Health Care
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Health Care
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Kennedy seeks MAHA olive branch with new podcast |
Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. launched his own podcast this week, venturing into a medium he’s long been partial to, and offering a means of mollifying his “Make America Healthy Again” base following recent letdowns.
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This latest project from Kennedy comes as the White House is shifting away from overhauling vaccine policy and instead is leaning into less controversial MAHA policies like healthy eating and food safety.
The first episode of “The Secretary Kennedy Podcast,” released on Wednesday, focused on the U.S. food system in a conversation with celebrity chef Robert Irvine.
The MAHA movement consists of several factions that are sometimes in conflict with each other; some are focused on pesticide regulation, some on the food supply, and others on limiting vaccine mandates.
Kennedy's MAHA base has expressed feeling betrayed by the administration in recent months, with President Trump signing an executive order to increase access to the glyphosate-based herbicides and the experts tied to the food industry, the beef and dairy sector in particular, having heavily influenced the Dietary Guidelines for Americans.
MAHA influencers say they’re open to the podcast.
Vani Hari, author of the “The Food Babe” vlog, told The Hill, “Long-form conversation lets someone like Kennedy and his guest explain complex or controversial positions in a way short interviews can’t — that’s a good thing.”
“It is helpful to have the secretary reengage directly, as this will remind the grassroots why they supported this administration and confirm that Kennedy is still working on our behalf. Kennedy’s bravery in confronting captured agencies drove millions of votes,” said Kelly Ryerson, who goes by “The Glyphosate Girl” online.
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Welcome to The Hill’s Health Care newsletter, we’re Nathaniel Weixel and Joseph Choi — every week we follow the latest moves on how Washington impacts your health.
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How policy will be impacting the health care sector this week and beyond:
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Iran announced Friday morning that the Strait of Hormuz is “completely” open amid the temporary ceasefire reached between Israel and Lebanon. President Trump reacted enthusiastically to Iran’s announcement but said the U.S. blockade remains in place. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was grilled once again Friday by a House panel. Kennedy defended the Trump administration’s “Make …
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Rep. Mark Takano (D-Calif.) grilled Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. about President Trump’s mental fitness Friday, pressing him about some of Trump’s recent social media posts. During a Friday hearing in the House Education and Workforce Committee about the budget of the Department of Health and Human Services, Takano presented large posters of some Trump’s Truth Social comments, …
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(NewsNation) — A recent analysis of more than 400,000 Reddit posts has found some lesser-known side effects of GLP-1 drugs taken for weight loss and diabetes. Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania used AI to analyze more than five years of posts from nearly 70,000 Reddit users, according to a report published in Medical Xpress. Gastrointestinal issues, including nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and headaches, are commonly …
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Rising premiums are outpacing inflation |
When insurer practices drive up costs, families feel it in their monthly premiums. Without reform, healthcare costs could continue rising faster than inflation—putting care further out of reach for millions of Americans. Learn more
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Branch out with a different read from The Hill:
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Judge rules that HUD effort to change criteria for homeless funding is unlawful
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A federal judge in Rhode Island ruled on Tuesday that the Trump administration’s effort to dramatically change the criteria to get tens of millions of dollars in funding to aid homeless people was unlawful. Several nonprofits filed a lawsuit last year accusing the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development of changing the rules …
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Local and state headlines on health care:
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- Colorado marijuana regulators pledge crackdown on intoxicating hemp (The Denver Gazette)
- Michigan House moves ahead on state health department budget with expanded SNAP and Medicaid checks (Michigan Advance)
- Alaska’s only dedicated queer health care clinic is closing (Alaska Public Media)
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Health news we've flagged from other outlets:
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- Your new therapist: chatty, leaky, and hardly human (KFF Health News)
- HaloMD’s legal win highlights the difficulty of challenging arbitration decisions (Stat)
- A UnitedHealth reckoning still looms (Wall Street Journal)
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Opinions related to health submitted to The Hill:
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You're all caught up. See you next week!
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