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- <text id=89TT1111>
- <title>
- Apr. 24, 1989: Profile:C. Everett Koop
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Apr. 24, 1989 The Rat Race
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PROFILE, Page 82
- A Doctor Prescribes Hard Truth
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>C. Everett Koop, America's Surgeon General, has an opinion on
- everything healthful, but he nonetheless enjoys meat and
- martinis
- </p>
- <p>By Margaret Carlson
- </p>
- <p> He is, by Washington standards, a little strange. First,
- there is the uniform draped with gold braid he insists on
- wearing. Before he became famous, it prompted people at
- airports to pile him with baggage and ask what time the flight
- was leaving. Then there is the big, clunky hearing aid that he
- takes out and fusses with right in the middle of a conversation,
- as if it were a pipe, and the canvas tote he uses as a
- briefcase, and his habit of loudly cracking his knuckles. On top
- of that there are the Old Testament beard and the preacher's
- voice that make him seem like Moses come down again from Mount
- Sinai to deliver commandments 11 through 20. Smoking? It's an
- addiction that will kill you. Sex? Only in marriage. AIDS? The
- best preventive device is a monogamous relationship; the second
- best, a condom. Deformed newborns? Save them. Sex education? In
- the earliest grade possible.
- </p>
- <p> You name it, Surgeon General C. Everett Koop has an opinion,
- which he will give you with great certainty at high speed. There
- has never been a Surgeon General like him, not even Luther
- Terry, who slapped warnings on cigarette packs 24 years ago.
- It's a fair guess that Terry was never air-kissed by Elizabeth
- Taylor, the butt of jokes in Johnny Carson's monologue, was
- never a visitor to the set of Golden Girls, and never lectured
- Hollywood producers about showing safe sex in their programs.
- Antismoking is a small part of Koop's crusade; AIDS, child
- abuse, domestic violence, pornography, old people, drunk driving
- and Baby Doe regulations made Koop one of the most visible
- officials in Washington. Now at airports people offer to carry
- his bags.
- </p>
- <p> The 13th Surgeon General, whose second term runs through the
- end of the year, almost never got a chance to don a uniform.
- When Koop, a retired pediatric surgeon, and his wife Betty
- moved to Georgetown in early 1981 to await his confirmation,
- they became proof of the old saw that if you want a friend in
- Washington, buy a dog. The process, expected to take a few
- days, turned into nine nightmarish months of name-calling and
- personal attacks, as liberals stalled his confirmation. He was
- called a right-wing crank, a prolife nut, a religious zealot,
- inexperienced, Dr. Unqualified (the New York Times), scary
- (California Congressman Henry Waxman) and Dr. Kook. The
- intensity of the attacks was fueled by prochoice advocates who
- feared his opposition to abortion. In addition to being the
- author of several books, Koop was known for an antiabortion
- film he produced in which a thousand black and white dolls were
- scattered over the salt wastes of the Dead Sea to represent
- millions of aborted fetuses. Koop, who became an evangelical
- Presbyterian in his 30s, explains his views against abortion
- and against withholding food and medical care from congenitally
- deformed newborns simply: "If you had led my life, you would
- understand." As a pediatric surgeon for 33 years, Koop saved
- many babies no bigger than his hand. In the course of treating
- 100,000 patients, Koop saw many so-called difficult cases become
- happy and productive children. One of these was Paul Sweeney,
- born in 1965 with twisted intestines, facial deformities and a
- cleft palate. Koop operated on him 37 times. For the final
- operation by another surgeon in 1983, Koop returned to
- Philadelphia in full dress uniform to wheel his former patient
- into the operating room. Sweeney recently graduated from West
- Chester University in Pennsylvania.
- </p>
- <p> Accustomed to the godlike treatment accorded surgeons, Koop
- was stunned by the viciousness of Washington, which has neither
- gods nor heroes. Every day he would go to his temporary office
- on the seventh floor at the Department of Health and Human
- Services. Every day the phone wouldn't ring. His wife, uprooted
- from Philadelphia, waited in their small sublet wondering
- whether to unpack. One day Koop returned to find tears rolling
- down her face, a critical newspaper article on her lap. He
- considered leaving, but Betty persuaded him to stay. The two
- had been through a lot--long years of medical school, Koop's
- fractured vertebra and stomach surgery and, worst of all, the
- death of a son--and they stuck it out. Finally, in November
- 1981, he was confirmed by a Republican-controlled Senate.
- </p>
- <p> Koop was expected to be a figurehead like most Surgeons
- General, with little authority and few staff or duties, but he
- quickly shook things up. He insisted that the commissioned corps
- of public-health officers wear uniforms. Then the 6-ft. 1-in.,
- 210-lb. doctor, whose taste for red meat and martinis keeps him
- from losing his paunch, pronounced the U.S. a country of fatsoes
- who would have to give up cholesterol in favor of fiber. When
- Koop found out that the tobacco companies had fought hardest
- over the years against the Government's calling nicotine
- addictive, he stated high up in his Surgeon General's report
- that nicotine is addictive. "They absolutely hated it," he
- gloats. He said the companies' claims that science cannot say
- with certainty that tobacco causes cancer were "flat-footed
- lies" and that sending cigarettes to the Third World was "the
- export of death, disease and disability."
- </p>
- <p> He is not above gimmicks. Pushing his slogan "A Smoke-Free
- Society by the Year 2000," he adopted a kindergarten class whose
- students pledged not to start smoking ("Like Communists," he
- says, "you have to get them when they're young"), and everywhere
- he goes he hands out buttons saying THE SURGEON GENERAL
- PERSONALLY ASKED ME TO QUIT.
- </p>
- <p> But Koop might have remained just another bureaucrat if it
- had not been for AIDS. As the disease grew to near epidemic
- proportions, the Administration had to do something.
- Conservatives breathed a sigh of relief when in 1986 the
- President handed the job to the Fundamentalist Christian
- Surgeon General.
- </p>
- <p> After getting assurances that he would be the sole author of
- the report, Koop took to the task with an open mind, consulting
- Government experts like the National Institutes of Health's Dr.
- Anthony Fauci and inviting more than 25 groups, from gay
- activists to the Southern Baptist Convention, to his office. He
- wrote 26 drafts at the stand-up desk in the basement of the
- brick house he rents on the campus of the NIH. He numbered the
- copies he took to a meeting at the White House and collected all
- of them to prevent leaks. The next day, Oct. 22, 1986, he
- released the report at a packed press conference; 16 million
- copies of the report and 107 million copies of an AIDS pamphlet
- are in print.
- </p>
- <p> Administration conservatives were stunned by the report's
- candor. They were particularly outraged that he did not preach
- abstinence alone and refer euphemistically to body fluids rather
- than semen. "The White House doesn't like the C word. But if you
- don't talk about condoms, people are going to die. So I talk."
- Liberals were amazed that Koop had produced a reasoned report
- with such compassion for homosexuals, whom he had once called
- antifamily. Phyllis Schlafly, who said the report sounded as if
- it had been edited by a gay-rights group, lashed out against
- Koop and led a campaign against him. Her efforts culminated in
- the boycott of a dinner in honor of Koop and persuaded two
- presidential candidates, Representative Jack Kemp and Senator
- Robert Dole, to pull out as sponsors of it.
- </p>
- <p> Koop says no one should be surprised, that the report is
- consistent with his moral view that you can hate sin but love
- the sinner. "I am the Surgeon General, not the chaplain, of all
- the people, and that includes homosexuals," he says. He outraged
- conservatives again in January. Although opposed to abortion
- morally, Koop concluded, following an 18-month study undertaken
- after President Reagan promised right-to-life leaders a report,
- that the evidence just wasn't there to condemn the practice as
- psychologically harmful.
- </p>
- <p> Despite his success in Washington, Koop's real calling is
- medicine. By the time he was five, he knew he wanted to be a
- doctor like his uncle. At 15, he would take the subway on
- weekends from Brooklyn to Columbia-Presbyterian Hospital in
- Manhattan, pinch a white lab coat, and take a seat in the
- balcony of the operating room, transfixed for hours by
- amputations and appendectomies. Back home, while his father was
- at the office, he would persuade his mother to help her
- precocious only child round up stray cats and dump them into a
- sterile trash can with an ether-soaked sponge so that he could
- perform exploratory surgery. He brags that he never lost a cat.
- </p>
- <p> Not your normal teenage pastimes, but Koop managed to avoid
- being the science nerd with a slide rule in his back pocket. He
- was on the wrestling, football and baseball teams, editor of
- the school paper and president of the student council. He went
- on to Dartmouth and Cornell University Medical College,
- completing his training at the University of Pennsylvania in
- 1947. He surprised many people when he decided to specialize in
- pediatric surgery, a decidedly low-rent field in those days,
- when the real brains were going into neurosurgery. "Children
- weren't getting a fair shake in surgery, getting giant incisions
- like their grandfathers' and being sewn up like a football when
- a tiny hole would do," he recalls. "I saw the chance to make a
- difference." There were about five such surgeons in the country
- at the time (there are close to 500 now), and Koop's training
- consisted of going to Boston Children's Hospital and peering
- over the shoulders of surgeons there, much as he did at Columbia
- when an adolescent.
- </p>
- <p> Back in Philadelphia, Koop quickly became known as a
- tireless and dedicated doctor. When a peptic ulcer threatened to
- keep him out of surgery for months, he treated himself at night,
- filling an IV bottle with milk and clamping it onto the bedpost.
- With the help of his wife, then pregnant with their first child,
- he would thread a tube through his nose and down his throat so
- the liquid could drip into his stomach while he slept. More than
- once, the jury-rigged system failed, and the Koops woke up in
- a soaked bed.
- </p>
- <p> Koop was named surgeon in chief at Children's Hospital of
- Philadelphia in 1948. There he perfected techniques for
- correcting undescended testicles and undeveloped esophaguses,
- skills that he compares to threading together two wet noodles at
- the bottom of an ice-cream cone with your eyes closed. His first
- brush with fame came when he separated Siamese twins joined at
- the abdomen and pelvis. He established the country's first
- neonatal unit. Noted for his speed--he did hernias in six
- minutes (he has done more than 10,000)--he used the time saved
- to counsel parents and make house calls on terminally ill
- patients he thought were better off at home. Dr. Judah Folkman, a
- professor at Harvard Medical School who trained under Koop,
- says, "I remain in awe. He was beloved at that hospital,
- worrying over patients as if they were his own children." To
- criticism that he tinged his medicine with religion, Koop says,
- "There are no atheists at the bedside of a dying child."
- </p>
- <p> Koop learned this firsthand in 1968, when his youngest son
- David, a junior at Dartmouth, fell to his death in a
- mountain-climbing accident. "I thought I knew what parents went
- through, but I had no idea," he says. "I felt bone-crushing
- grief." For months he got such a lump in his throat talking to
- parents that he had to cut his discussions short.
- </p>
- <p> Koop and his wife, the daughter of a Connecticut country
- doctor for whom a punishing dawn-to-midnight schedule was
- normal, have three other grown children and seven
- grandchildren. The Koops recently celebrated their 50th wedding
- anniversary aboard the QE2.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever happens when his term is up in 1990, Koop will stay
- in Washington, which has made its peace with him. His most
- vociferous enemies have admitted they were wrong about him. Most
- of the friends he lost in making the ethically correct--not
- politically correct--decision on AIDS have come back. The city
- that worships at the gray altar of ambiguity found there was
- room for a man of black and white.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-