WASHINGTON - In just a few months, Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
These directives are part of the same problem that drives a health-conscious, left-leaning American who eventually voted for the Republican president, whose favorite meal came from McDonald's, Trump and Kennedy, catered to a voter who distrusts American health care institutions but may have a new type of distrust of federal health care policies.
Bernadine Francis, a lifelong Democrat, supported Joe Biden as president in 2020 and then told NBC News in an interview with NBC News, even though she has approved Kennedy’s efforts so far, even though his efforts were kidnapped by the government and the fixed forces in the administration and Congress.
“I’ve been trying to do what I’ve been trying to do so far and I’m very proud of what he did,” she said.
Francis is one of the voters who left the Democratic Party and voted for Trump because there is nothing important except for Kennedy and Kennedy’s public health.
Concerns about food and toxin chemicals advocated by Democrats have long been a galvanizing problem in key parts of the Trump Republican Party, where oversaturation information has not yet been proven in some cases. It has also been spotlighted as people worry about accelerating vaccines under Trump, managed under Biden and weaponized by anti-vaccine activists like Kennedy after the devastating pandemic.
“We know that in order for RFK to get there so he can help us with the situation we have in the health industry, we know we have to do that.” Washington, D.C., retired public school administrator, said she said she left her "beloved" career because she turned down the vaccine.
"It seems to me that once (Biden) becomes president, the vaccine is authorized, and that is I lost all the hopes of the Democratic Party," Francis told NBC News, referring to the vaccination mandate for the majority of the federal workforce provided by the Biden administration during PANDPOGIGAMECAMECAMECTY. There is currently no federal common vaccine requirement.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1,228,393 people have confirmed deaths in the United States since the pandemic began.
Marty Makary, a hand-picked commissioner of Kennedy of the Food and Drugkins and Researcher, told NBC News in an interview that he wanted to change the agency, saying the impact on the pharmaceutical and food industries faces "corruption."
“I mean, you look at the food pyramid, it’s not based on what’s best for you, but on what the company wants to buy,” he said, and “a brand new nutrition guidance” will be released later this summer.
He praised the FDA's research and regulatory mission, saying the agency was "very good and we've run the train on time."
He also highlighted the 75-page "Make America Healthy Again" Commission report (which highlights super popular foods and toxins in the environment), which has set a "research agenda" in the FDA, HHS, HHS and institutions to oversee social security network programs such as Medicare and food stamps. (Maha's report initially cites some non-existent research, which Kennedy adviser Calley said was a mistake of "great damage" to their mission.)
"I think we're going to learn a lot. For example, the microbiome that has attracted attention in the Maha report needs to be on the map. We don't even talk about it in the medical community," Makari said. "The microbiome, food is the drug, the immune response that occurs when chemicals that don't appear in nature descend along our gastrointestinal tract."
Pressure on other areas of the government, such as the Environmental Protection Agency, made decisions that went against the pro-regulatory ideas proposed in the Maha report, Makary said he could only comment on the FDA, where they were "committed to Secretary Kennedy's vision."
But Kennedy’s public health agenda is more than just studying food supplies and chemicals. Kennedy recently said in a video posted on X last month that the use of Covid vaccines for healthy children and pregnant women is no longer recommended, a change in CDC guidance, which skipped the normal public review period.
A few days later, the government updated its guidance again urging parents to consult with doctors after critics questioned the decision and raised concerns about the lack of public data behind the move.
Makary defended Makary, who imposed a distrust of chaos and whether Americans are now on a party that the public distrusts the health system, has been criticized for spreading misinformation.
“My experience with Secretary Robert F. Kennedy was what he listened to. He listened to myself, he listened to Jay Bhattacharya, and listened to Dr. Mehmet Oz, who listened to many of the scientists who were coaching him,” Makary refers to the National Administrator of the Institute of Health, who provides health services and health services. “So, he might have big questions, but the questions he is asking are the questions most Americans are asking.”
Breast cancer oncologist and integrative medicine physician Dr. Dawn Mussalem, who combines traditional treatments with research-based alternative therapies, tries to help her patients help her patients through medical misinformation they encounter online and in their social circles.
Mussalem has an incredible personal survival story: While in medical school, she was diagnosed with stage IV cancer and was diagnosed with heart failure after conventional therapies like Chemo saved her life. After a heart transplant, Mussalem performed a 26-mile marathon a year later.
“I learned a lot in medical school, but nothing compared to the patients I learned,” said Mussalem, who averaged one-on-one courses with patients focused on 90 minutes. "It's not any political choice. But we know that lifestyle is important."
For example, a new study by the American Society of Clinical Oncology found that eating foods that reduce inflammation in the body may help people with advanced colon cancer survive longer.
Mussalem’s mission, as well as her colleagues, is to enhance modern medicines that save her life and encourage patients to live a healthy lifestyle, including regular exercise, minimal processed food, less screen time, more social connection and better sleep.
But, as Mussalem says, politics does get into trouble every day with millions of Americans who are flooded with social media influencers and “non-medical experts.”
“Patients asked all these questions, fear,” she said. “I’ve heard from patients a lot of times that their nervous system is affected by what’s going on in the government.”
Mussalem acknowledged that “many people there” questioned traditional medicine. For her, it wasn't one or the other.
“We have to believe in routine medicine,” she said. “With traditional care, we need to do more integrated ways in the root causes of the disease and can help use lifestyles to optimize lifestyles.”