RFK Jr, Health
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A lawsuit filed Monday by a coalition of medical professional groups alleges that Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
National Confectioners Association questions focus on synthetic dyes as MARS reverses its 2016 commitment, despite other companies joining Kennedy's initiative
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The health secretary’s approach to the condition gives the impression that two decades of research simply never happened.
The American Academy of Pediatrics is suing Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. over his changes to vaccines. Dr. Susan Kressley, the group's president, joins Katy Tur to share more on the lawsuit and why they were compelled to act,
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Intelligencer on MSNWhy Calling RFK Jr. ‘Anti-Science’ Misses the PointKennedy Jr. and the Make America Healthy Again movement marched through that rift as they rose to power. As secretary of Health and Human Services, Kennedy has replaced all the members of a vaccine advisory board with his preferred consultants,
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The health secretary has no plan for addressing the country’s sleep problem.
The American Academy of Pediatrics and the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine, among other medical groups, joined the lawsuit against Kennedy.
Aside from opposition from the food industry, success of RFK Jr.'s campaign on ultra-processed foods hinges on how effective it is in altering ingrained dietary habits.
Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s campaign to eliminate synthetic food dyes from the American food supply is facing stiff resistance from one of the country’s most iconic candy makers —
The vaccines are intended to be developed for use against Marburg virus and Sudan ebolavirus, two hemorrhagic fevers in the same family as the Ebola virus
Democrat mayors from Baltimore, Chicago, and Columbus, Ohio, have filed a lawsuit1 against the Trump administration’s rollback of access under the Affordable Care Act, alleging that the changes will increase the number of uninsured Americans.