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5 Takeaways From RFK’s First Make America Healthy Again Assessment

The MAHA report suggests factors such as screen time and ultra-processed foods are responsible for chronic disease among children.

A sweeping report released last week by the Trump administration’s Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) Commission takes aim at unhealthy lifestyle habits, environmental toxins, and prescription medicines and vaccines that the government says are contributing to a surge in chronic disease among children.

The commission, chaired by Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., is asking federal agencies to take a close look at how ultra-processed foods, chemicals in the environment, screen time, and overuse of prescription drugs and vaccines might negatively impact kids’ health, according to the report. The MAHA Commission plans to outline more detailed plans for assessing these risks within 100 days, and share its findings within six months.

Estimates of chronic disease rates among U.S. children vary depending on the definition and source, with USA Today reporting the percentage may fall between 10 and 50 percent.

“To turn the tide and better protect our children, the United States must act decisively,” the report says. “During this administration, we will begin reversing the childhood chronic disease crisis by confronting its root causes — not just its symptoms.”

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