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President Donald Trump on April 16–17 nominated Dr.
Erica Schwartz to lead the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, naming three senior deputies alongside her: Sean Slovenski as deputy director and COO, Dr.
Jennifer Shuford as deputy director and chief medical officer, and Dr.
Sara Brenner as senior counselor for public health.
Schwartz, a retired rear admiral in the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps and former deputy surgeon general in Trump’s first term, is a board‑certified preventive medicine physician with medical and public‑health credentials from Brown University and the Uniformed Services University and a law degree from the University of Maryland.
The nomination must be approved by the Senate; NIH director Jay Bhattacharya is serving as acting CDC director during the likely months‑long confirmation process.
The pick comes after a year of turmoil at the agency — including abrupt leadership changes, staffing and budget cuts, a shooting at CDC headquarters and controversy over vaccine policy under Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Many public‑health experts and CDC staff greeted the selection with guarded optimism, seeing Schwartz as a conventional, experienced choice but warning her authority could be constrained by political interference.
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The discussion frames Schwartz as a conventionally qualified public‑health professional whose private‑sector insurance background fuels conflict‑of‑interest worries. At the same time, commenters note the CDC’s remit limits direct insurance control, while political constraints and agency erosion raise real risks she could be hamstrung or blamed for future public‑health failures.







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