Make America Healthy Again, Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
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HHS secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. disavows news that forthcoming Make America Healthy Again report will be harsh toward farmers, popular herbicide.
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WISN 12 News on MSNBaldwin promises to 'hold his feet to the fire' after RFK Jr. clash over MPS lead crisisThe focus of Baldwin's questions during recent Congressional hearings was on the Milwaukee Public Schools lead crisis and lack of federal support. RFK Jr. claimed a team from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was on the ground in Milwaukee assisting, a claim the city's health department said is not true.
US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. got into a tense exchange with Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) during a Senate Appropriations hearing. Kennedy accused the committee’s top Democrat of standing by as chronic disease spiked in the country after Murray asked a question about childcare and development block grant funding.
The numbers appeared tied to estimates on the number of people who may be cut from Medicaid under U.S. President Donald Trump's "Big Beautiful Bill."
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. defended his proposed budget for next year on Tuesday amid challenges from members of both political parties at a budgetary subcommittee hearing.
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., one of the nation's most publicly recognized vaccine skeptics, took a softened approach on vaccines when he answered questions before a House committee Wednesday morning, saying, "I don't think people should be taking medical advice from me."
Many health advocates and some leaders in Congress have growing concerns about how HHS cuts and RFK Jr.'s stance on vaccines are impacting public health.
The Trump administration plans to drop routine COVID vaccination guidance for kids and pregnant women, marking a major shift in federal health policy, according to a report.
A recent study conducted by the Ethics & Public Policy Center that found nearly 11% of women who used the popular abortion pill mifepristone experienced a “serious adverse event.”
"The trust issues are quite far-reaching" and impact public perception towards health-based changes across the U.S., a health professor told Newsweek.