
In January 1982, a deeply religious pediatric surgeon from Philadelphia was sworn in as the 13th Surgeon General of the United States.
He had an Amish-style beard, a commanding presence, and conservative credentials that stretched back decades. The religious right celebrated his appointment. Democrats were alarmed. Everyone was certain they knew exactly what kind of Surgeon General C. Everett Koop would be.
They were wrong about nearly everything.
Before Washington, Koop had spent 35 years as surgeon-in-chief at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. He pioneered life-saving techniques for newborns with severe birth defects. He established the nation’s first newborn surgical intensive care unit. He separated conjoined twins when few surgeons believed it was survivable. He was meticulous, demanding, and entirely committed to his patients.
Those qualities didn’t disappear when he put on the Surgeon General’s uniform. They just found a different operating table.
In June 1981, just months before Koop’s nomination, the CDC had reported five unusual cases — young men in Los Angeles dying from a rare pneumonia that attacked weakened immune systems. Within weeks, more cases appeared. A new and terrifying disease was moving through the population, and no one knew how, or why, or how fast.
The Reagan administration’s response was silence.
For his entire first term in office — four years — Koop was prevented from addressing the AIDS crisis. He was not placed on the AIDS task force. Reporters were discouraged from asking him about the epidemic. The nation’s top health officer was being stopped from doing his job, and he later said no one ever gave him a clear reason why.
Then, on February 5, 1986, President Reagan visited the Department of Health and Human Services. In the middle of a routine address, he mentioned almost casually that he was asking the Surgeon General to prepare a major report on AIDS.
Koop happened to be in the room. He took the hint.
He wrote the report himself — at a stand-up desk in the basement of his own home, working alone, late at night, with a few trusted advisors. He visited AIDS patients personally in Washington hospitals. He met with scientists, community organizations, Christian fundamentalists, hemophilia foundations, and gay rights groups. He approached it entirely as a medical question. He refused to approach it as a moral one.
When the report was finished, he knew the danger.
Reagan’s domestic policy advisers were expected to review it — and Koop was certain that any reference to condoms or sex education would be cut before it ever reached the public. So he printed numbered copies of the final draft, distributed them at the review meeting, and then collected every single copy back at the end of the meeting — explaining he was preventing leaks to the media.
It was not about leaks.
The strategy worked. The report went forward without revision.
On October 22, 1986, Koop released the Surgeon General’s Report on AIDS. The 36-page document was written in plain, direct language. It told Americans clearly how AIDS was — and was not — transmitted. It said they could not contract the disease through casual contact. It called for comprehensive sex education beginning in elementary school. It explicitly recommended condom use as a means of prevention.
His conservative supporters were stunned. They had expected a moral judgment on the communities most affected. Instead, they received science.
Koop was burned in effigy. Critics accused him of promoting immorality.
He did not back down.
He explained his position in words that have held up across every decade since: “I am the Surgeon General of the heterosexuals and the homosexuals, of the young and the old, of the moral or the immoral, the married and the unmarried. I don’t have the luxury of deciding which side I want to be on. So I can tell you how to keep yourself alive no matter what you are. That’s my job.”
In May 1988, he went further. He wrote an eight-page condensed version of the AIDS report — a pamphlet called Understanding AIDS — and arranged for it to be mailed to every single household in the United States. One hundred and seven million homes received it. It was the largest public health mailing in American history. The first time the federal government had ever provided explicit information about sexual health directly to the public.
The backlash was immediate and fierce. Religious groups called for his resignation. Politicians were furious. Critics said he had gone too far.
Koop noted that far more children were dying from the disease than from reading a pamphlet.
He did not back down.
He was equally unsparing on tobacco. His 1982 report had attributed 30% of all cancer deaths to smoking. His 1986 report declared that nicotine was as addictive as heroin or cocaine, and that secondhand smoke posed genuine risks to non-smokers — shifting the entire debate from personal choice to public safety. The Reagan White House eventually withdrew its support, under pressure from the tobacco industry.
Koop continued anyway.
He left office in 1989. His popularity had undergone a complete reversal. He had entered as the champion of the religious right. He left as a hero to public health advocates, civil liberties organizations, and the communities hit hardest by AIDS. The same people who had celebrated his appointment were relieved to see him go. The same people who had feared it were sorry to see him leave.
C. Everett Koop died on February 25, 2013, at the age of 96, at his home in Hanover, New Hampshire.
The Associated Press noted that he was “the only Surgeon General to become a household name.” The American Medical Association said that “because of what he did, and the way he did it, he had a dramatic impact on public health.”
He was not an ideologue. He was a surgeon.
He numbered his report copies so the White House couldn’t gut it.
He mailed it to 107 million homes so no one could claim they hadn’t been told.
He chose truth every time he had the option.
And in the decades since, the lives that choice saved cannot be counted.









