Updated: Tracking RFK Jr.’s promises to remake health in America
By Isabella Cueto and J. Emory Parker,
Stat
| 06. 11. 2026
WASHINGTON — A pledge to “Make America Healthy Again” earned Robert Kennedy Jr. his job atop U.S. health agencies a year and some change ago. He’s now had the opportunity to turn his words into action, with mixed results.
“All one needs” to prove the health secretary’s attentiveness is to “review my unprecedented list of accomplishments on a wide range of issues, all of which I drove,” Kennedy posted on X on Wednesday in response to a journalist.
Indeed, Kennedy has a long list of to-dos. He has made numerous additional promises, some of which are well underway (think artificial dyes and school meal changes). Yet many other ambitions have changed shape against the hard edges of reality. For instance, his announcement in 2025 that Health and Human Services would find a root cause of autism in a matter of months did not come true. Kennedy has failed to persuade Congress to fund a new chronic disease-focused agency, or the president to ban direct-to-consumer pharmaceutical advertising.
STAT has been tracking Kennedy’s plans, including ones outlined in the MAHA strategy report and...
Related Articles
By Arche Noah, GMWatch | 06.17.2026
The European Parliament has voted for a wide-reaching deregulation of New Genomic Techniques (NGTs). There was no majority for amendments stopping patents on conventionally classically bred plants or NGT plants. “Today’s vote is a missed opportunity to protect Europe’s farmers...
By Julia Métraux, MOJO WIRE | 06.16.2026
On Tuesday, the Trump administration announced that it would move two key functions of the Department of Education—disability education oversight and the department’s Office for Civil Rights—to the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Justice...
By Megan Molteni, STAT News | 06.05.2026
In 2021, the federal office charged with ensuring that the vast research enterprise bankrolled by the Department of Health and Human Services keeps study participants safe, received a report of a death by suicide involving a person enrolled in a...
By Staff, ABC News | 06.01.2026
The Victorian government is introducing legislation it says will make IVF clinics safer and more accountable following high-profile bungles by private providers.
As part of the changes, the state's health minister will have the power to personally intervene to cancel...