Health Update: From wellness grifter to surgeon general: Trump nominates anti-science quack Casey Means  - What Experts Say

Health Update: Health Update: From wellness grifter to surgeon general: Trump nominates anti-science quack Casey Means – What Experts Say– What Experts Say.

Casey Means takes her seat at the start of a Senate Health, Education Labor and Pension Committee confirmation hearing for U.S. Surgeon General on Capitol Hill Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026, in Washington. [AP Photo/Tom Brenner]

On Tuesday, Casey Means—a wellness influencer with no active medical license—appeared before the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee for her confirmation hearing as Donald Trump’s nominee for Surgeon General. Over more than two hours, Means systematically refused to recommend measles or flu vaccination to parents, declined to rule out a vaccine-autism link despite decades of refuting scientific evidence, and defended past statements attacking hormonal birth control—all while insisting, in a formula repeated like an incantation, that she “believes vaccines save lives.”

The hearing took place against the backdrop of a national measles emergency—982 confirmed cases in 2026 as of late February, with tracking data indicating the total had surpassed 1,000, on pace to far exceed 2025’s three-decade record of 2,281—and the most sustained assault on public health infrastructure in American history, waged over the past year by Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. If confirmed on a party-line Republican vote, Means would become the first surgeon general in US history without an active medical license—the nominal head of the nation’s public health at the very moment public health is being systematically destroyed.

The spectacle of Democratic senators posing “tough questions” to a nominee they are powerless to stop epitomizes the bankruptcy of bourgeois politics. The hearing was not an exercise in democratic accountability. It was theater, staged amid the ruins of a public health infrastructure that both parties, over decades, have starved of funding and subordinated to corporate interests.

When pressed by committee chairman Sen. Bill Cassidy—himself a physician—on whether she accepted the overwhelming scientific evidence that vaccines do not cause autism, Means replied: “I do accept that evidence. I also think that science is never settled.” She added: “We do not know as a medical community what causes autism. We should not leave any stones unturned.”

This is the classic formulation of the anti-vaccine movement, superficially accepting science while leaving the door wide open to conspiracy. Speaking on the right-wing Joe Rogan Experience podcast in October 2024, Means was far less circumspect, stating, “One vaccine probably isn’t causing autism… What about the 20 that they’re getting before 18 months?”

The pattern of evasion was relentless. Asked whether she would encourage parents to vaccinate their children against measles amid an active outbreak with children dying, Means would say only: “I do believe that each patient, mother, parent needs to have a conversation with their pediatrician.” The formulation transparently expresses general “support” for vaccines while refusing to recommend any specific vaccine to any specific person.