RADM Kenneth P. Moritsugu, M.D., M.P.H.
Deputy Surgeon General
Rear Admiral Kenneth P. Moritsugu, M.D., M.P.H., was appointed the
Deputy Surgeon General by Assistant Secretary for Health and Surgeon
General David Satcher on October 1, 1998.
A career officer in the Commissioned Corps of the U.S. Public Health
Service, Admiral Moritsugu served as an Assistant Surgeon General
beginning with Surgeon General C. Everett Koop in 1988. Dr. Moritsugu was
born and raised in Honolulu, Hawaii. After attending Chaminade College for
two years, he received his Baccalaureate Degree with Honors in Classical
Languages from the University of Hawaii in 1967, an M.D. from the George
Washington University School of Medicine in 1971 and an M.P.H. in Health
Administration and Planning from the University of California, Berkeley in
1975.
He began his Public Health Service (PHS) career in 1968 and completed
three tours of duty while in medical school. These included assignments in
Community Nursing in Washington, Forensic Psychiatry at St. Elizabeth's
Hospital in Washington, D.C. and Leprosy Research and Clinical Care at the
USPHS Hospital in San Francisco. Having completed residences in Internal
Medicine and in Preventive Medicine, Admiral Moritsugu is Board Certified
in Preventive Medicine; holds Fellowships in the American College of
Preventive Medicine; the Royal Society of Health and Royal Society of
Medicine; and is a Certified Correctional Health Professional.
Over his career, Admiral Moritsugu has served in many diverse
assignments. These include Staff Medical Officer at the UPSHS Hospital
Outpatient Department in San Francisco; Medical Officer on board U.S.
Coast Guard Cutter Taney; Regional Consultant for HHS in San Francisco for
Medical Manpower Planning and Development; Chief of International Medical
Education Programs; Deputy Director, then Director, of the Division of
Medicine of the Health Resources and Services Administration; Director of
National Health Service Corps; and Deputy Director of the Bureau of Health
Professions.
Most recently, from December 1987 to September 1998, he served as an
Assistant Bureau Director and the Medical Director of the U.S. Department
of Justice's Federal Bureau of Prisons, a position responsible for the
health care of over 120,00 federal inmates and detainees, with a budget in
excess of $400 million. This includes medical and psychiatric care,
occupational safety and environmental health and food and nutrition
services. During his tenure, the Bureau tripled in size due to the growth
of the incarcerated population.
Admiral Moritsugu has been the federal representative to numerous
national health care agencies and has provided consultation in health
professions development to Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Nigeria, Germany, Mexico
and the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands. He served as the official
U.S. observer to the Council of Europe's Select Committee of Experts on
the Impact of the AIDS Epidemic on the Criminal Justice System in
Strasbourg, France.
Admiral Moritsugu has received numerous honors and awards, including
the Surgeon General's Medal for Exemplary Service; the Surgeon General's
Medallion; the Distinguished Service, the Meritorious Service, the
Outstanding Service and the Commendation Medals of the U.S. Public Health
Service; the Distinguished Service and the Meritorious Service Medals of
the U.S. Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Prisons; the Army
Achievement Medal; the Coast Guard Arctic Service Medal; and the Phillips
Medal of Public Service from Ohio University, among many others.
He has additionally received the President's Award from the American
Academy of Physician Assistants and the Society of Teachers of Family
Medicine and the William B. Miller Award from the American Association of
Colleges of Osteopathic Medicine. He was recently deemed an Honorary
Deputy United States Marshal by the Director of the U.S. Marshals Service.
Admiral Moritsugu holds Honorary Doctor of Science degrees from the
University of New England and the Midwestern University of North Texas
College of Osteopathic Medicine. Within the past few years, he has
received the Director's Special Achievement Award from the U.S. Marshals
Service, the John D. Chase Award from the Association of Military Surgeons
of the United States, the Nathan K. Davis Award from the American Medical
Association, the Distinguished Service Award from the American
Correctional Health Services Association and a Special Achievement Award
from the National Commission on Correctional Health Care. In 1997, the
American Academy of Physician Assistants named him an Honorary Lifetime
Member, a distinction granted to only a handful of non-PAs.
He has been an Adjunct Associate Professor of Public Health at the
Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences and has spoken and
written extensively, in many diverse areas, including health professions
education, health professions credentialing and quality assessment, the
physician assistant profession, international health care, health systems
development, health care delivery to underserved populations, emergency
health care response in natural disaster, correctional health care,
managed care, HIV, health promotion/disease prevention and organ and
tissue donation and transplantation.
He was founding Chair of the Board of Trustees of the Certified
Correctional Health Professions Program and has served for the past four
years as the Chair of the American Correctional Association's Committee on
Health Care in Corrections.
In his official capacity, Admiral Moritsugu has been a dedicated
advocate for organ and tissue donation and transplantation. Since 1994, he
has been an active participant in the Donor Family Recognition Programs in
Washington, D.C., and a key speaker at numerous national and local
programs on organ donation and transplantation.
In his private capacity, he is a member of the Board of Directors of
the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS), Secretary/Treasurer and Board
member of the Washington Regional Transplant Consortium (WRTC) and member
of the National Advisory Board for the Minority Organ and Tissue
Transplant Education Program (MOTTEP). He is an active volunteer with the
Transplant Recipients International Organization (TRIO) and has been a
past member of the Board of Trustees of the National Kidney Foundation (NKF),
the Executive Committee of the National Donor Family Council and the
Washington Regional Transplant Consortium's Donor Family Council, its
Public Affairs Committee and its Minority Affairs Committee.
Additionally, he serves as a Trustee and Treasurer of the Physician
Assistants Foundation (PAF) of the American Academy of Physician
Assistants, Chairman of the Board of the Anchor and Caduceus Society of
the U.S. Public Health Service and member of the Board of Directors of the
Royal Society of Medicine Foundation. He is the immediate past Chair of
the U.S. Chapter of the Royal Society of Health.
He lost his wife, Donna Lee Jones Moritsugu, in an automobile accident
in 1992, and his daughter Vikki Lianne in a separate automobile accident
in 1996. Both of them were organ and tissue donors. Admiral Moritsugu has
one surviving daughter, Erika Lizabeth Moritsugu.
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