logo
#

Latest news with #FoodBabe

White House report to outline causes of America's declining health
White House report to outline causes of America's declining health

Time of India

time22-05-2025

  • Health
  • Time of India

White House report to outline causes of America's declining health

Washington: A commission led by U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and tasked by President Donald Trump with investigating chronic illness is set to deliver a report outlining its findings on Thursday. Trump signed an executive order in February establishing the Make America Healthy Again Commission to investigate chronic illness and deliver an action plan to fight childhood diseases. Thursday's report outlining the causes was due this week and will be followed by a strategy document due in August. The commission is jointly run by HHS and the White House, with Kennedy serving as its chair and the Domestic Policy Council chief as executive director. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins and other cabinet members sit on it, as do federal health agency chiefs and senior White House officials. Supporters of Kennedy's Make America Healthy Again, or MAHA, movement for which the commission is named, said they expected it to outline causes they had long blamed for the decline in American health and sum up Kennedy's accomplishments during his first 100 days in the job, but that it would bring no surprises. "Nobody's talked about any bombshells coming out or anything like that," said Jeff Hutt, who was national field director of Kennedy's presidential campaign and now runs a group supporting his food and health goals. The report is likely to outline efforts Kennedy has already announced, said Hutt, including studying the safety of vaccines, making changes to the food safety process, and removing some dyes and petroleum-based products from the food supply. The report will also tackle pesticides, drawing concern from farm groups that are wary of what it will say about glyphosate. Some environmental groups argue the use of the chemical to dry crops and harvest them faster leads to human exposure of it. Farm lobby groups warned that criticizing specific farm practices could impede collaboration on the administration's health agenda and put food production at risk. The groups should not be worried, said Hutt, because Kennedy has already publicly reassured them there would be nothing in the report they would find shocking or upsetting. It will likely focus on data and raising awareness, rather than policy proposals, said prominent MAHA activist Vani Hari, who authors "The Food Babe" blog. "Once somebody learns this information, they can't unlearn it, and it changes their behavior," she said. "They make different purchasing decisions at the grocery store."

White House report to outline causes of America's declining health
White House report to outline causes of America's declining health

Yahoo

time22-05-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

White House report to outline causes of America's declining health

By Ahmed Aboulenein, Renee Hickman and Leah Douglas WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A commission led by U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and tasked by President Donald Trump with investigating chronic illness is set to deliver a report outlining its findings on Thursday. Trump signed an executive order in February establishing the Make America Healthy Again Commission to investigate chronic illness and deliver an action plan to fight childhood diseases. Thursday's report outlining the causes was due this week and will be followed by a strategy document due in August. The commission is jointly run by HHS and the White House, with Kennedy serving as its chair and the Domestic Policy Council chief as executive director. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins and other cabinet members sit on it, as do federal health agency chiefs and senior White House officials. Supporters of Kennedy's Make America Healthy Again, or MAHA, movement for which the commission is named, said they expected it to outline causes they had long blamed for the decline in American health and sum up Kennedy's accomplishments during his first 100 days in the job, but that it would bring no surprises. "Nobody's talked about any bombshells coming out or anything like that," said Jeff Hutt, who was national field director of Kennedy's presidential campaign and now runs a group supporting his food and health goals. The report is likely to outline efforts Kennedy has already announced, said Hutt, including studying the safety of vaccines, making changes to the food safety process, and removing some dyes and petroleum-based products from the food supply. The report will also tackle pesticides, drawing concern from farm groups that are wary of what it will say about glyphosate. Some environmental groups argue the use of the chemical to dry crops and harvest them faster leads to human exposure of it. Farm lobby groups warned that criticizing specific farm practices could impede collaboration on the administration's health agenda and put food production at risk. The groups should not be worried, said Hutt, because Kennedy has already publicly reassured them there would be nothing in the report they would find shocking or upsetting. It will likely focus on data and raising awareness, rather than policy proposals, said prominent MAHA activist Vani Hari, who authors "The Food Babe" blog. "Once somebody learns this information, they can't unlearn it, and it changes their behavior," she said. "They make different purchasing decisions at the grocery store."

White House report to outline causes of America's declining health
White House report to outline causes of America's declining health

Hindustan Times

time22-05-2025

  • Health
  • Hindustan Times

White House report to outline causes of America's declining health

WASHINGTON, - A commission led by U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and tasked by President Donald Trump with investigating chronic illness is set to deliver a report outlining its findings on Thursday. Trump signed an executive order in February establishing the Make America Healthy Again Commission to investigate chronic illness and deliver an action plan to fight childhood diseases. Thursday's report outlining the causes was due this week and will be followed by a strategy document due in August. The commission is jointly run by HHS and the White House, with Kennedy serving as its chair and the Domestic Policy Council chief as executive director. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins and other cabinet members sit on it, as do federal health agency chiefs and senior White House officials. Supporters of Kennedy's Make America Healthy Again, or MAHA, movement for which the commission is named, said they expected it to outline causes they had long blamed for the decline in American health and sum up Kennedy's accomplishments during his first 100 days in the job, but that it would bring no surprises. "Nobody's talked about any bombshells coming out or anything like that," said Jeff Hutt, who was national field director of Kennedy's presidential campaign and now runs a group supporting his food and health goals. The report is likely to outline efforts Kennedy has already announced, said Hutt, including studying the safety of vaccines, making changes to the food safety process, and removing some dyes and petroleum-based products from the food supply. The report will also tackle pesticides, drawing concern from farm groups that are wary of what it will say about glyphosate. Some environmental groups argue the use of the chemical to dry crops and harvest them faster leads to human exposure of it. Farm lobby groups warned that criticizing specific farm practices could impede collaboration on the administration's health agenda and put food production at risk. The groups should not be worried, said Hutt, because Kennedy has already publicly reassured them there would be nothing in the report they would find shocking or upsetting. It will likely focus on data and raising awareness, rather than policy proposals, said prominent MAHA activist Vani Hari, who authors "The Food Babe" blog. "Once somebody learns this information, they can't unlearn it, and it changes their behavior," she said. "They make different purchasing decisions at the grocery store."

How Vani Hari, the Blogging ‘Food Babe,' Became a Trump-Era Megastar
How Vani Hari, the Blogging ‘Food Babe,' Became a Trump-Era Megastar

New York Times

time21-05-2025

  • Health
  • New York Times

How Vani Hari, the Blogging ‘Food Babe,' Became a Trump-Era Megastar

Vani Hari, who branded herself the Food Babe back in 2011 when she started blogging about green smoothies and buttocks-firming exercises, stood at a podium in the great hall of the Department of Health and Human Services last month in a sequined white tweed suit. The stage behind her was filled with mothers like herself who have become the face of the 'Make America Healthy Again' movement. In front of her were reporters assembled to hear the government's strategy to eradicate petroleum-based food dyes. And there, gazing up at her from the front row, was the nation's health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who helped transform Ms. Hari, once voted one of the sexiest Democrats in Charlotte, N.C., into the Taylor Swift of the MAHA moms. Ms. Hari took a deep and very audible breath. 'For over a decade I said the F.D.A. is asleep at the wheel,' she said. 'Now I can stop saying that.' Ms. Hari, a 46-year-old former business consultant with a computer science degree, can barely believe that after 14 years of food activism in which she chewed a yoga mat to make a point about the chemicals in Subway sandwich bread, she has surfed the wellness wave all the way to the center of the Trump administration's food agenda. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store