Opinion Today: How will an anti-expert expert fare as surgeon general?
Casey Means is a doctor who doubts medicine’s value.
Opinion Today
October 30, 2025
Author Headshot

By Alexandra Sifferlin

Health and Science Editor, Opinion

America’s health leadership has been breaking with convention for some time. Its leader, the secretary of health and human services, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., isn’t a medical professional after all. So it’s not entirely surprising, if still striking, that the Trump administration’s nominee for surgeon general, Dr. Casey Means, is a Stanford-trained doctor who left medicine before ever practicing to become a tech entrepreneur and wellness influencer. Her confirmation hearing is today.

As Dr. Rachael Bedard writes in a guest essay for Times Opinion, Means is a fitting choice for Kennedy: She embodies his administration’s “paradoxical relationship to expertise.”

Means is “simultaneously boastful of her academic accomplishments and insistent on their uselessness,” writes Bedard. “She references graduating at the top of her class at Stanford to establish her authority, only to then use that authority to argue that Stanford and institutions like it are fundamentally corrupt. She is an anti-expert expert, the doctor who believes doctors make people sicker.”

A doctor who doubts medicine’s value as the nation’s physician-in-chief would be a first. Means could, as Bedard notes, use her platform to bring together partners who support her views on issues like diet and environmental health. “Instead, her intense skepticism of medicine forecloses meaningful discourse with people who do not entirely agree with her.”

Read the guest essay:

Here’s what we’re focusing on today:

Editors’ Picks

A man holds up a device to steam a large American flag.

The Conversation

There Are So Many Ways to Shut Down a Country

The moderate vs. progressive debate will not be solved on Tuesday.

By Frank Bruni and Bret Stephens

More From Opinion

A photo illustration of various scales of justice floating around in midair.

Guest Essay

All It Took for Trump to Dismantle the Justice Dept.

The cumulative damage done to the agency is so profound that it may not regain any semblance of its former self in our lifetimes.

By Carol Leonnig

Interesting Times with Ross Douthat

What Palantir Sees

The tech company’s C.T.O. on surveillance, A.I. and the future of war.

play button

58 MIN LISTEN

Jerome Powell’s face and a section of the American flag repeat three times across a black-and-white illustration. Mr. Powell’s face fades as its image repeats.

Guest Essay

The Fed Resisted Trump. Good.

The Federal Reserve didn’t comply with President Trump’s wishes.

By Steven Rattner

Guest Essay

Hurricane Melissa Maxed Out What Scientists Thought Was Possible

Western Jamaica experienced something near to the worst tropical cyclone impacts our planet can produce.

By Alan Gerard

Nicholas Kristof

Trump Lost the Trade War to China

Xi now sees our weakness and will try to exploit it, perhaps leaving America a diminished presence in Asia.

By Nicholas Kristof

A black-and-white photo of a lone wolf standing in a field.

Guest Essay

The Reality of Living With Wolves, Bears and Mountain Lions

Recent conflicts between wolves and people expose major shortcomings of America’s efforts to bring back predators.

By Arthur Middleton, Justin Brashares and Kaggie Orrick

Two large hands holding pills dwarf the figure of a crouching woman.

Jessica Grose

Big Wellness Finds an Easy Target With Perimenopause

Will ashwagandha cure my “cortisol face”?

By Jessica Grose

Article Image

Chance DeVille

letters

Josh Hawley’s Plea for Food Assistance

Readers respond to the senator’s Opinion guest essay about the possible cutoff of SNAP benefits.

We hope you’ve enjoyed this newsletter, which is made possible through subscriber support. Subscribe to The New York Times.

Games Here are today’s Mini Crossword, Wordle and Spelling Bee. If you’re in the mood to play more, find all our games here.

Forward this newsletter to friends to share ideas and perspectives that will help inform their lives. They can sign up here. Do you have feedback? Email us at opiniontoday@nytimes.com.

If you have questions about your Times account, delivery problems or other issues, visit our Help Page or contact The Times.

If you received this newsletter from someone else, subscribe here.

Need help? Review our newsletter help page or contact us for assistance.

You received this email because you signed up for the Opinion Today newsletter from The New York Times.

To stop receiving Opinion Today, unsubscribe. To opt out of other promotional emails from The Times, including those regarding The Athletic, manage your email settings.

Subscribe to The Times

Connect with us on:

facebookxinstagramwhatsapp

Change Your EmailPrivacy Policy