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The MAHA plan for healthier kids includes 128 ideas, but few details

U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. presented a strategy report of the Make America Healthy Again Commission intended to tackle childhood chronic disease.
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U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. presented a strategy report of the Make America Healthy Again Commission intended to tackle childhood chronic disease.

Updated September 9, 2025 at 4:49 PM MDT

The Trump administration released a report Tuesday outlining a broad strategy to improve children's health. It calls for a wide range of executive actions and policy reforms aimed at tackling a rise in chronic diseases.

In announcing the report, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. called chronic disease in kids "an existential crisis for our country" and said the report's 128 recommendations are "historic and unprecedented."

"There's never been an effort like this across all the government agencies," he said.

The Make America Healthy Again Commission, led by Kennedy, identified four potential drivers behind rising rates of chronic disease among children, including poor diet, chemical exposure, lack of physical activity and chronic stress, as well as "overmedicalization" – which the commission describes as "a concerning trend of overprescribing medications to children."

The report has drawn mixed reactions from researchers and advocates working in public health, who note that its goals stand at odds with other recent Trump administration moves. Those include funding cuts to food assistance, Medicaid programs, and scientific research, as well as Secretary Kennedy's push for changes in vaccine policy, all of which could undermine public health.

"How can we 'Make America Healthy Again' unless we renew our commitment to ensuring access to food for children," and other Americans, asks Eric Mitchell, President of the Alliance to End Hunger, in a statement.

"While Administration officials regularly tout the importance of nutrition," they worked with Congress to pass a plan that will push millions of people off federal food assistance, known as SNAP, he says.

Susan Mayne, an epidemiologist at Yale University School of Public Health and former Food and Drug Administration official, says there's consensus that "we need to address chronic disease in our whole population, including children," and she agrees now is the time to take action.

The MAHA report includes "a lot of good talk about things they want to do," Mayne says. "But the plan for how to execute it and the resources for how to get that done are actually going in the opposite direction. And so that concerns me."

Tackling kids' diet and exercise habits

The report notes that 60% of the calories U.S. children consume come from highly processed foods – which often contain excess salt, refined starch and sugar – and it calls for an educational campaign to promote the government's dietary guidelines, which are expected to be updated in the coming weeks. The campaign will emphasize eating more whole foods and less highly processed products.

Mayne says it's a good idea to develop a standard definition for ultra-processed foods, but says we need more than a definition.

"What are the steps that we're going to take so that they're eating less of it?" she wonders. "There are steps that they should be taking immediately to continue to try to reduce things like excess sodium, excess sugar and excess saturated fat in those ultra processed foods."

The strategy calls for new research into nutrition and chronic disease prevention and the development of a standard definition of ultra-processed foods. It says the government will remove restrictions on whole milk sales in schools, and help states limit the purchase of unhealthy items with SNAP benefits.

The MAHA Commission points to "unprecedented levels of inactivity," among children and their strategy calls for partnering with the President's Council on Sports, Fitness, and Nutrition, to help states and schools "re-establish" the Presidential Fitness Test, and promote more physical activity in afterschool programs.

In addition, the plan is to launch an education and awareness initiative on screen time, one of the causes of inactivity, which will be led by the surgeon general. (To date, the Trump administration has not appointed a surgeon general. It has nominated Casey Means.)

"I'm very happy to see that they've identified diet and physical activity as two of the top health problems in the U.S.," says Lindsey Smith Taillie, professor of nutrition at the Gillings School of Public Health at UNC Chapel Hill. "But this report was lacking actual, meaningful action that would help Americans address our problems."

Chemical exposure flagged, but little pressure on pesticides

An earlier MAHA report, released in May, pointed to potential harms of chemical exposure and noted that children can be more vulnerable to these harms. It listed a range of chemicals, including PFAS, phthalates, bisphenols, microplastics and chemicals used on farms to kill pests and weeds.

The new strategy report states that "children are exposed to an increasing number of synthetic chemicals, some of which have been linked to developmental issues and chronic disease."

This is an issue that has animated parts of the MAHA movement. As a long-time environmental lawyer, Kennedy has spoken out frequently against the use of agricultural pesticides and herbicides. During the 2024 presidential campaign, he made statements vowing to "ban" some agricultural chemicals that are already restricted in other countries.

But the report calls for few changes on regulation of pesticides.

The strategy calls for a more status-quo approach to evaluate current regulations that govern the use of agricultural chemicals: "The current regulatory framework should be continually evaluated to ensure that chemical and other exposures do not interact together to pose a threat."

Dr. Philip J. Landrigan, a pediatrician and professor at Boston College, and director of the Program for Global Public Health and the Common Good notes that "the report contains no recommendations on how to reduce children's exposures to toxic chemicals in food other than food dyes and heavy metals in infant formula."

The Environmental Working Group, said in a statement, that the original MAHA report released in May mentioned "the health risks of pesticides, and the fact they're found at 'alarming' levels in some children and pregnant women."

Tuesday's strategy report has no such language.

"It looks like pesticide industry lobbyists steamrolled the MAHA Commission's agenda," said EWG president Ken Cook.

The group points to agribusiness lobbying efforts urging the administration to "back away" from anti-pesticide rhetoric.

Meanwhile, the American Farm Bureau issued a statement supporting the MAHA strategy. "We appreciate the commission's willingness to meet with farmers across the country, hear our concerns and develop smart solutions," said AFB president Zippy Duvall.

A call for new "vaccine framework"

The strategy also calls on the White House Domestic Policy Council and HHS to develop a new vaccine framework, which may mean revamping the vaccine schedule, the list of vaccinations that children should receive at specific ages. The schedule is developed by infectious disease experts, and a committee of expert advisors to the CDC, a group that Kennedy recently replaced with his own picks including some critical of vaccines.

The strategic plan calls for addressing vaccine injuries, and ensuring "medical freedom," which in this context could suggest support for giving people more personal choice over vaccinating their children.

Kennedy's recent moves in this area raise concerns that further actions may undermine an evidence-backed, uniform approach to vaccination. He recently pushed out Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director Susan Monarez and put new limits on access to the COVID vaccine.

The American Lung Association notes that the report "puts the childhood vaccine schedule in question, which sows mistrust in the established and science-based vaccine infrastructure."

"Community immunity through vaccination keeps kids in school and helps protect our most vulnerable," it said in a statement. "Vaccines are a cornerstone of public health and the mistrust sewn in this report puts children's lives at risk."

A wide mix of ideas 

All told, the report contains 128 proposals, covering research, policy changes and regulation, public awareness campaigns and suggestions for public-private partnerships.

But Landrigan of Boston College says it fails to present "any kind of comprehensive blueprint for improving the health of American children."

"Overall, I would describe the report as presenting a very uneven, poorly conceived, disjointed hodgepodge of recommendations that reflect Secretary Kennedy's preoccupations and little else," he says.

Other critics noted that the report's goals are undermined by recent Trump administration policy moves.

For instance, the report calls for the Environmental Protection Agency to research the impact of air pollution on children's health. However, as the American Lung Association notes in a statement, EPA is actively eliminating its research arm and "working to roll back critical clean air safeguards and allowing major polluters to bypass requirements that limit emissions – emissions that worsen asthma and other chronic lung conditions in children."

Copyright 2025 NPR

Corrected: September 9, 2025 at 4:49 PM MDT
A previous version of this story incorrectly said that Patty Murray is a senator from Maine. She represents Washington state.
Allison Aubrey is a correspondent for NPR News, where her stories can be heard on Morning Edition and All Things Considered. She's also a contributor to the PBS NewsHour and is one of the hosts of NPR's Life Kit.
Maria Godoy is a senior science and health editor and correspondent with NPR News. Her reporting can be heard across NPR's news shows and podcasts. She is also one of the hosts of NPR's Life Kit.
Carmel Wroth is a senior health editor for NPR's Science Desk, where she guides digital strategy for the health team and conceives and edits digital-first, enterprise stories and packages.