The Blue Guidon The Newsletter of Andover and the Military
Fall 2023
An Unwavering Commitment to Service & Leadership By Rush Taylor ’96
PHOTOS COURTESY OF DR. JESSE EHRENFELD
“I left PA feeling an incredible obligation to serve.” —Jesse Ehrenfeld ’96, Cmdr., USN (Ret.), MD, MPH USAF Lt. Col. Rush Taylor ’96, the new editor of The Blue Guidon, recently interviewed friend and classmate Dr. Jesse Ehrenfeld about his non sibi spirit and how his time at Andover influenced his serving 10 years in the Navy, achieving tenure as a professor of anesthesiology and director of the “Advancing a Healthier Wisconsin Endowment” at the Medical College of Wisconsin, and making American Medical Association history as the organization’s first openly gay president. Ehrenfeld credits his Andover experience as playing the lead role in each of these career pathways. The first hurdle to overcome when trying to catch up with Dr. Jesse Ehrenfeld is just working around his amazingly hectic work and travel schedule. The second hurdle is trying to digest just how many entities he’s involved in. About half his month is spent traveling the world in support of his role as the 178th president of the American
Medical Association (AMA). He joined the AMA board in 2014 and was elected president in 2022. As president, he is responsible for influencing health in America. As broad as that sounds, his goals are fairly straightforward: fight back against the “twindemic” (the pandemic and the spread of misinformation surrounding COVID-19), ensure health care becomes more equitable and sustainable, and remove technical and administrative barriers surrounding health care. Ehrenfeld regularly meets with law makers, members of Congress, U.S. Food and Drug Administration officials, and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services officials to further these goals. Ehrenfeld’s position as AMA president is, in reality, a part-time position. He divides his time, he said, “among clinical practice, teaching research, and directing a $560 million statewide health philanthropy.” He is a senior associate dean, tenured professor of anesthesiology, and director of the “Advancing a Healthier Wisconsin continued on page 2