The Dr. Hyman Show - How Food Policy Impacts Your Health with Senator Bill Frist, MD
Episode Date: May 25, 2020Maintaining good health is front and center in most of our minds right now, and for good reason. As we take in the latest news on COVID-19 each day, it’s the perfect time to take a deeper look at wh...y some of us are more susceptible to this virus. How can we collectively improve our immunity to combat this pandemic more successfully? How can we protect ourselves in the future? There are many ways. And you won’t be surprised that food and the policies that influence our food system are a huge piece of that puzzle. Today on The Doctor’s Farmacy I talk with Senator Bill Frist, a politician, doctor, farmer, author, and much more. Senator Frist is a heart and lung transplant surgeon and former U.S. Senate Majority Leader. He represented Tennessee in the U.S. Senate for 12 years and was elected Majority Leader in 2003. He led passage of the 2003 Medicare Modernization Act and the historic PEPFAR HIV/AIDS legislation that has saved millions of lives worldwide. As the founder and director of the Vanderbilt Multi-Organ Transplant Center, he performed over 150 heart and lung transplants, authored over 100 peer-reviewed medical articles, and published seven books on topics such as bioterrorism, transplantation, and leadership. Throughout this episode, we discuss how a lack of appreciation for data and science among policymakers is affecting how we handle COVID-19, as well as healthcare in general. *For context, this interview was recorded on May 1, 2020. Here are more of the details from our interview: Lack of appreciation for data and science among policymakers, as it relates to COVID-19 and healthcare in general (4:35) Is there an opportunity to improve our food system through policy at this moment in time? (7:28) Health and economic benefits of providing medically tailored meals to people with chronic disease (11:03) Food industry lobbying in Congress (15:44) Reforming our national food stamp and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Programs (22:06) How policy moves from an idea to implementation, and why language and storytelling are critical to this process (26:03) Training COVID-19 contract tracers to be community health workers (41:24) Addressing challenges around the way we grow food and our commodity crop food system (52:13) Our health and its effect on our national security (1:01:35) Find Sen. Frist online at http://billfrist.com/ and follow him on Facebook @SenatorBillFrist and on Twitter @bfrist. Subscribe to Sen Frist’s podcast, A Second Opinion, at https://bit.ly/aso-podcastÂ
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
During the HIV era, and even today when I argue for public health and write op-eds and talk to our legislators,
I come back to basically three words, or maybe it's four, but it's medicine is a currency for peace.
Welcome to The Doctor's Pharmacy. I'm Dr. Mark Hyman, and that's Pharmacy with an F,
F-A-R-M-A-C-Y, a place for conversations that matter. And today's conversation is going to
matter a lot if you care about health and healthcare, if you care about what's happening
today with COVID-19, and if you want to really understand the mind of someone who spent their
whole life looking at health, healthcare policy, who's been a doctor, a policymaker, a farmer,
and much, much more. It's Senator Bill Frist, who's my guest today. I'm so happy to have you
here today with me, Senator Frist. Thank you for joining us. Thank you, Mark.
So Senator Frist was first and foremost a heart and lung transplant surgeon, although he did a
degree in political science at Princeton. So he was thinking about politics, but he was given the advice to go do something real first and became
a heart surgeon, which is no small task. He's the former U.S. Senate majority leader and one of the
few politicians that didn't want to make a career of it. He said, I'm going to just pick two terms.
I'm going to do my best, be of service. And, you know, Senator Frist has really spent his whole life in service, first as a doctor, then in politics. And he's been running around the world,
helping people all over, doing surgeries in every place from Africa to Haiti, and really is working
really hard to solve some of the big problems around health and global health around the world.
He's just an incredible guy. He comes from a family of doctors. His father, his brother, his family started the Health Corporation of
America. Is that it? Health HCA? Hospital Corporation of America. And he was really
involved in the Medicare Modernization Act, the PEPFAR HIV AIDS legislation that literally saved
millions and millions of lives worldwide and helped address poverty and AIDS in Africa when it seemed like an irrelevant
issue for most people in America, but he really cared about it. He's performed 150 heart surgeries,
authored 100 peer-reviewed papers, seven books on bioterrorism leadership, and he's an adjunct
professor at Vanderbilt University and, you know, School of
Medicine. He also, in 2005, gave this incredible speech at Harvard about pandemic preparedness
and talked about the need for a Manhattan Project to really get us ready for this,
for COVID-19, and nobody listened, unfortunately, which is why we're in the mess we're in right now.
He's just active in his community, and he's a really rare bird.
He's a doctor, a politician, a farmer, an activist.
He's now joined the Bipartisan Policy Center with his former rival, Tom Daschle, and they together have really been thinking about how to solve the hard problems in healthcare and
in health,
you know, because we suck in America. I mean, just a few statistics, and then we'll sort of
get into it, Senator Frist. You wrote in one of your articles that, you know, we're 43rd
in life expectancy. And in some communities like African American, Native American communities,
we're far worse in the world. We're 11th out of 11 industrialized
countries in health outcomes, despite spending twice as much as everybody else. And we don't
focus our attention on prevention or on how to create healthy communities or on the social
determinants of health. We focus on instead treating things at the last minute when someone
needs a bypass surgery. We're good at that. And you certainly did that, but realized you had to look upstream to see why were those patients
ending up on the operating table in the first place. So you just had an incredible career.
I respect you so much. We've got to know each other over the years and I'm a big fan of yours.
So welcome to the Doctors Pharmacy Podcast. Mark, thank you. It's great to be with you.
Look forward to our discussion. Yeah. So one of the things I want to start off with is, you know, you have talked a lot about,
you know, pandemic preparedness, but you've also really been focused on the healthcare
challenges in our country of chronic disease, the burden on the economy, health disparities,
and some of the challenges of our health policy. And you being, you know,
the Senate Majority Leader had, you know, front row seat to what our policies are and what the
challenges are, and what the challenges are, in fact, of changing the policies that don't work
anymore. So how do you think your colleagues in the Senate and Congress and the administration
are thinking today about the fact that much of the mortality, morbidity, much of the death and
the sickness, the severe sickness that's happening with COVID-19 is because of our underlying
metabolic poor health in America and chronic disease, where only 12% of us are metabolically
healthy. Is anybody thinking about this? Mark, it's a great question. And early on, people have just panicked, locked down, anxiety across the country.
But our representatives in Congress are the same sort of thing.
It's sort of a shock value.
They never thought about it.
They didn't listen to my remarks back 15 years ago.
The 20 speeches I gave on it.
And a lot of them are not that tuned in into data, to science. It's just not
their background. When I came to the United States Senate back in 1994, 1995, I was the first
scientist, the first physician to come to that upper legislative body of the greatest country
of the free world to be there, to be a senator.
There hadn't been a doctor in the Senate in 70 years.
Yes, since 1938, right?
Yeah, exactly. And that is a little bit of a reflection of why there's not this appreciation of science and data and sort of the inquisitive and the curious mind. So to answer your question, not yet.
But the reason my 2005 speech has sort of made the viral circuit now
is because it's resurfaced.
It just can be predicted.
It is something that is long-term, but it's in our lifetime,
and it will come back again.
So now that's where we are today.
So to answer your question, as the data comes forward,
in the last week and the next several weeks,
people are beginning to realize that the virus is out there a lot more than we think.
But it's most destructive on people who are the most vulnerable people.
And that's who is dying.
That's who is suffering.
That's who has to be hospitalized.
And who are the vulnerable people?
Yes, it's racial, the African-American.
Yes, it's racial to African American. Yes, it's socioeconomic, but it's people who have chronic disease, whose immune systems are worn
down, who don't have the natural strength within their own bodies to be able to fight out this
little cagey virus, which will otherwise take them down. Now, as I talk to my colleagues in
the Senate, they're saying, oh, that begins to make sense. And then, so I hope we can use this as a teachable moment to come back to nutrition and exercise and our overall
metabolic health as being the most important predisposition for the destructive impact of this
COVID virus. Yeah, because it seems like if we really focus double down now on our health as a
nation, that we could make ourselves more resilient in the face
of COVID and reduce the burden on health care. And I wonder, within the next pieces of relief
legislation, do you think there's an opportunity for inserting provisions to help improve our food
system, improve our health care system, to focus on the chronic disease and metabolic health of
our population? How could that happen? Is there an opening for that? Would they be listening? Yeah, absolutely. And, you know, our great
democracy is really great because it takes this diversity of thought and it reacts to the whims
of the American people, the House of Representatives probably more than the Senate. And that's good
because it means that when there are teachable moments like this, people are receptive, but it does take that grassroots understanding, that advocacy, that coming forward.
So I think as the data does come forward, it gives that moment.
And we've seen a certain receptiveness of Congress to things like Medicare Advantage, a program that you mentioned that I helped start back in 2005,
that Medicare Advantage has begun to open up to nutrition, to transportation,
to some of these non-medical determinants for reimbursement in the future.
Again, another little opening.
So I think that case just has to be made by us, like on this show, and by the American people to give that understanding to Congress.
And for those who don't know, Medicare Advantage is a program where private providers contract with Medicare
and get a bundled payment so that they get the same amount whether their patients are sick or healthy.
So they're actually incentivized to do the right thing and create these programs.
And I've seen this start to happen, which is very exciting, where they're addressing social determinants,
where they're addressing nutrition, where they're addressing social determinants, where they're addressing nutrition,
where they're addressing lifestyle.
And I think that's an amazing thing.
And that legislation really helped catalyze that,
which is great.
But we need to do that across the whole spectrum
of Medicare and Medicaid, which is value-based care.
And I think we're still not there yet.
And I think what's really striking to me,
and you might have some perspective on this,
is in the value-based care conversation,
which means getting better outcomes at lower costs in healthcare, which things that actually matter to do that,
rather than just care coordination, better health IT, reducing, improving efficiencies,
improving payment systems, and deal with the real issue? Because those are like moving the deck chairs in the Titanic. We need to actually say, why are people coming in the healthcare
system in the first place? You know, the left of the Democratic Party is saying Medicare for all.
And I'm like, well, it's a nice idea that everybody should have a human right to health care, but it's a disaster if we load up the system with a chronically ill population instead of fixing the reason why people are in there in the first place.
So how do we get Congress and the White House and the country focused on what seems like a smoldering problem instead of
this acute problem. Mark, I think it's getting there. And again, your reach and your writing,
which being on it and laying it out, both the history of it and where we are today is hugely
helpful. And I'll give you an example. First of all, Medicare Advantage is right. There are,
say, 40 million people in Medicare, 20 million get their Medicare through Medicare Advantage, that program we started back there. And in a few years, 80% will be. It's very popular. And it's popular because it allows the flexibility for payers, the insurance companies, to reimburse for things that work based on data, based on outcomes. And so an example would be a company that I'm also in the private equity
investment world, and I wear all these different hats just because it's all
around health and healing.
But there's a company called, it doesn't matter what it is,
but it's called Pure Foods.
Pure Foods gives medically tailored meals and about 50 million a year or so a lot in all 49 states. And they're medically tailored
meals. They delivered two weeks. It's not frozen, but they're medically tailored. And they're
medically tailored for people with diabetes, with chronic disease, with hypertension. They're
arranged 12 different medically tailored meals. And what they had demonstrated, they came to me initially and said,
well, why aren't we reimbursed?
We know that it works.
And I said, collect the data.
And they spent about two years collecting the data with the other medically assisted, you know, fresher food in the sense of medically tailored meals.
And what they did is the data,
and they found that the medical admissions fell by 30% if you were on these meals for like
three to four months. And I said, that's unbelievable. They said that the overall
length of stay for the admission fell by about 22 to 24%. And if you had chronic conditions fell
by about 50%. And then they said, and they demonstrated that the overall cost of care by eating good, healthy foods that are tailored to these chronic conditions, that the overall medical cost will fall by 37% over that period of six months.
Now, they had to get the data, but once they got the data, they took it to Congress, to CMS, Center for Medicare, that controls Medicare Advantage. And based on that kind of hard data, that outcomes
are improved, costs fall, people live longer, that fewer health problems, overall health care,
health is improved, that ultimately in this last Medicare, about eight months ago, these Medicare
revisions with Medicare Advantage, that begins to be reimbursed. Now tell that long story because
it shows that if we come back to the science,
if we come back to the data, if we measure outcomes,
if we show that their improved health leads to more productivity,
less absenteeism, and you take that data
and you give it to the appropriate people in Congress, they will act.
So that's a good story.
Again, that's one.
I love that story.
Yeah, yeah.
So it's possible.
I think I
think my friends at Tufts school nutrition science and policy actually
analyzed a lot of that and looked at the fact that over a five-year period you
could prevent 3.2 million cardiac events and a hundred billion dollars yeah and
yet you know this the results that you just shared for those who aren't
doctors or in healthcare, they're staggering. There is no drug on the planet that can do that.
There's no drug that can reduce healthcare costs by almost 40% and cut hospital stays by 50%. I
mean, it's a staggering set of data points and it should be the headline news, but it's sort of invisible because the reimbursement system, now Medicare is doing it, but our other private insurers do it.
How do we get that to happen?
Yeah, and I think it just comes back to measurement.
Appreciation of science.
And then the small companies, the mid-sized companies do have to measure the data and demonstrate that there are better outcomes,
people are healthier, people are happier, better well-being. And then also that results in huge
cost savings for the system. And that's pretty direct like that. And we sort of say social media
is bad and hard and difficult and all. But in truth, with social media and sort of these open sourcing,
we can collect this data pretty quickly,
and we can communicate directly with our legislators with that data today.
And I think in people's understanding, you know, in my own life,
you mentioned for 20 years I did straight medicine,
just practicing everyday medical school,
and did probably 10,000 heart surgeries and a bunch of transplants.
And I'll bet you of all the 10,000 cases that I did in heart surgery,
I'll bet you as much as 50% of that burden of disease comes back to nutrition and to food.
And we didn't know that before.
We knew smoking was bad, and we you know, reduced that from 50% to
20% and 15% of the population. So with these movements like the one that you helped both
create, we can make it work. And using these little examples that I can put on the table,
if we stick with it, this understanding, reliance on data, getting it to the appropriate people, we can change the system.
So how does, you know, changing the system work in the face of some of the challenges of Congress,
which is the amount of lobbying in the food industry and the sort of interests that are
pushing against what's right? I mean, just one bill alone, which was the GMO Labeling Act, had $192 million spent on it by the food industry to oppose it, and it didn't pass.
Yeah.
Because what you're saying makes so much sense.
I think, is it a lack of understanding of the legislators about these issues?
Is it something else?
Because it seems to me that there's, this is sort of a duh, like, you know,
just the data you just presented is just like, well, why wouldn't we make this our premier
strategy for dealing with the Medicare crisis, that we're going to run out of money in the
Medicare trust fund in five years? Like, this is just to be like, the house is on fire and we have
a solution. Let's do it. Yeah, I think it is a lack of understanding i think it really is going
to be just sort of staying with it the lobbying is an issue but it's not an insurmountable issue
and um one of the reasons that not one of the reasons but i said i was gonna start for 12 years
ended up being majority leader left um and fulfilled commitment. And part of that freed me up from any kind of
dependence on raising money, spending time raising money, having lobbyists come in and say, oh yeah,
I'll help you out. And so lobbying is an issue here. But based on my experience of those 12 years
of running the United States Senate, it is not the primary driver.
And the people, I can speak for the Senate, the people in the Senate will listen.
It takes getting to them.
As I said, social media actually helps in terms of getting to them.
It has to be fact-based, increasingly science-based.
And one thing I think that the whole COVID pandemic is going to do among our 350 million
people out there
is an appreciation of what science is all about. And, you know, cut through all the fake news,
cut through all the dismissal of science. And I think even the president of the United States,
who has not been a big fan of science in the past, maybe is going to wake up a little bit more
the fact that science matters.
This pandemic will not end until science actually brings us a vaccine or antiviral agents and everything in between is okay,
but science is going to ultimately rule.
Yeah, I think, I think that's right. So, so you know, once this,
this will end at some point, it'll get better.
And society may be different unless there's some really great cure which i i sort of as a doctor doubt i think there are some other things that
are happening in parts of the world that are interesting that promise i look promising but
i i do think that this is going to be changing society forever but i think we're going to be
left with the chronic problem that we have that is driven primarily by the food system as i've
talked about before in the podcast according to to the Global Burden of Disease Study, 11 million people
die every year from preventable chronic disease caused by food. I think that's an underestimate
because about 75% of deaths worldwide are from chronic disease and food has a component of
contributing to all of those. So if we are left with this, this burden, you know, and it's driven by food
as a doctor, as a regenerative farmer, or he had grass fed beef as a, as a, you know,
policymaker, you know, where, where would you start to try to chip away at the, at the,
the need to change the food system. I mean, you were involved in the one campaign
that was driving the AIDS and poverty relief in Africa.
And it was a massive campaign against all odds
and it succeeded and you were shepherding that through.
And that was a huge achievement.
We need a PEPFAR one campaign for the food system.
We need a Manhattan Project for the food system.
How would you go about, given all your experience and knowledge and your work at the Bipartisan
Policy Center, laying that out in a way that was a doable strategy, a winnable way?
Yeah. Well, I think, and remember, I did the sort of 20 years in medicine, the 12 years in
politics and policy, but for the last 12 years I used the private sector.
And the example, the food that I gave,
the example that I gave to you really comes out of the importance of the
private sector and investments that are made,
that are cutting edge, that ultimately define policy.
I also work from the policy end.
So even though I'm no longer majority Leader of the Senate, you mentioned it, I'm on the
board of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation where we talk about the health of the community,
the non-medical determinants of health being much more important than the healthcare, that
the food and our behavior and where we live and how we live is much more important than Bill Frist, the heart transplant surgeon, you know, saving lives, doing dramatic things.
That's where the drama isn't very important.
Don't want to diminish it.
But the sort of 60% of the impact is in the dimensions that we were talking about.
And that means we have to go to policy.
People say, why did you leave medicine and go to the United States Senate?
What drove you to do it? Did you lose your mind? And I guess I did lose my mind. But one of the
reasons is to be able to participate in the system that we're talking about. And that is ultimately
public policy matters. Today, a lot of people dismiss government, dismiss institutions, but at the end
of the day, the public policy matters. And you've written about it. You know, we've talked about
nutrition and agricultural policy. The Bipartisan Policy Center always, which is a center in
Washington, D.C., bipartisan. Tom Dashiell and I run the health component. We stay on the issues
of supplemental nutrition on agricultural policy.
We're on that because it does affect health care and the health,
the burdens of disease and the sort of quality of lives we're going to live.
So it really starts from the private sector all the way up to the public sector.
And you don't have to be a politician to participate in the public sector.
Yeah, you don't.
And so, you know, the key things
that have to get changed, and you write about them, for example, in the bipartisan policy work,
you know, SNAP, food labels, you know, reforms to Medicare, reimbursement around food as medicine,
which you're talking about. How challenging do you think it is to get some of these things done?
Because, for example, with SNAP, you know,
the leveraging nutrition was a great report that was put up by the Bipartisan Policy Center,
which outlined some of the things that need to be done,
like sort of limiting access to, for example, sugar-sweetened beverages,
which the dietary guidelines say we shouldn't eat,
but the SNAP benefits provide $7 billion a year for soda consumption. And so it's like
schizophrenic. It's like the right hand doesn't know what the left hand of the government's doing.
And there are people who are for it. There's people who are against it. For example,
the hunger groups oppose any restrictions. And how do you thread that needle? Because I think
it's such an important program, for example, for feeding the hungry and food insecurity, but it also has secondary negative consequences of actually increasing poor health in that community and increasing the need for Medicaid and Medicare to pay for those patients who eat those foods who get sick.
So it's really kind of a rabbit hole you don't want to go down. It is, it is, and again, you've written so much
about it, but, you know, the food stamp program of the 1960s, a program that you've written about,
is, was mainly, you know, can people afford the food, and let's just get them food, let's just
get them calories, and some protein, but let's get them calories, and then in the 70s, when,
when sort of I was coming through in the medical in medical school we first began to say
well that's not going to be enough and we really need to start looking to sort of better nutrition
but it took another 15 years to a healthier food and not just any food but it took another 15 years
really and the you know the snap actually became snap supplemental nutrition program after I left
the senate but the fact that nutrition was put in the title, that was good.
But then it took another five or six years before people say, what does nutrition really mean?
And I think the SNAP, the Bipartisan Policy Center report that you mentioned, basically said three things.
Instead of taking the big policy issue and just arguing for it, it said, let's take three things.
Number one, that food is medicine and healthy food has to be an
objective of snap not the and it wasn't what that wasn't the objective back in the 60s so do that
number one number two sugary beverages we know from science you've known for a long time but
for the last eight years we know there's probably the number one killer out there today in terms
when you look at metabolic disorder that's just prominent, and I'm exaggerating a little bit and oversimplifying.
But we made that number two.
And then number three, in that just one report,
and that one report goes to the 450 sort of policymakers out there,
the United States Congress.
We made the healthy reading in terms of fruits and vegetables
and to lower making them both affordable,
but also in the SNAP program itself.
So we focused on all that.
We took it.
Now, that's not because of that report, but obviously the Obama administration came in,
made huge progress.
We have, based on the science, and that's been evaluated, you know, the health, the
metabolic conditions were probably 40% healthier, some reports say, than we did with the AllSnap program.
And now you have President Trump coming in trying to roll that back.
And that rollback, now the only thing that's going to stop that, again, as you said, all
the lobbying is out there against it, is going to be the science.
If we're 40% healthier, we're 40% more productive at work, there's 40% less absenteeism, the
GDP, the economy is growing.
The jobs are being created.
And it's that sort of reasoning that ultimately we need to push through, continue to push through.
And you, again, you've written this whole story.
But things like the Bipartisan Policy Center and other foundations need to echo that directly into the policy centers.
Yeah, I think that's right. I mean, I think, you know, I'm always curious about, you know, policy ideas becoming then policy and then becoming implemented.
And it seems like there's a lot of steps there that things can go wrong.
How do you navigate that?
Well, that's hard to read because it's a fragmented system.
We have our executive branch, which can sort of be out a voice and can do a lot through regulations then
we have our legislative branch where all the money is and people forget that and the house
of representatives is where all the sort of money starts and therefore ultimately has to be translated
but then even after the law is passed it goes back to the execution and those are different people
the only thing i can say is it comes back
in this region i'm talking to you now and you're talking to me and we've got you know
hundreds of thousands of listeners it comes back to the american people yeah and how how educated
how knowledgeable they are that they can translate that up through their mayors to their school
boards to their city boards through the state and ultimately it gets through the system itself.
And that's why democracy is a tough, tough system of government
to implement and execute because it takes so long to get through it.
But again, the HIV age is a great example for our listeners to listen to
because it was killing 3 million people a year,
not 60,000 a year, 3 million people a year globally.
Huge stigma around it, impossible to do.
But by coming together, Democrats and Republicans in a global,
in appreciation of the global environment,
just like nutrition is and metabolic disorder is a global issue,
by coming together over a period of two years,
we were totally able to reverse what up until that time,
the previous 20 years since the early 1980s,
had been set over in the corner and stigmatized.
And now there are 20 million people alive because of that legislation.
So policy can work, so we've got to stick with it.
It reminds me of what Winston Churchill said, which was democracy is the worst form of government except for all the others.
And I think, you know, you're kind of a unicorn because you thread the needle between a heart surgeon, which is the sort of epitome of acute care rescue medicine and public health, which has been a large focus of your work, and particularly with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
Like you said, you were there operating on the downstream consequences
of all this stuff, and you're like, wait a minute,
maybe we better figure out a way to not get these people on my operating table.
And a lot of the work you're doing now in Nashville with Nashville Health
and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation is focused on population health
and how the social determinants, which are
food and your housing and your economic opportunities and all the things that we
don't think are that important, which may make up to 80% of the difference in your health,
in your actual health quality of life and productivity. What do you see is required for the government to sort of really shift to say,
wait a minute, we're focusing on the wrong end of the stick here. Yes, we need to, you know,
maintain our best healthcare system in the world and the high quality of acute care medicine.
But if we're really going to solve the health disparities, the economic impact of chronic
disease, the fact that six out of 10 Americans suffer from a chronic disease, four out of 10 have two, and in a few years, 83 million will have three or more chronic
diseases, and this will beat metabolic health only being 12% of the population, 88% are not healthy.
How do we start to shift our focus and share some of the work you're doing there? Because it's so
important, and it's such a different framework for how we solve these problems than just more
access to care and better financing and better efficiencies. It's,
it's a, it's flipping the whole problem on its head.
Yeah, it, it, it is. And I'll tell you what,
just from a bit from the political standpoint. And again,
it's nice to put politics aside, but politics are
important in our democracy and where we are today. But the language that we use is critical.
And the study of language and the storytelling, if we want to move and establish movements. And for the HIV AIDS end of things, one of the things that we did was
focus on young people and people like Jesse Helms, sort of an arch conservative who had written an
article in the New York Times about how evil and immoral HIV AIDS is, and therefore we should not
support any sort of helping people. That changed over about two or three months as we focused on things like a drug called
niverapine, which you know, and that for just 50 cents, you can give that to somebody and
that would reverse 10 million orphans out there to growing over time.
And when Jesse Helms heard that, you know that there's a really sort of cost-effective
way to protect babies and future babies and orphans and people, all of a sudden he said
he became our biggest advocate and he pulled in a huge constituency and the evangelicals
came on board and the right people and the right people from the left. Family planning,
another huge global issue that I've been involved with um is an issue that you
know republicans will turn to abortion issues and and democrats will turn to abortion issues and try
to politicize it and and always but if you instead of you say family planning you say that healthy
timing and spacing of babies but you just say that. All of a sudden, people come to the room, and I think we can do a better job.
Instead of saying eat healthy or eat your vegetables at all, really do frame it.
And I'll just close with saying what does speak, and the Affordable Care Act became so unpopular because it focused just on access, which is important.
It didn't focus on cost.
It didn't focus on money.
To the individual person, their prices were going up and they weren't getting any more benefits.
So I think the more we can translate things into cost, to effectiveness, to well-being,
and we know that a healthier, we know from my heart transplant, my heart transplants,
they would do well long-term if nutritionally and metabolically they were strong.
So, yeah, I did a heart transplant.
I wanted to live 50 years, and it came back to nutrition and a healthier lifestyle coming in.
So I think if we do translate nutrition policy, not just good, bad, eat healthier, but translate it into a healthier person is a more productive person and greater well-being
and it means more productivity at work does mean a growing of economy means fewer absentee days
the economy growing individual well-being increased which translates into national
effects in their economy and the affordable care act Act might have missed it this time around,
I think, if we get the right language. And we do end up couching it into growth, personal growth,
product of economic growth, productivity, that the case can be made, will be made, will be listened
to. That's true. You know, and the thing that you talked about in terms of medically tailored
meals is such a great example of an out-of-the-box intervention that works better than anything else. And you see that with the homeless population,
providing them housing, literally paying for their apartments, reduces healthcare costs
dramatically, and it's actually an economic benefit. Or I was speaking to the former head
of population health at Cleveland Clinic where I work, and he said, you know, if we provided housing and food for young mothers, we would dramatically reduce preterm births and neonatal costs, which are
literally in the billions and billions of dollars. And yet our healthcare system isn't set up to
provide food or housing or any of the things that actually make the most difference. That's what's
so striking to me. Yeah. And I think, you know, the things that people listen to us, they say, well, again, you're talking about Washington, D.C. and policy and all that stuff. And what's so striking to me. Yeah, and I think, you know, the things that, as people listen to us, they say, well, again,
you're talking about Washington, D.C. and policy and all that stuff, and it's so far
away.
But it really isn't.
When I left the Senate, the first thing I did is come back to Nashville, Tennessee,
where I grew up, Vanderbilt and family and all.
And Nashville, ironically, it's sort of a Silicon Valley of health services,
all the hospital chains, disease management chains, psychiatric hospital chains are based
there on a per capita basis, much bigger than New York or Boston or Washington in terms of the reach.
But ironically, in the Davidson County, where all these home offices are, the population health
measures, and it could be
metabolic disorders, diabetes, obesity, how long somebody lives, infant mortality,
are higher there than other sort of brother-sister cities around the country of comparable size.
And so we started a local initiative called Nashville Health, not appointed by the mayor
or the governor. Those are good, but they tend to go away when they go away. But a collaborative of 120 nonprofits, the academic institution partnering with government,
addressing these local issues. And because it's not health care, it's health. And as you said,
80% of that are things like food and housing and access to the internet. That's where our focus is.
And we're making measurable change in the local
community. And I throw that out there because whoever's listening to us, they'll look around,
do you have a collaborative like that, addressing these issues at that ground level? And that's
where this great movement can be of educating mayors and educating governors and educating
Congress people starting in one's own community. Yeah, it's true. We were at a friend's house, Jimmy Haslam, and his brother
was the governor of Tennessee, and we were chatting, and he said, you know, a third of our
Tennessee budget is Medicaid, which is predominantly because of populations who are affected by these social
determinants and desperate to find solutions. But I don't think they're hearing the right
ideas. I don't think they're hearing the right information. And I think, you know, the fact that,
you know, you're out there talking about this and that there's these models like national health,
I think hopefully will spur governors and mayors and others to actually start to act on this because this is where we have to move. I think, you know, in healthcare right now, there's this movement towards population health. Cleveland Clinic just stood up a new program called 4C, Cleveland Clinic Community Care, to try to actually act in this space. And they started a food is medicine program. So you see these, these global leaders like Cleveland clinic leaning into this space,
but I still find it's so incremental.
And I am like,
wait,
you know,
this is like,
I feel like I'm,
I'm,
I've got a big,
you know,
a truck full of water and I'm,
you know,
in the desert.
And there's on the other side of this glass wall is everybody's dying of
thirst.
And it's like,
it's so not that hard. And yet,
and we're just, it's so frustrating. So I think you're right. I think it's a grassroots efforts
and, and on the local, local levels being, being focused on this. And it's also educating
policymakers. And that's really why, you know, I, I wrote my book food fix is why I started the,
the food fix campaign to try to create a coordinated effort, like you're talking
about, for the 2,000 people in Washington that actually need to be educated to understand these
things. Because, you know, I don't believe there's anybody that wakes up in the morning and says,
you know, I just want to keep people sick in America. And I, you know, I want to, you know,
maintain the status quo. I mean, people, whether you're a big CEO of a food company or you're a
politician, everybody wants better for themselves, for their families, for their country. It's just that we don't have the roadmap to get there. And I think this is the kind of stuff that actually has to be at the forefront of we deal even the next pandemic that's going to come
unless we make a more resilient healthcare system,
a more resilient population?
And I think you've worked so hard to do that.
So how would you, if you were president today,
what would you be like leading the charge on
to get us going in the right direction
around this incredible burden of health disparities
and chronic disease
and social determinants?
Yeah, it's a great question.
First of all, I'd go back and-
I would vote for you, actually.
I'm a Democrat, but I would vote for you.
Thank you, but you're not going to have the chance to.
Come on.
Why aren't the good people running?
I just don't understand.
You know, it is interesting that people say,
how are you spending your time? And first of all, as you know, I do a podcast and that podcast is
really interesting. It's called A Second Opinion, but I'm talking to people just like you are.
And it's really interesting. My particular podcast looks at this intersection of health
and healing, the life that you and I live as physicians, intersected with policy,
the sort of things we talk about today. And the third big bubble is innovation,
the creativity innovation. So we bring people on, and not to be advertising it too much,
but the interesting thing is that when we gravitate back to that intersection of policy,
number one, number two, health and healing, number three, innovation, just at that intersection there, it comes back to exactly what we're talking about,
these non-medical determinants overall that will lower cost, improve outcomes, have greater
well-being, productivity for the nation coming back. And then you end up starting with shelter and you start with housing and you start with access to access
and consumption of healthy foods and nutrition. And then you gravitate back out to do that.
So there are all the issues that I'm looking at. I think that COVID itself gives us this teachable
moment. As when we started started the vulnerable people are disproportionately impacted
and vulnerable people who are people who metabolically suffer from poor nutrition
and some of them recognize that some of them do not but it is that teachable moment right now the
the policy that i'm putting out there which which is a big policy and, and other public health experts like Mark McKellen and Atul Gawande and,
and Andy Slavitt and others,
we've come together and the policy we just this past week,
the sense of the president and the Congress is on COVID, but it's big.
And it costs a fair amount, $46 billion,
but it does come back to say we need to do this contact tracing today.
And that's going to take an actual investment and improve the testing.
Number two, for people who have to quarantine, that we ought to be able to help them quarantine in hotels and all the empty hotels today.
Number three, for the 180,000 people in the contact tracing, we ought to use that as part of the stimulus program and actually use government money to go out and hire them. So that's sort of the big policy out there. I don't know if it'll
get through or even be looked at, but that's the kind of policy today that links growth of the
economy with health and well-being, with social determinants, with the current issue of COVID in
terms of the contact tracing. I think you're right. You know, I think talking about COVID for a minute, I mean, the obstacles to getting back to normal
are the lack of adequate testing and the challenges, not just in, you know, getting
people to test, but just the supply chain issues of the reagents and the mediums and the swabs and
the laboratory. Like it's not so simple to say, let's do testing, even if we want it tomorrow
because of the challenges. And then the contact tracing is the other key issue, which is to
identify and find all the contacts of people with COVID-19. We have 600 people at the CDC
to do the job, which is going to require an estimated half a million people, which we now
have 36 million unemployed or whatever it is.
I think, what is it? 20? Every, every day it's like another 5 million people.
And then, and then, and then we have the, you know, these,
these challenges of sort of this infrastructure that we don't have to actually
go do this. So these ideas I hear talked about, I read about them,
I see these articles,
but nobody's talking about the challenge of how to make this happen. to actually go do this. So these ideas I hear talked about, I read about them, I see these articles,
but nobody's talking about the challenge of how to make this happen.
And I think, you know, my dream would be to take,
yeah, let's hire a million
or half a million contact tracers,
but let's train them to be community health workers.
You know, take like a public works program like FDR did
and get them started with COVID-19,
but then deploy them to actually be in the communities to
be community health workers, which is really what we need to do to solve this pandemic of chronic
disease. And it's been demonstrated in many other situations. You worked in Haiti a lot with Paul
Farmer. He created community health workers to solve TB and AIDS in some of the most intractable
places in the world, and successfully, when the public health community had just given up on them and realized it wasn't simply about
better drugs and surgery, it was about getting people to change the social determinants that
were driving us, what he called structural violence, you know, the social, economic,
and political conditions that drive disease. And that inspired me actually to start this program
with Rick Warren called The Daniel Plan, which is a faith-based wellness program.
And I had the idea that, you know, based on Christakis' work and others, that chronic disease, obesity is contagious.
It may not be infectious, but it's contagious that, you know, your social networks determine your health outcomes and your social environment.
So I said, why don't we go to the church and have people work in small groups to get healthier and support each other.
So let's see if it works.
And it was tremendously successful.
We called the Daniel Plan.
I wanted to call it
the Jewish Doctor's Guide to Christian Wellness.
They didn't go for that.
I won the Christian Book of the Year Award.
Actually, I'm the only Jewish guy I think to win that.
Well, there might have been that other guy
about 2,000 years ago,
but that was, you know.
Oh, good.
And it was so successful.
Now we're doing this at Cleveland Clinic in shared medical appointments,
and we're seeing really amazing results on transforming people's behavior
and their habits through this power of community and social networks.
So I think we do need these, and I think this is a moment where we can go,
wow, how do we reinvent our healthcare system
to deploy these community health workers?
We used to have federal extension workers
that went around in the 50s to teach young families
how to take care of their homes and grow gardens
and cook and do basic things that families need to do.
We lost all that.
And I think this is maybe that moment in history
where we can go, wait a minute,
maybe because of this, we can build an infrastructure of community health that is going to solve a problem.
And I think you're probably familiar with Nigel Crisp, who wrote a book called Turning the World Upside Down that was a big eye-opener for me.
Yeah, yeah.
Which is-
I think this community health worker thing is a good example of there is no silver lining to what
we're going through in this pandemic, but I think it's a good example of how the new norm can well
be constructed of things that we learned during this pandemic. The fact that we have no medicine,
you know, acute Western type antiviral drug or a vaccine yet, nor will we have a vaccine that can really
be distributed for a couple of years, that we are relying on individual people, the community
health workers, the contact tracers, which literally are picking up the telephone and
talking to people and walking them through this. They don't have to be doctors. They don't have to
be scientists. They don't have to. They need training, but very specific this. They don't have to be doctors. They don't have to be scientists.
They don't have to, they need training, but very specific training. They're of the community.
They have the language. They have the cultural sort of understanding of their fellow person.
They have the empathy. And that's the sort of thing that you and I were not really trained to do. We had our white coat on. We walked in the room. We had knowledge in our head.
And our policy structured the system such
with these almost most caste-like systems
of doctor protection.
You can't use telemedicine.
You can't use telemetry.
You can't practice outside of your state.
You can't let nurses do things.
You can't let community workers.
I think this covid thing is
a great equalizer here that the future of your safety my safety our family's safety is going to
depend on people who can go out and do this contact tracing they're they're community health
workers yes and it's all over the world and it's one of the things that that you know all the
countries that i've operated in and done surgery in, I have learned more overseas than here about the way healthcare should be
practiced. They use community health workers as their primary care, and it can be done. It can
be done successfully, and you contrast that to where we've been, this cast-like system.
Things are being broken down. Telemedicine is another good example that before had a cast-like,
you know, we can't do it.
It's not safe.
And all of a sudden we can do it.
Overnight, like that.
Yeah, exactly.
So I think all of this and the community health worker, I think coming out of this, people will see how important they can be.
And we'll have to adjust policies to have appropriate breaking down of regulations and old licensing to allow that.
Yeah, I think you're right. I think this book, Turning the World Upside Down,
talked about putting people in communities at the center of health care,
not doctors.
You know this book I'm talking about?
Yeah, oh, yeah, absolutely.
Doctors in hospitals, and it gave example after example
of how our growing burden of chronic disease can't be dealt with
with acute care medicine, that we need community-based solutions
that are peer support networks, that are community health workers, that are, I mean, and you look at the NUCCA health system, which is a great example
in Alaska, where it was an Indian health service program that was just costing enormous amounts
of money, losing so much money. The outcomes were terrible. And the local population of the
Inuit said, look, let us take over our own healthcare system and try it. And what they did
was fascinating to me. In order to get into the healthcare system, you had to join a group,
basically a support group, a peer support group to deal with the social issues, whether you're
being abused, was there alcoholism? Did you have lack of access to food? What were the issues that
were really obstructing your ability to get healthy. And they built teams of workers.
They built community health workers.
And the cost reductions were in the hundreds of millions of dollars.
The health outcomes were stellar.
And I think this is a model of how we need to sort of reinvent healthcare,
given the new reality of where we're at.
Because, you know, my thinking is, you know, 40 years ago,
you know, when you probably graduated medical
school, there wasn't this big problem. I mean, yeah, we had heart disease and this and that,
but, you know, if you look at the, in 1980, the hockey stick of chronic disease and obesity is
like this. It's sort of like the COVID curve, but instead of over a month, it's over 40 years,
right? And it's sort of like the frog in normal temperature water
that just boils to death without knowing.
This is sort of where we're at,
but I think it's reached a crisis point.
I do feel optimistic.
I think however horrible this is,
I think it's highlighting that health is an issue for America,
that chronic disease is an issue.
And I may be a Pollyanna,
but I believe that, you know, we can get things done in Washington. And in fact, just look at
what's happening. We talked about gridlock. I mean, there's more legislation that's passed in
the last two months, I think in the last 20 years. Yeah, and bipartisan as well. That's what I mean,
bipartisan. Everybody's working together. It's pretty impressive. So I think, you know,
these trends that you mentioned are real, and they've been accelerated with COVID.
We've seen it in telemedicine.
We've seen it in community health worker.
Also, this whole trend for traditional medicine, bricks and mortar, hospital, which over the last 10 years shifted to Affordable Care Act and risk-taking and value-based care. This next step, and I think it's been
accelerated, is moving much more to the home, from the hospital to the home, where people are aging
at home, aging in place. And what that means is things like food, something that they see,
that people see every day, becomes much more immediate. Housing becomes much more immediate.
And therefore, I think
policymakers will follow this, the old acute bricks and mortar through the sort of value-based
managed care. And now how best to age at home where the community workers, things called long-term
support services become important. The companies are being built there. I'm building a company
there called CareBridge that focuses on the LTSS, the support services. You don't need doctors in the home. You need personal caregivers. You need
people with empathy. You need community health care workers. So this flow of capital is going
there. Policymakers will go there. And because nutrition is so important as that aging in place,
I believe that that will be escalated as well in terms of the national
agenda. Yeah, it just seems like there's this intersection of trends of the social good
and the medical good intersecting with the economic good. So it's like, wow, wait a minute,
there's this moment where the economic argument should drive this because, you know, I remember being in Washington during
the Obamacare debates and was advocating for lifestyle reimbursement for lifestyle medicine.
And I think everybody thought it was a great idea, both sides, but, you know, because of the
haggling in the back room, whatever, horse trading, it didn't end up in the bill. But,
you know, it was really clear that there was an interest in this, but people
just didn't get how important this is. And now there's a moment where I think that people are
starting to realize this. And I think if we don't solve this now, the consequences for our society
are just staggering. And it is like a slow-moving tsunami.
It's not this, you know, hurricane that sort of came in like COVID-19,
but it's a slow-moving tsunami that is going to overwhelm us.
And I fear for our future.
I mean, I fear for a lot of things, not only our health,
but even the consequences to our environment and climate
from the way we grow food.
So, you know, you were telling me the other day you're in Tennessee,
you've got your farm there, you had grass-fed beef,
you've got your chickens and growing vegetables,
and you have an organic farm.
So as a sort of switching gears a little bit to thinking about the other side
of the food chain, which is how we grow our food, you know,
what's your perspective on,
as both a farmer, as a doctor, and as a policymaker, on how we address the challenges of our agricultural system, which seemed like a good thing. As we looked at trying to feed a
hungry population in the 50s, we were modernizing agriculture. We were increasing productivity. We
were growing lots of grains and starchy food to
provide abundant calories for a growing population. But at the time, we didn't know how bad that
starchy stuff was for us. And I think, how do you see us navigating that part of the food chain?
It's a really, really, really important both question but matter. I'm on the board of the Nature Conservancy and vice chair
of the Nature Conservancy, which is the largest environmental conservation climate change
organization in the country. And I chose that board to work on in sort of the nonprofit arena
because of this intersection that we're talking about of health and conservation,
health and land, health and climate change.
And that voice is not out there nearly as much.
I mean, you and I and others are trying to make a headway there.
But that intersection of food and land and sustainable agriculture
with our health and well-being.
And you articulate it perfectly,
but we just need to get the language out there further and further.
And the example is agricultural policy.
And you just outlined it and you've done it so well in your writings.
You actually read what I read. That's impressive.
No, I do. I have to act smart. I can get smart from people like you. But, you know, from the 1930s and 40s,
there were economic protections.
Our government stepped in to support the family farmer, in essence.
And then, you know, later, just through the progression that you said,
the policy out of Washington looked at how we get the prices as low as we
possibly can.
How can we export things for overseas to build up our economy
and still get price support?
So what it resulted in is sort of eight commodity foods,
80% of all the federal subsidies, and they're huge federal subsidies.
We talk about sugar, and we know all the obvious,
but they're huge commodity subsidies.
And you mean like wheat and corn and soy.
Exactly.
Soy,
sorghum,
weed,
corn,
all,
all those.
And so those eight,
that's five,
but of the eight,
yeah,
cotton.
So all the subsidies are going to those eight.
And then the best way to produce those eight to get the price down is to get
rid of the family farmer and come in and just get these large tracts but worse than that i put on my tnc hat is the the types of techniques
that are used are just the opposite of we know what are eco-friendly sustainable over time more
nutritious things like no-till farming yeah you know no- till farming is harder to do, but protects the earth. Clearly, over time,
much more nutritious, both for the soil and for the product itself. Well, it does away with that.
And so that policy may have been right for the time, but it drove us further and further away
from the metabolic disorders, which are destroying our kids, our country, the future, our healthcare
system, the Medicaid programs and costs to the state.
And so now we need to continue to wake up and sort of begin to reverse that in terms of our
national policies itself. But telling the story, people understand that at a point in time,
it may make sense for the priorities. But now that we have the science of the productivity of the
cost of chronic disease of metabolic disorders.
We're measuring the outcomes. And if we measure the outcomes and we show it to people that the
metabolic disorders, the obesity and the diabetes is killing the American dream. Once we can put
numbers on that and demonstrate that, I think that our policymakers will change very quickly.
Yeah, I think that's right. I think it is an economic argument. I think the amazing thing is
that there are big companies now that are understanding that we need to shift to
regenerative agriculture, like Danone and General Mills are literally funding farmers to turn their
conventional farms into regenerative farms, because they understand that if we keep farming the way
we are, we won't actually be able to grow food anymore. We'll deplete the soil, we'll lose
resources. And so they're actually funding this, which is what I think the government should start
to do. I mean, there's a transition period where it's tough for maybe two, three, four years for
farmers to turn their farms from conventional regenerative. But when they do, they use less inputs, they make more money,
they produce better food, more nutritious food, and everybody wins.
And it revitalizes rural communities, it revitalizes farmers,
and it just seems such an obvious solution.
And the side effect is less environmental degradation
and drawing down carbon into the soil.
I think most people don't realize that a third of all the carbon in the environment,
which is a trillion tons, is from the loss of soil because of tilling and soil erosion
and killing the soil with chemicals.
So that's like 200 to 300 billion tons of carbon that could be put back into the soil.
In fact, I think people don't realize that the soil
is much better carbon sink than the rainforest or the forest. It literally could take down all
the carbon in the environment. You know, it is one that you've mentioned, sort of a lifestyle,
and I spend all of my time on a farm. I'm still doing work in 18 hours a day, but in terms of my
living and the food that we
grow and the like, and that sort of experience and connection with nature really does help.
And a lot of people just don't have that opportunity, but I write a lot about getting
in parks and environment and all would help. But when you see the plants and you see what you see
on the surface, and then you see them going down three times that length, and then you think of carbon and the ability to absorb that carbon
that is taken deep into the ground safely.
It fits with the nature conservative conservation, climate change.
It all begins to fit together.
So you're the head of the Senate and the head of Republican Senate.
How do you talk to your colleagues about this? Because it seems like a non-starter to talk about
climate change. And it's such a polarized issue. And you're a scientist. And, you know, I mean,
whatever the cause is, things are changing. And I think it's hard to argue about if you look at
the data. But it seems like there's such a polarization and lack of willingness to actually
have this conversation. So how do you break through that I don't
know yeah it is I mentioned the importance of language and it applies to
everything that we've talked about today it was that way with HIV AIDS and the
and early 2000 late 1900s I mentioned the family planning issue, which is a huge issue.
Same thing with climate change.
As the science becomes clearer and clearer, whether you see the natural disasters of increasing
frequency or the impact that global warming is having on everybody's daily lives, it's
getting much better.
It falls right into this polarization.
Even my talks on pandemics back, you know, being an alarmist.
And no, the science is there.
The viruses are cagey.
They move faster than us.
The reason that they exist is to change faster than us.
And we are totally native, virgin in terms of immunity.
Gradually, people will understand if we stick
with it, if we use the right language. And I think climate change is exactly the same thing.
You know, it's ironic that people at the World Economic Forum back in January, that's all they
talked about, which was good. But at the same time, this pandemic was well underway in China,
so they missed it. And so these sort of fancy, large, intellectual,
even political groups will miss things. But if we stay on it, use the right language,
bring science to it, look at data. And now the American people, there's a teachable moment,
because now they're used to looking at all these epidemiologic curves and flattening of the curve,
where six weeks ago they weren't. And I think being able to present data in an
understandable way is going to be very helpful to accelerate these big issues.
Yeah, it's exciting. And then the nice thing is that when you look at root causes, if you solve
the root cause of how we grow food, how we produce food, how we consume, market, eat, waste food,
it helps solve all these problems. It helps solve the chronic disease pandemic,
the economic burden,
the issues of social and health disparities,
the issues around climate change,
environmental degradation,
even things like national security,
which you talk about.
In fact, your former colleague, Mike Esper,
is now the Secretary of Defense
who worked for you in the Senate.
And I think, you know, I just sort of shocked at some of the data that I've seen about the lack of
mission readiness. And I think that the 700 retired admirals and generals put together a
report about this unhealthy and unprepared where, you know, up to 30% can't get in the military
because they're overweight and 70% are rejected for poor health or other reasons. And what was even more shocking
in that report was that there was 72% more evacuations from Afghanistan and Iraq because
of obesity related problems than from war injuries. And I, you know, I met with a woman who works for the secretary,
for the deputy secretary recently in Washington,
and she said, you know, on the bases,
the soldiers are not ready to deploy because they're so unhealthy,
and on the bases is all this fast food stuff all over the place.
So I think, you know, we solve one problem,
we seem to solve all of them, right?
Yeah. You know, I do think relating things to security is very useful because ultimately our government exists to keep us safe and secure. We see it in states right now with COVID that given these emergency powers, we see it with federal government, we excuse some of the privacy issues and why it's for our safety and security
during the HIV era.
And even today,
when I argue for public health and write op-eds and talk to our legislators,
I come back to basically a three words or maybe it's four,
but it's medicine is a currency for peace.
And in those words, it's really true that if you have a healthy society, a society that is full of hope and optimism and a future to look to, they become less prone to create problems, to become terrorist nations, to fight. When I was going into Sudan and doing my medical work every year,
even while I was in the Senate, I spent two or three weeks in the southern Sudan.
A lot of fighting going on in the area.
Civil war, you know, two million people killed, five million people displaced.
Terrible.
But I noticed that when I went in with medicine and doing surgery,
that within about 10 or 15 or 20 miles around,
all the fighting stopped. I mean, it was really remarkable. I couldn't explain why, and I still
don't know why, but it drove home that as we turned to our sort of more humanitarian,
sort of centered on health, there's just a certain amount of trust and a certain amount
of healing that's
there. And therefore, it made me sort of come back and say, yeah, medicine is sort of a currency for
peace and health is. And I think this really applies. And then, so if you start bringing
things like our military, that one out of three people, when you just say one out of three people
who want to come into the military are the appropriate age, cannot come in because of obesity.
And that just really drives home the direct impact.
And then all the other statistics we've mentioned as well.
And again, it is a national defense issue.
It is the protection of the American people
and it comes down to food.
Yeah, and it seems like the Defense Department
would be the perfect ally because they're a closed system.
You know, there's the VA, they have their own health corps, and they really supply the food chain.
So they could change their procurement, their purchasing, the food they're doing.
And it's also a performance issue, right?
I mean, you want your soldiers to be in top shape and perform at the highest level.
And if they're all sagging because they're eating crap,
it's so bad. Well, you know, I just think you're extraordinary and I wish you were running for president because I would vote for you. And I think we need more leaders like you. And I think
your voice is so important because you've crossed so many sectors of health and policy and agriculture
and public health. And I think you really have a deep understanding.
And you really pointed out some of the challenges we have, but also some of the possibilities
of how to actually make a difference.
And I think you're like me.
You're probably a pathological optimist who's always working to try to make things better.
And I just, I'm so grateful you joined us on this podcast.
Are there any last thoughts or words you'd like to share?
No, Mark, I'll just say thanks very much.
I think that the overall messaging
or the importance of healthy living,
but centering on nutrition is just so critical,
so fundamental to moving ahead.
I'm optimistic.
We're going to get through this COVID thing.
It's going to be tough.
The American people are sticking together. I mean,
it's really pretty amazing that you can come in and say, stay at home.
And the 300 million people are staying at home.
There's a huge resilience out there.
And that leads to the optimism to address the many issues we talked about
today.
Yeah. I feel the same thing. However horrible this is all is it's like,
wait a minute. Humanity is all sharing the same experience.
They can all come together in this moment with collective action to address a threat.
And even Congress is doing it, which is staggering.
And wow, maybe we can actually do something together
after this happens using this same ethic
and understanding that we can face
our collective issues together and solve them.
So I'm just so grateful for you and your work
and it inspires me so much.
And I
love your writings. Everybody should check out Senator Frist's website, BillFrist.com. There's
so many articles and wonderful things on there that you can read about his work at the Bipartisan
Policy Center. If you're a policy geek like me, it's really awesome. Maybe boring to some of you,
but I love this stuff. And I really am so grateful. Thank you for joining us on The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Thank you, Mark.
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Hey, everybody. It's Dr. Hyman.
Thanks for tuning into The Doctor's Pharmacy.
I hope you're loving this podcast.
It's one of my favorite things to do and introducing you to all the experts that I know
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