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MAKING AMERICA HEALTHY AGAIN: Today, President Donald J. Trump signed an Executive Order establishing the President’s Make America Healthy Again Commission.
Chaired by U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the Commission is tasked with investigating and addressing the root causes of America’s escalating health crisis, with an initial focus on childhood chronic diseases.
Within 100 days, the Commission will produce an assessment that summarizes what is known and what questions remain regarding the childhood chronic disease crisis, and include international comparisons.
Within 180 days, the Commission will produce a strategy, based on the findings of the assessment, to improve the health of America’s children.
The Commission has four main policy directives to reverse chronic disease:
Empower Americans through transparency and open-source data and avoid conflicts of interest in all federally funded health research.
Prioritize gold-standard research on why Americans are getting sick in all health-related research funded by the federal government.
Work with farmers to ensure that U.S. food is the healthy, abundant and affordable.
Ensure expanded treatment options and health coverage flexibility for beneficial lifestyle changes and disease prevention.
The Commission aims to restore trust in medical and scientific institutions and hold public hearings, meetings, roundtables, and similar events to receive expert input from leaders in public health.
ADDRESSING THE RISE OF CHRONIC ILLNESSES: President Trump understands that America’s healthcare system is largely focused on treating chronic illnesses rather than preventing them, leading to a growing health crisis with serious economic and national security consequences.
Based on all health indicators and global comparisons, Americans are becoming sicker, beset by illnesses that our medical system isn’t addressing effectively.
In the United States, six in 10 adults have at least one chronic condition, and four in 10 have two or more.
Prior to COVID, American life expectancy averaged 78.8 years, while comparable countries averaged 82.6 years, creating a gap that equates to 1.25 billion fewer life years for Americans.
The United States has the highest age-standardized cancer incidence rate across 204 countries, nearly double the next-highest rate.
From 1990 to 2021, the United States saw an 88% increase in cancer.
Asthma is far more common in the United States than in other parts of the world, including most of Europe, Asia, and Africa.
The rise in chronic conditions is not limited to adults.
Childhood is usually the healthiest period of life, yet as of 2022, 30 million (40.7%) United States children had at least one health condition like allergies, asthma, or autoimmune diseases.
Autism now affects one in 36 children, a staggering increase from rates of one to four out of 10,000 children identified with the condition during the 1980s.
18% of teens suffer from fatty liver disease, nearly 30% are prediabetic, and more than 40% are overweight or obese – these conditions were virtually unheard of in prior generations.
The incidence of childhood cancer, while still rare, increased 0.8% per year since 1975—an over 40% increase over 45 years.
Overmedication, particularly among children, is a growing concern. More than 3.4 million children are currently taking medication for ADD/ADHD and diagnoses continue to rise.
https://www.malone.news/p/president-trump-establishes-a-maha