Rochelle Paula Walensky (née Bersoff; born April 5, 1969) is an American physician-scientist who served as the director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention from 2021 to 2023 and had also served as the administrator of the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry in her capacity as the director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention from 2021 to 2023.
On May 5, 2023, she announced her resignation, effective June 30, 2023.
Prior to her appointment at the CDC, she had served as the chief of the Division of Infectious Diseases at Massachusetts General Hospital and a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School.
Walensky is an expert on HIV/AIDS.
Walensky was born Rochelle Paula Bersoff in Peabody, Massachusetts, to Edward Bersoff and Carol Bersoff-Bernstein.
Her family is Jewish.
She was raised in Potomac, Maryland.
1987
Walensky graduated high school from Winston Churchill High School in 1987.
1991
In 1991, Walensky received a Bachelor of Arts in biochemistry and molecular biology from Washington University in St. Louis.
1995
In 1995, she received an Doctor of Medicine from Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.
From 1995 to 1998, she trained in internal medicine at Johns Hopkins Hospital.
Walensky then became a fellow in the Massachusetts General Hospital/Brigham and Women's Hospital Infectious Diseases Fellowship Program.
2001
In 2001, she earned an MPH in clinical effectiveness from the Harvard School of Public Health.
Walensky had been on the faculty of Harvard Medical School since 2001, first as an instructor, then as a professor.
2011
She has been co-director of the Medical Practice Evaluation Center at Massachusetts General Hospital since 2011.
2012
Walensky was a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School from 2012 to 2020, and served as chief of the division of infectious diseases at Massachusetts General Hospital from 2017 to 2020.
She conducted research on vaccine delivery and strategies to reach underserved communities.
Walensky has worked to improve HIV screening and care in South Africa, led health policy initiatives, and researched clinical trial design and evaluation in a variety of settings.
2014
Walensky was chair of the Office of AIDS Research Advisory Council at the National Institutes of Health from 2014 to 2015 and has served as a member of the US Department of Health and Human Services Panel on Antiretroviral Guidelines for Adults and Adolescents since 2011.
She serves on the board of directors of Mass General Brigham.
2020
Walensky was among the first to sign the John Snow Memorandum in October 2020 as a critical response to the Great Barrington Declaration.
In a paper published in Health Affairs in November 2020, Walensky and her co-authors showed that the effectiveness of a COVID-19 vaccine will be strongly affected by:
President-elect Joe Biden announced Walensky's presumptive appointment as CDC director on December 7, 2020, during the presidential transition.
Doctors and public health experts widely praised the choice.
As the position of director of the CDC does not require Senate confirmation to take office, Walensky's tenure at the CDC began on January 20, 2021.
On August 3, 2021, Walensky instituted a 60-day extension of a federal COVID-related ban, which had just expired, on landlords evicting their tenants.
The extended ban applied only to "counties experiencing substantial and high levels of community transmission levels", but under the criteria of the ban this covered an area holding 90% of the U.S. population.
On August 26, as was widely expected, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the extension as unconstitutional, ruling that only the U.S. Congress had the authority to issue such a moratorium.
As the pandemic entered the Omicron variant wave, Walensky acknowledged that officials on the CDC response team were burned out, and tried to reassign workers.
Walensky and other top officials had a plan to dissolve large parts of the pandemic response team, which has more than 1,500 staffers, and reassign members to their original posts.
Walensky shelved the plan with the emergence of Omicron as cases began to tick up across the U.S., bringing morale lower than ever at the CDC.
However, Ashish Jha says, "Dr. Walensky inherited a really messy organization with some real strengths but also a lot of problems."
In a January 18, 2022 interview with The Boston Globe Walensky responded to some of the criticisms of her first year in office.
Her critics told the Globe that she has confused the public on issues like quarantine guidance, school reopening, and mask-wearing.
"What we’re seeing is policy failures, accompanied by poor messaging," said Anne N. Sosin, a public health researcher at Dartmouth College, who added that the rest of the administration is also to blame.
Critics said that the CDC was prioritizing the economy over public health.
The American Medical Association criticized her December 27 guidance to shorten the COVID isolation period from ten to five days and to let people who contracted COVID leave isolation without a negative test.
Former CDC Director Dr. Tom_Frieden commented on her messaging around the change in guidance, saying “I think the way they were released was very problematic.”
Walensky described her critics as "naysayers" who have helped sow the public confusion she has been accused of creating and pointing out that many Americans are still not following the most basic guidance on COVID-19 prevention.
She also said, "We’re making decisions in imperfect times, sometimes without all the data that we would like to make them.” Walensky said she is working with a messaging coach and she is listening to her critics. She said that better communication is not always possible. "Some of this is not based on the messaging because, 'Wear a mask' is about as crystal clear as you could be.