President Donald Trump’s commission on health on May 22 said that the government should launch new clinical trials on nutrition and improve the surveillance of vaccines and other drugs given to children.
“America will begin reversing the childhood chronic disease crisis during this administration by getting to the truth of why we are getting sick and spurring pro-growth policies and innovations to reverse these trends,” it states.
The commission issued 10 recommendations, including a call for the National Institutes of Health to fund new long-term trials comparing whole-food and low-ultra-processed food diets to assess their effects on obesity, and for health agencies to develop new systems to monitor the safety of vaccines and other pediatric drugs.
“Our kids are the sickest kids in the world,” Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. told reporters on a call. He added later that officials had already begun a lot of the research the report recommends.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says that more than four out of 10 children in the United States have at least one chronic health condition, such as asthma. About 75 percent of American youth are not eligible for military service, primarily due to obesity and poor fitness, according to the Department of Defense.
Other recommendations include funding studies to evaluate how ingredients historically deemed generally safe by the Food and Drug Administration affect human health; creating a task force to apply artificial intelligence to federal datasets to detect early chronic disease trends; and investing in non-animal testing models.
It also states that human studies are limited and does not advise, at least for now, making adjustments to the availability of any pesticides. Instead, it calls for launching a new initiative that would “map gene–environment interactions affecting childhood disease risk, especially for pollutants, endocrine disruptors, and pharmaceuticals.”
Kennedy told a Senate panel this week that there were no portions of the report that should worry American farmers.
“There’s a million farmers who rely on glyphosate, 100 percent of corn in this country relies on glyphosate, and we are not going to do anything to jeopardize that business model,” he said.
Kennedy chairs the commission. Vince Haley, an assistant to the president, is the executive director. Members include Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins, Housing Secretary Scott Turner, and FDA Commissioner Dr. Marty Makary.
The executive order directed the commission to submit a report to the president within 100 days, and within 180 days, to present a strategy to the president to address chronic diseases in children, including obesity and diabetes.