Wed. Nov 13th, 2024

In summary

Mark Ghaly has been a steady voice in Gov. Gavin Newsom’s cabinet, shaping the administration’s COVID policies and its efforts to bring down the cost of health care.

Dr. Mark Ghaly, who led California’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic as a top adviser to Gov. Gavin Newsom, is stepping down from his position as secretary of Health and Human Services, the governor’s office announced today.

Ghaly has been a consistent face in Newsom’s administration since 2019, when the pediatrician took office in the governor’s cabinet. Many California residents may recognize the bespectacled doctor as he often delivered the latest COVID-19 updates, either from a podium or from his desk with his kids’ colorful drawings in the background. 

When some in the public criticized Newsom’s pandemic rules as overreaching, Ghaly was often responsible for explaining the reasoning and the science behind the state’s decisions. He also gave the governor a COVID vaccine in a live broadcast when the shots became available.

Newsom at a press conference said Ghaly is leaving the agency to “focus a little bit more on himself and his kids rather than 40 million Americans.” Newsom called Ghaly “the most transformative leader in the health space” in the U.S. in recent years.

“His steadfast leadership of California’s nation-leading response to the pandemic saved countless lives and set the stage for our state’s strong recovery,” Newsom said in a statement.

Ghaly will stay in his role through the end of the month. Newsom appointed Kim Johnson, who currently heads the California Department of Social Services, as the state’s new Health and Human Services secretary. Johnson will start her new role on Oct. 1. 

As the state’s top health official, Ghaly steered just about every health conversation in the state. He served as the board chair of the state’s health insurance marketplace, Covered California; he led a new board charged by law with bringing down the cost of health care, and he steered the Healthy For All Commission, a group of experts assigned with exploring paths to getting California to a state of health coverage for all residents. 

“That doesn’t happen without a center of gravity that allows things to align for change,” said Dr. Sandra Hernandez, president of the California Health Care Foundation, who has worked with Ghaly on multiple health commissions, including the state’s affordability board and Covered California.

Advocates and community groups have worked for decades on many of the health care changes that took place during Ghaly’s tenure, including the multibillion-dollar overhaul of the state’s public insurance program known as CalAIM, but Hernandez credits Ghaly for his “unique ability to see how all the pieces work together.”

“To move all of the necessary levers of government to make those things come together and have momentum…that’s extraordinary leadership,” Hernandez said.

Gov. Gavin Newsom, left, received a Moderna COVID-19 vaccine booster shot from California Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly at Asian Health Services in Oakland on Oct. 27, 2021. Photo by Jeff Chiu, AP Photo

Newsom also credited Ghaly with overhauling California’s behavioral health system to expand treatment for people in need; creating a blueprint for the state to better serve aging Californians; and launching CalRx, an initiative for the state to manufacture and distribute its own, more affordable medications, starting with insulin and naloxone.

He’ll long be associated with Newsom’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, which frustrated some Californians because of its long business lockdowns and school closures. Those concerns propelled the failed recall campaign against Newsom in 2021. 

Newsom and Ghaly have defended their policies by saying they saved lives in an unprecedented pandemic. Newsom has acknowledged he would have opened up the state earlier if he had today’s understanding of the virus when he made those decisions.

“I think we would’ve done everything differently,” Newsom said on NBC’s Meet the Press a year ago. 

Supported by the California Health Care Foundation (CHCF), which works to ensure that people have access to the care they need, when they need it, at a price they can afford. Visit www.chcf.org to learn more.

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