Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Panning MAHA Plan, Farm Action Says It's 'A Far Cry From The Bold Promises'
Farm Action, a nonpartisan, farmer-led watchdog organization that advocates for accountability from the government and large corporations within the agricultural sector, rated the contents of a recent leaked draft of the MAHA strategy a "D+," saying, "It recognizes some of the right priorities and even overlaps with our recommendations in places, but the execution is timid and avoids the structural reforms needed to truly deliver on the MAHA Commission's own diagnosis of the problem." (Mordowanec, 8/25)
Executives at big processed-food makers are trying to determine how much of what Kennedy and MAHA want will actually happen, and how it could affect their bottom lines. Their challenge is to balance his push for what he sees as healthier food with their need to make products that consumers will buy.聽Some companies have assembled special teams to navigate MAHA, drawing up lists and 鈥渉eat maps鈥 to track ingredients coming under scrutiny, and assessing which ones they might have to remove or label. Executives have compared dealing with MAHA to battling the mythical Hydra鈥攃ut off one head and two more spring up. (Newman and Tucker-Smith, 8/25)
Millions of Americans might soon have mail from Robert F. Kennedy Jr. The health secretary鈥攚ho fiercely opposes industrial, ultraprocessed foods鈥攏ow wants to send people care packages full of farm-fresh alternatives. They will be called 鈥淢AHA boxes.鈥 For the most part, MAHA boxes remain a mystery. They are mentioned in a leaked draft of a much-touted report that the Trump administration is set to release about improving children鈥檚 health. Reportedly, the 18-page document鈥攚hich promises studies on the health effects of electromagnetic radiation and changes in how the government regulates sunscreen, among many other things鈥攊ncludes this: 鈥淢AHA Boxes: USDA will develop options to get whole, healthy food to SNAP participants.鈥 In plain English, kids on food stamps might be sent veggies. (Florko, 8/20)
An avid consumer of dietary supplements, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has surrounded himself in part with senior staff members, advisers and health influencers who have promoted everything from weight loss pills to capsules of desiccated organ meat. But that hasn鈥檛 led to gains in Washington for the multibillion-dollar industry 鈥 yet. (Khimm, 8/26)
TikTok鈥檚 favorite birth control method is more like no birth control at all. On the Gen-Z-beloved app 鈥 approximately 60% of its users are in their teens and 20s 鈥 鈥渘atural鈥 birth control is having a moment: Terms like 鈥渂irth control natural alternatives鈥 are trending, with wellness influencers encouraging other women to quit birth control and track their fertility cycles naturally (or with apps) and use herbal supplements to avoid getting pregnant. (Wong, 8/22)
People who believe embryos are children oppose IVF because it can involve the discarding of some embryos, which they say is akin to abortion. 鈥淭he popularity of IVF creates a dilemma for Republican politicians who have had anti-choice organizations as a key part of their constituency for their whole careers,鈥 said Sean Tipton, chief advocacy and policy officer at the American Society for Reproductive Medicine. (Vollers, 8/26)
In case you missed it 鈥
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) today launched MAHA in Action鈥攁 dynamic new platform showcasing the powerful federal initiatives and state-led reforms advancing President Donald J. Trump and Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.鈥檚 Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) agenda. (8/18)