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The "Make America Healthy Again" report outlines what it says are four leading drivers of childhood disease, but it is facing criticism from some health officials.
Critics are coming forward after a report from the "Make America Healthy Again" commission implied a connection between pesticides and chronic health issues in children. NewsNation’s Anna Kooiman breaks down the debate — and who is funding each side.
Make America Healthy Again Commission, led by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., released its report on rising chronic diseases in U.S. children, urging systemic reforms.
RFK Jr.'s MAHA report blames chronic illnesses on ultra-processed foods, chemicals and sedentary behavior among children. It also says childhood vaccines need more study.
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr said he will ban government scientists from publishing in leading medical journals and proposed creating an “in-house” publication by the
President Donald Trump and Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy released the long-awaited “Make America Healthy Again” report, painting a dire picture of children's health.
Trump's "MAHA" commission, led by RFK Jr., detailed four reasons they say causes childhood chronic disease. Here's what to know in New Jersey.
Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. urged healthcare providers and state medical boards to stop providing “dangerous” sex-change interventions to gender confused children in a letter Wednesday.
Unless these journals change dramatically, we are going to stop NIH scientists from publishing there and we are going to create our own journals, in-house,” Kennedy Jr. said.
Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. took aim at reputed journals such as the Lancet and said his agency will create “in-house” publications instead.
In advancing his "Make America Healthy Again" agenda — on food, medication, vaccinations — Kennedy has already given his supporters what they wanted and his detractors what they feared.