Vivek Murthy
Vivek Murthy was born in Huddersfield, England, United Kingdom on July 10th, 1977 and is the Doctor. At the age of 47, Vivek Murthy biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
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Career
Murthy co-founded VISIONS Worldwide in 1995, which he led for eight years as a Harvard freshman. The nonprofit group, which was primarily focused on HIV/AIDS education in the United States and India, was focusing on HIV/AIDS education. In 1997, he co-founded the Swasthya Community Health Partnership to educate women in rural India as community health workers and educators.
Murthy completed his internal medicine residency at Brigham and Women's Hospital, as well as Harvard Medical School. Murthy, a visiting physician at Brigham and Women's Hospital, cared for thousands of patients while also helping with the education of hundreds of undergraduates, medical students, and residents.
Murthy founded and served as President of Doctors for America in 2008, a group of over 15,000 physicians and medical students dedicated to affordable healthcare for all.
Murthy was appointed by Barack Obama in 2011 to serve on the Presidential Advisory Council on Prevention, Health Promotion, and Integrative and Public Health within the Department of Health and Human Services. The National Prevention Council is advising the National Prevention Council on how to create goals and partnerships to advance the nation's health by prevention. During his re-election bid in 2012, Murthy served as co-chair of Obama's health-care advisory committee.
Murthy is also the co-founder and chairman of TrialNetworks, a cloud-based Clinical Trial Optimization Service for pharmaceutical and biotechnology trials that enhances the quality and effectiveness of clinical trials in order to bring new medications to market faster and more effectively. He founded Epernicus in 2008, intending to be a collaborative network web platform for scientists to raise research efficiency.
President Barack nominated Murthy for the position of United States surgeon general in November 2013. Several Democrats, Republicans, and the National Rifle Association opposed Murthy's earlier remarks that gun violence was a threat to public health.
More than 100 medical and public health organizations in the United States have expressed a wide support for Murthy's appointment. David Satcher and Regina Benjamin, two former surgeon generals, endorsed him. Richard Carmona, another former surgeon general, opposed the appointment based on Murthy's age.
Murthy's appointment as surgeon general was accepted in a 51–43 Senate election on December 15, 2014.
Murthy's career began in the early years, and he emphasized the importance of creating a culture of prevention in America, one that is rooted in physical fitness, diet, and emotional stability. Step It Up! was released as part of this campaign. The Surgeon General's Call to Action to Promote Walking and Walking Communities. He led a two-week public-private partnership with Fitbit that encouraged over 600,000 people to improve their physical activity with a world record-breaking 60 billion steps. He collaborated with Elmo and Top Chef to educate the nation about vaccines and healthy eating, as well as other food items. The e-cigarette use among youths in Murthy's 2016 surgeon general emphasized the danger of young people to the products and recommended that e-cigarettes be integrated into existing smoke-free legislation to discourage youth from using e-cigarettes. Proponents of e-cigarettes, including R Street and other public policy organizations, reacted an emolliently to the study.
Murthy was also responsible for several major health issues, including the Ebola and Zika viruses, the Flint Michigan water crisis, and the currently raging opioid crisis. Murthy announced the first-ever Surgeon General's study on Alcohol, Drug, and Wellbeing, which found that approximately 21 million Americans suffer from some sort of substance abuse disorder. In addition, Murthy sent a letter to 2.3 million healthcare professionals in 2016, demanding that the prescription of opioids be changed and the image of those living with addiction be included in this series. Murthy's letter states that heroin use is "a chronic illness, not a moral failure." In addition, Murthy has researched the effects of climate change on the nation's health. "We are looking at a rise of tens of thousands of illnesses and death episodes as a result of climate change by the end of the century." Murthy has also spoken out against conversion therapy, saying that "conversion therapy is not a medical procedure," and that "we all need to work together to increase knowledge and acceptance in our culture."
Murthy was relieved of his duties as the 19th Surgeon General by President Donald Trump on April 21, 2017. Rear Admiral Sylvia Trent-Adams, his deputy surgeon general, had been named acting surgeon general. Murthy's parting address said, "for the grandson of a poor farmer from India who had been asked by the President to look out for the wellbeing of a whole nation." I will always be grateful to our country for welcoming my immigrant family nearly 40 years ago and giving me the opportunity to serve."
Murthy had been nominated by President-elect Joe Biden to return to the position of Surgeon General on December 3, 2020, according to Politico. His nomination was submitted to the Senate on January 20, 2021, and confirmed on March 23, 2021, by a vote of 57–43. Murthy, the president, leads a team of 6,700 public health officers with the aim of providing exceptional healthcare to medically underserved populations both nationally and abroad.
Murthy has appeared on numerous television and radio shows discussing the issue of loneliness, and he has written numerous books on the subject. Murthy was shocked by how often he encountered people suffering from severe depression during his medical work, and argued that loneliness in America has become so prevalent as to be designated as a "epidemic." Murthy believes that loneliness plays a significant role in other social problems. Together: The Healing Power of Human Relations in a Often Lonely World, in April 2020, he published a book about what both culture and ordinary people as individuals can do to eliminate loneliness in themselves and others.
Subsequent career
Murthy spoke at the 2020 Democratic National Convention.
Murthy joined the Biden-Harris Transition Team's advisory council on September 5, 2020, which was arranging Joe Biden's presidential transition. Murthy was unveiled on November 9, as one of three co-chairs of then-President-Elect Biden's coronavirus advisory board, alongside former FDA commissioner David A. Kessler and Yale public health professor Marcella Nunez-Smith. Murthy was selected as a nominee for United States secretary of health and human services in the Biden administration just days later.
Murthy reported 1.7 million dollars in consulting for Netflix ($547,500), Airbnb ($410,000), Estee Lauder ($292,500), before his Senate confirmation. Hundreds of thousands of dollars in speaking fees from hundreds of organisations, including "$30,000 from Duke University Kenan Institute for Ethics for a speech I gave in January 2021."
Murthy said explicitly that prisoners for cannabis use are "no value" in jail.