On a recent weekday evening, helped her 13-year-old son, Case, with homework. He did math problems and some reading, underscoring how much he鈥檚 accomplished at his school for children with autism.
Richards has heard Trump administration officials suggest that and cause autism and ADHD. That stance, she said, unfairly blames parents.
鈥淭here鈥檚 no evidence to support it,鈥 said Richards, 44, a marketing director in Richmond, Virginia. 鈥淎s a parent, it鈥檚 infuriating.鈥
In their zeal to 鈥淢ake America Healthy Again,鈥 Trump administration officials are making statements that some advocacy and medical groups say depict patients and the doctors who treat them as partly responsible for whatever ails them.
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and agency leaders have attributed a panoply of chronic diseases and other medical issues 鈥 such as autism, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, depression, diabetes, and obesity 鈥 to consumers and their lifestyle choices, according to a review of 15 hours of recorded interviews, social media statements, and federal reports.
He said at a news conference on April 16 that and that rates are rising because of toxic substances in the environment, despite a lack of evidence there is any link.
鈥淭hese are kids who will never pay taxes. They鈥檒l never hold a job. They鈥檒l never play baseball. They鈥檒l never write a poem. They鈥檒l never go out on a date,鈥 he said. 鈥淢any of them will never use a toilet unassisted.鈥
The vast majority of people on the spectrum do not have those severe challenges.
The statements are more than rhetoric. These attitudes, ranging from judgments about individual behaviors to criticism of the chronically poor, are shaping policies that affect millions of people. The sentiments have been a factor behind decisions to cut Medicaid, keep federal insurance programs from covering anti-obesity drugs, and impose new barriers to covid vaccines for healthy people, say public health leaders and doctors. GOP lawmakers and federal health officials, they say, hold a reproachful stance toward chronic illnesses and the estimated 129 million people in the U.S. affected by them.
鈥淭his is at the heart of so much of our national problem with health,鈥 said Robert Califf, who led the Food and Drug Administration during the Obama and Biden administrations. 鈥淚t鈥檚 these two extreme views. It鈥檚 every health decision is up to the 鈥榬ugged individual,鈥 versus the other extreme view that it鈥檚 all controlled by environment and social determinants of health. The truth is, it鈥檚 on a continuum.鈥
The Blame Game
Self-reliance is a common theme among adherents of MAHA, an informal movement for which Kennedy has fashioned himself the figurehead that promotes medical freedom, skepticism of vaccines, and a focus on nontraditional medicine to treat disease.
Taking medication to manage diabetes? FDA Commissioner Marty Makary suggested on in late May that it would be effective to 鈥渢reat more diabetes with cooking classes鈥 instead of 鈥渏ust throwing insulin at people.鈥
People with Type 1 diabetes must take insulin because their pancreases don鈥檛 produce it, according to the , which also notes that many with Type 2 diabetes 鈥渘eed to take diabetes medicines as well.鈥
Taking birth control pills? Casey Means, President Donald Trump鈥檚 nominee to be U.S. surgeon general, has said that鈥檚 a 鈥渄isrespect of life鈥 for short-term gain and efficiency.
鈥淲e are prescribing them like candy,鈥 she said last year on 鈥,鈥 adding that birth control medications 鈥渁re literally shutting down the hormones in the female body that create this cyclical, life-giving nature of women.鈥
Have a child on ADHD meds? , who is an adviser to Kennedy and is Casey Means鈥 brother, said on the same show that Adderall is prescribed as the standard of care when children get a little fidgety because they鈥檙e in sedentary environments with limited sunlight and eat too much ultraprocessed food.
As a society, he said, 鈥渨e鈥檙e really committing mass child abuse in many ways, and we鈥檙e normalizing that and we鈥檙e not speaking out about that. And then we鈥檙e giving people stimulants developed by Nazi Germany.鈥
Calley Means was probably referring to Pervitin, a drug administered to Adolf Hitler鈥檚 forces in World War II. Adderall is a prescription drug containing amphetamine, a stimulant that鈥檚 as methamphetamine.
The Department of Health and Human Services didn鈥檛 respond to messages seeking comment from Means.
Some conservatives and MAHA adherents argue that people need to take more responsibility for their health. But comments that shift blame to patients and physicians risk perpetuating stigmas, fostering the spread of misinformation, and eroding trust in modern medicine, say medical groups, doctors, and patient advocacy groups.
The statements assume consumers and patients have control over improving their health and preventing chronic disease when the reality is more complex, according to some public health leaders. Lower-income people, they say, often lack access to grocery stores and healthy food, may juggle too many jobs to have time to cook from scratch, and may live in dangerous areas where it鈥檚 harder to get outside and exercise.
, surgeon general during the previous Trump administration, told 麻豆女优 Health News that he worries efforts to promote health will be undone by 鈥渢he return of vaccine-preventable diseases, increasing mistrust in the health care system, and the tearing down of social supports which are critical for making healthy choices.鈥
Tough Talk
The attitudes held by top Trump health officials have affected policy decisions, some doctors and public health leaders say.
Kennedy and other Trump administration health leaders have been especially outspoken, targeting issues they consider especially egregious in recent federal actions, research, or policy.
For example, the Biden administration proposed in November that would let Medicare cover weight loss medications such as Wegovy and Zepbound. But Kennedy and other political appointees at HHS and its agencies have criticized the drugs and the people who take them.
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 very dark,鈥 Calley Means , referring to the weight loss drugs. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 a stranglehold on the U.S. population, almost like solidifying this idea that there is a magic pill.鈥
He added: 鈥淲here is the urgency on saying 鈥楬ey parents, maybe we shouldn鈥檛 feed our kids toxic food?鈥欌
Kennedy, too, has criticized the medications and people who use them, saying in October on that drugmakers 鈥渁re counting on selling it to Americans because we鈥檙e so stupid and so addicted to drugs.鈥
In April, the Trump administration announced it would not finalize the Biden-era coverage rule.
鈥淚t鈥檚 impacting the kind of care and treatments patients will have,鈥 said Andrea Love, a biomedical scientist and founder of ImmunoLogic, a science communication organization. 鈥淚t sends the message that it鈥檚 your fault. It鈥檚 very much victim-blaming. It creates the idea that scientific progress is the devil, demonizes things that aren鈥檛 individually harming health, while avoiding addressing systemic issues that play a much larger role in health.鈥
Kennedy and HHS didn鈥檛 return messages seeking comment.
Data shows that the medications are effective. People who took the in clinical trials lost an average of 48 pounds, and 1 in 3 on that dose lost more than 58 pounds, or 25% of their body weight.
Kennedy and other agency leaders also oppose many covid-era health restrictions and rules. Some physicians and public health leaders note these officials downplayed covid risks while criticizing vaccines developed during the previous Trump administration.
Kennedy has said that people who died from covid actually fell victim to chronic diseases such as obesity, diabetes, or asthma.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 really what killed them,鈥 Kennedy said on 鈥溾 in April. 鈥淭hese were people who were so sick they were basically hanging from a cliff, and covid came along and stamped on their fingers and dropped them off. But they were already living lives that were burdened by sickness.鈥
Covid was the underlying cause of death for more than in the U.S. from Aug. 1, 2021, to July 31, 2022, according to a 2023 report in JAMA Network, an open-access journal on biomedical sciences published by the American Medical Association.
Covid ranked first among deaths caused by infectious or respiratory diseases for youths under age 19, based on the report. Infants under a year old may be at higher risk of experiencing severe illness from covid compared with older children, , and risks are also higher for infants under 6 months and those with underlying medical conditions.
鈥 can help protect infants after birth,鈥 according to the CDC.
But Kennedy announced in May that the federal government would no longer recommend covid vaccines for pregnant people and children who are healthy. Medical groups such as the American Academy of Pediatrics opposed this decision and filed a lawsuit.听
Kennedy also helped promote beliefs that many childless adults on Medicaid, the federal-state program for low-income people, don鈥檛 work and thereby drain resources from the program.
At a May hearing of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, Kennedy said the program was in jeopardy because of 鈥渁ll the able-bodied people who are not working [or] looking for jobs.鈥
It鈥檚 a view embraced by Republican lawmakers who portrayed adults enrolled in Medicaid as lazy or shirking work as they advanced a budget bill estimated to cut federal spending on the program by about $1 trillion over a decade, in part by imposing work requirements on many adult beneficiaries.
鈥淭hirty-five-year-olds sitting at home playing video games, they鈥檙e going to now have to go get a job,鈥 said House Majority Leader Steve Scalise of Louisiana.
The legislation, which Trump signed into law this month, will cause about 10 million more people to be without health insurance by 2034, .
Some health leaders who criticized the legislation say the statements inaccurately maligned Medicaid enrollees, who by law cannot hold high-paying jobs and remain in the program.
Nonetheless, nearly two-thirds of adults ages 19 to 64 covered by Medicaid in 2023 were working. For about 3 in 10, caregiving responsibilities, an illness or disability, or school attendance prevented them from working, , a health information nonprofit that includes 麻豆女优 Health News.
鈥淚t鈥檚 using anti-welfare tropes for something that is basic health care, not a cash benefit,鈥 said Anthony Wright, executive director at Families USA, which supports the Affordable Care Act and expanded health coverage. He summarized the Republican message: 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to make it harder to get the help you need by imposing a bunch of paperwork, and if you don鈥檛 get it, it鈥檚 your fault.鈥
麻豆女优 Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at 麻豆女优鈥攁n independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about .