By Bill Frist
Special to CNN
(CNN) -- A legacy of President George W. Bush will be that he saved 10 million lives around the world.
His critics ignore it, but name another president about whom one can say that with such certainty. It is what historians will say a decade from now looking back. Not bad for a president who leaves office with the lowest approval rating in recent memory.
The bottom line is: George Bush is a healer.
First, a surprise proclamation came on January 29, 2003.
I was in the first row in the House chamber when three quarters through his State of the Union address, the president boldly said: "I ask the Congress to commit $15 billion over the next five years ... to turn the tide against AIDS in the most afflicted nations of Africa and the Caribbean" and "lead the world in sparing innocent people from a plague of nature."
And lead the world we did. No president in history had made such a commitment against a single disease. Those words and the action that followed meant that instead of another 30 million people dying from HIV infections, maybe just another 20 million will.
Later that night in an interview for CNN in my Capitol office, I predicted that five years later, this commitment to fight HIV would be the single most significant thing the president said that night. It was.
But even I -- who as physician in Africa had witnessed how this virus was hollowing out societies -- did not predict the huge global impact this Bush commitment would have on generations to come.
In my annual medical mission trips to Africa during the Bush administration, I saw the cost of treatment for HIV with life-saving antiretrovirals (ARVs) drop from $4,000 a year to $125. The number of Africans on ARVs jumped from 50,000 to 2.1 million.
And the multiplier effect of Bush making this a presidential global priority was reflected thereafter in every meeting I had as Senate majority leader with the world leaders, including those from Russia, China and India. If you were dealing with the United States, you'd better have made HIV a national priority, because we had.
And it was more than HIV. Six months ago, Tom Daschle, Mike Huckabee, John Podesta, Cindy McCain and I (yes, we five of different persuasions do work together!) went to Rwanda on a fact-finding trip.
Our visits with villagers all over the country opened our eyes to how Bush's five-year, $1.2 billion effort to combat malaria has provided 4 million insecticide-treated bed nets and 7 million life-saving drug therapies to vulnerable people. Yes, George Bush the healer.
Future historians will also note what today's pundits ignore: total US government development aid to Africa quadrupled from $1.3 billion in 2001 to more than $5 billion in 2008. What's more, the Bush administration doubled foreign aid worldwide over the past eight years. You have to go back to the Truman years to match that.
And the president revolutionized the way we give aid with the creation of the Millennium Challenge Corporation, now active in 35 countries. This $6.7 billion public-private partnership for the first time ties aid to accountability based on a country's governing well, fighting corruption and commitment to economic freedoms. iReport.com: Share your thoughts on Bush's legacy
Secondly, Bush healed abroad, but he also healed right here at home.
Before Bush acted, the nation's 43 million seniors did not have affordable access to prescription drugs (the most powerful tool a doctor has to prevent and treat disease) through the Medicare program. Today, because of George Bush, they do.
Initially, conservatives howled because the prescription drug initiative "cost too much." Liberals hated it because it involved the markets and competition. But today, 23 million seniors live healthier lives, Medicare drug spending has been 20 percent to 30 percent less than predicted for each of the past two years and seniors overwhelmingly give the program enthusiastic reviews.
And, in addition, the program is highly redistributive -- giving advantages the poorest, introducing preventive care to Medicare, encouraging electronic prescribing and introducing chronic disease management. Who says Republicans can't lead on heath reform?
Thirdly, a lot of people forget that the health of a nation's people is more dependent on behavior and education than on health services -- the doctors, hospitals and insurance companies. Infant mortality is three times higher for a woman who did not graduate from high school when compared with one who has a college degree.
And the president focused laser-like on improving K-12 education by demanding transparency and accountability, and raising expectations.
The U.S. ranks a miserable 21st in the world in science and 25th in math among 15 year-olds. President Bush made the education of our children a moral issue.
To maintain our now slipping global competitiveness, we have no choice but to radically transform the K-12 education system over the next decade. And historians will say it all began with the groundbreaking No Child Left Behind legislation of President Bush.
I've had the privilege of knowing George W. Bush personally and as president. I have seen his passions. Naturally, he will be judged in the short term for his role in waging the war on terror, keeping America safe since 9/11 and acting on his belief in promoting liberty aboard.
Over time, however, it is the foundations he laid for healing. for the most part ignored by mainstream media, that I am confident will be his enduring legacy.
EWA
Wow. I had no idea about some of this stuff. Are you sure this came from CNN? After all, it's praising Bush.
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It is necessary to try to surpass oneself always; this occupation ought to last as long as life.
1Yes, it is indeed from CNN, you have to remember the Democrats have succeeded to regain power. No reason not to now publish the truth. Remember how glowingly the press covered Clinton's trips to Africa, and the promises he made (made but never kept. Meantime you had to constantly check articles from around the world, to see how much Bush had accomplished in Africa. Bono knew, and Bono praised Bush consistently over the last several years for his efforts in Africa, and pointed out the glaring differences between Clinton's promises, vs. Bush's actions. It would get a two line mention in some back section of the paper, and below the fold. This has been a 8 year (successful) attempt, to besmirch, belittle and nit pick every aspect of his administration. Too bad ignorance is not an impeachable offence.
2Yeah I know it's from there, I saw the headline on CNN earlier today but didn't have the time to read it.
I'm surprised they would want to publish the truth even now though. Because they're very intent on making him the bad guy, you'd figure they'd just keep it going.
Nothing to lose.
~~~~~
It is necessary to try to surpass oneself always; this occupation ought to last as long as life.
3Great article. I did not know this- thanks for posting, Grandpa!
4Now that the election is over they do not need to demonize him, so now they will tell the truth.
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"Enjoy life, it's ungrateful not to." - Ronald Reagan
I understand where both of you are coming from...it's just hard for me to think that the demonization will stop coming from them. I guess I think that if they hated him so much they will still continue with the Bush bashing.
It'll be interesting to see in the coming years how they
write about him.
~~~~~
It is necessary to try to surpass oneself always; this occupation ought to last as long as life.
6I don't see how it can stop. I think they will continue to bash him...with a bone like this thrown to him now and then for good measure.
7They will demonize him when they need to show their pet is not as bad as he is. But they can not deny his work in Africa especially since Obama will most likely cut the programs.
8***************
"Enjoy life, it's ungrateful not to." - Ronald Reagan
Which I'm sure if he cuts the programs we'll hear nothing about it...or else they'll pretend he's saving the American people by not sending as much money overseas.
~~~~~
It is necessary to try to surpass oneself always; this occupation ought to last as long as life.
9It will be a side not: "the death toll in africa is up and now the weather...."
10***************
"Enjoy life, it's ungrateful not to." - Ronald Reagan
side note not side not
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"Enjoy life, it's ungrateful not to." - Ronald Reagan
I knew what you meant.
And you're probably right.
~~~~~
It is necessary to try to surpass oneself always; this occupation ought to last as long as life.
12
13***************
"Enjoy life, it's ungrateful not to." - Ronald Reagan
I don't understand it at all. It's not in character for the MSM to NOT demonize him. In addition, I don't recall ever hearing anything about this commitment he made... (Maybe I blinked?)
14If you blinked, you would have missed it, if you never read past the headlines, or the first page of any major newspaper.
15THAT was in the headlines or on the first page of every major newspaper?
16No, I was saying just the opposite. The MSM never publicised anything positive about President Bush, the economy, or the war on terror.
17Gotcha. I was about to have my head examined.
It's from all that
headsmacking I do....
18What a great article. I hope some of our liberal friends drop by to read this.
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19"Expecting a carjacker or rapist or drug pusher to care that his possession or use of a gun is unlawful is like expecting a terrorist to care that his car bomb is taking up two parking spaces." -Joseph T. Chew
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