
them as violent, threatening and menacing, such as Nicholson's character
in The Shining.
And then there's sometimes when they show people who are at neither extreme,
but who function in society despite any obstacles posed by their illness,
like Jack Nicholson in As Good As It Gets, for which he won the
Academy Award. We want to help overcome the stereotypes and to help people
realize that just as things go wrong with the heart, and the lungs, and
the liver, and the kidneys, things go wrong with the brain, and there
should be no shame in that. When that day comes, we will be identifying
mental health problems much earlier, we will be preventing many of the
consequences of them.
Let me just
close by saying that we look forward to working with you. We know that
public health is not easy, and we face tremendous challenges improving
the health of all people in this country. And it always reminds me of
a saying that became one of my favorites when I was a student at Moorhouse
College. Like me, a lot of the students there were from backgrounds in
which they were not expected to be there. And yet, every Tuesday morning,
the president, Benjamin Elijah Mays, would come to chapel to speak to
these students.
And there
are several quotes that I remember. I will share one of them with you,
it goes something like this. It must be borne in mind that the great tragedy
of life is not in failing to reach all of your goals, it is in having
no goals for which you are reaching. It is not a calamity to die with
dreams unfulfilled, but it's a calamity not to dream. It's not a disaster
if you fail to achieve your highest ideas, but it's a disaster if you
have no high ideas for which you are striving. It's not a disgrace to
fail to reach the stars, but it is a disgrace to have no stars for which
you are reaching. So I close by saying to you together, let us not be
guilty of low aim. Thank you.
|