Casey Means is a “wellness influencer” (read: grifter) nominated for the office of Surgeon General, the nation’s top medical official.
I say this as someone who is well acquainted with, uses and benefits from alternative medical approaches. There are some flat-out nutballs in that space.
Attn: Senator Bill Cassidy MD – The RFK example should be a giant red flag on this one.
Casey Means has, to say the least, modified her tone. When she testified today in front of the Senate’s health committee, the nominee for surgeon general didn’t, as she is normally wont to do, delve into her experiences with psychedelics or endorse raw milk. She also did not rail at length against birth control. Instead, the longtime health entrepreneur and influencer emphasized her medical degree from Stanford—even though she does not have an active medical license—and sought out common ground with the senators cross-examining her.
Before her nomination last spring, Means—who dropped out of her surgical residency in 2018—embraced some unconventional theories about wellness. As Rina Raphael wrote for The Atlantic last month, Means has talked to trees, implied that natural disasters are a “communication from God,” and dubbed the nation’s health “a spiritual crisis.” When she appeared on Tucker Carlson’s podcast in 2024, she denounced seed oils and suggested that the widespread use of hormonal birth control was indicative of a cultural “disrespect of life.” She has also questioned the universal birth dose of the hepatitis-B vaccine.
Continue reading “If You Liked RFK, You’ll Love this Surgeon General Nominee”

