Trump Shifts Surgeon General Pick from Vaccine-Skeptic Influencer to Cancer Specialist
President Donald Trump abruptly replaced his pick for U.S. surgeon general on Thursday, abandoning wellness influencer Casey Means and nominating breast cancer radiologist Dr. Nicole Saphier for the role.
The switch comes after Means faced mounting opposition from Republican senators over her controversial vaccine views and lack of a current medical license.
New nominee: Dr. Nicole Saphier
Trump announced the change in a Truth Social post, calling Saphier a “STAR physician” for her work guiding women through breast cancer diagnosis and treatment.

Saphier, a practicing radiologist at Memorial Sloan Kettering in New York, also wrote a book titled Make America Healthy Again in 2020, aligning her with the MAHA movement championed by Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Why Casey Means was dropped
Means, a 38-year-old Stanford medical school graduate, left her surgical residency early to co-found a health startup and build a social media following.
She does not currently hold an active medical license, a rare qualification gap for a surgeon general nominee, which drew criticism from lawmakers including Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski.
During her confirmation hearing, Means avoided explicitly endorsing childhood vaccines, and past comments surfaced where she called newborn hepatitis B vaccination “absolute insanity” and slammed hormonal birth control as a “disrespect of life.”
“Casey Means is the most articulate, eloquent, and erudite evangelist for the MAHA movement,” Kennedy told a House committee last month, urging lawmakers to back her.
Despite Kennedy’s public support, Means’ nomination stalled after Republicans refused to advance it.
Background: The MAHA movement and surgeon general role
MAHA – Make America Healthy Again – is a health agenda pushed by Kennedy that emphasizes lifestyle changes, distrusts pharmaceutical interventions, and questions vaccine safety.
The surgeon general is the nation’s top doctor, historically a licensed physician who provides the public with medical guidance on pressing health issues.
Means, a vocal promoter of MAHA, had toned down some of her more extreme views after being nominated but was unable to overcome skepticism about her credentials and past statements.
What this means for health messaging
Saphier’s appointment could signal a shift away from anti-vaccine rhetoric at the highest levels of public health, though she still supports the MAHA focus on diet and exercise.
Her background as a practicing cancer specialist may give her more credibility with the public and Congress, while the MAHA movement retains a foothold through her book and aligned views.
“Nicole is a STAR physician who has spent her career guiding women facing breast cancer through their diagnosis and treatment,” Trump wrote.
The change reduces the likelihood that the surgeon general’s office will promote vaccine skepticism, but the broader MAHA influence within the administration remains strong through Kennedy and other appointees.
For now, Americans can expect continued emphasis on lifestyle-based health advice, but with a more medically credentialed messenger at the helm.
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