'Asking big questions:' FDA Commissioner Makary outlines proposed changes for children's healthNew Foto - 'Asking big questions:' FDA Commissioner Makary outlines proposed changes for children's health

National health agencies are putting a new focus on chronic illness in American children, releasing a new report Thursday that lays out the scope and potential causes of such illnesses. A later report is expected to make new policy recommendations to address the problem. FDA Commissioner Dr. Martin Makary spoke with Scripps News Thursday about what expected changes and priorities could look like. "When it comes to the health of the population, American health care has been a 50-year failure," Makary said. "So we've got to start being proactive and not reactionary. And that means asking big questions we've never asked before." "We saw today an announcement of SNAP waivers so that sugary drinks and junk food is removed from SNAP tax dollar programs," Makary said. "Maybe we need to treat more diabetes with school lunch programs instead of just treating kids with Ozempic and maybe we need to treat more back pain with ice and physical therapy, then just surgery and opioids. We need a fresh new approach." "We've got to talk about the microbiome and food as medicine and that means we also have to talk about environmental exposures and cancers and toxins that cause cancer, not just the chemotherapy to treat it. That is all a part of this Make America Healthy Again and initiative that the White House has put out today." RELATED STORY |New MAHA report suggests root causes of chronic diseases in American children Makary said he was not concerned about criticisms that medication and vaccine hesitancy could lead to further harm for children. "Half of our nation's kids are sick. They've got diabetes, pre-diabetes, obesity, or a chronic condition. 40% of our nation's kids now have a chronic disease. And so the only thing that's dangerous just to keep going down the path that we're on," Makary said. "We are taking a whole new approach at health. And that is going to be implemented at all of our health agencies. That means the NIH is going to look more at root causes, not just on chemotherapy to treat late-stage cancers. The FDA is going to look at the food supply. People forget that the F in FDA stands for food. The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services is going to look at how they reimburse for health, not just for sickness." Watch the full interview in the video above.

'Asking big questions:' FDA Commissioner Makary outlines proposed changes for children's health

'Asking big questions:' FDA Commissioner Makary outlines proposed changes for children's health National health agencies are put...
Trump's ex-surgeon general suggests new nominee Casey Means lacks needed qualificationsNew Foto - Trump's ex-surgeon general suggests new nominee Casey Means lacks needed qualifications

WASHINGTON ―Jerome Adams, the former U.S. surgeon general duringPresident Donald Trump'sfirst term, called into question the qualifications of Trump's new nominee for the post, Casey Means, as he argued the surgeon general must hold a medical license to carry out the job's legal duties. Means is not a practicing physician and does not have an active medical license. Without mentioning Means by name, Adams outlined his positionin a May 22 post on X. Adams acknowledged that no explicit federal law mandates the surgeon general be a licensed physician. But he pointed to the surgeon general's legal obligation toserve as vice admiral of the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, a uniformed service of health professionals for the federal government. But to be commissioned as an officer in the PHSCC, a physicianmust hold a current valid medical medical licensein addition tocompleting one yearof a medical residency or another accredited postgraduate medical program. Adams said the PHSCC qualifications are "implicitly (and legally) essential" to serve as surgeon general. Since Trump nominated Means‒ a 37-year-old Stanford University-educated wellness influencer ‒ as surgeon general on May 7, she has drawn scrutiny for her lack of medical license.Means' Oregon medical licenseexpired in 2019 and was moved to inactive in January 2024. More:Who is Casey Means? Trump's new surgeon general nominee sparks drama Means also dropped out of a five-year medical residency program as an otolaryngologist at Oregon Health & Science University months before completing it. Yet she appears to still satisfy the PHSCC's requirement that physicians have one year of postgraduation education. "The Surgeon General's position as a trusted public health authority and physician makes full training and licensure a critical expectation in addition to an implicit legal requirement," Adams wrote. More:President Trump changes his mind on nomination for surgeon general He compared the credentials to an Army general meeting "the minimum qualifications to serve in the military" before being promoted to lead other troops held to the same standards. "This is in no way a personal criticism of any candidate, but a clarification for the sake of the integrity of the PHSCC that I was blessed and honored to lead," he added. "Failure to maintain these requirements not only compromises the mission and credibility of the service, but opens the PHS and HHS to lawsuits from others denied a commission or promotion, or terminated due to failure to meet these legal standards." The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Trump tapped Means after withdrawing his first pick for the role,Dr. Janette Nesheiwat, a Fox News medical contributor. Means, a close ally of Health and Human Services SecretaryRobert F. Kennedy Jr., is an advocate for metabolic health and preventing chronic disease,who has a large social media following. Trump has lauded Means for having "impeccable 'MAHA' credentials," referring to Kennedy's Make America Healthy Again movement. But Means has drawn the ire from some on the far-right including activist Laura Loomer, an influential voice for Trump, who hascriticized Means' lack of medical licenseand accused her of havinga "history being a Marxist tree hugger." Adams, an anesthesiologist and former state health commissioner of Indiana, served as Trump's only surgeon general during his first term, from 2017 to 2021. After leaving the White House, Adams joined Purdue University as executive director of the Center for Community Health Enhancement and Learning. Reach Joey Garrison on X @joeygarrison. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Trump's ex-surgeon general suggests new nominee unqualified for job

Trump's ex-surgeon general suggests new nominee Casey Means lacks needed qualifications

Trump's ex-surgeon general suggests new nominee Casey Means lacks needed qualifications WASHINGTON ―Jerome Adams, the former U.S. surgeo...
US judge blocks Trump's plan to dismantle Education DepartmentNew Foto - US judge blocks Trump's plan to dismantle Education Department

By Nate Raymond BOSTON (Reuters) -A federal judge blocked U.S. President Donald Trump's administration from carrying out his executive order to dismantle the U.S. Department of Education and ordered it on Thursday to reinstate employees terminated in a mass layoff. U.S. District Judge Myong Joun in Boston at the behest of a group of Democratic-led states, school districts and teachers' unions issued an injunction blocking the department from moving forward with a mass termination announced in March of over 1,300 employees, which would cut its staff by half. "The record abundantly reveals that defendants' true intention is to effectively dismantle the department without an authorizing statute," wrote Joun, an appointee of Trump's Democratic predecessor Joe Biden. Lawyers with the Justice Department argued that the mass terminations were not an effort to shutter the agency but a lawful effort to eliminate bureaucratic bloat while fulfilling its overall statutory mission more efficiently. But Joun said the cuts were having the opposite effect, as the "massive reduction in staff has made it effectively impossible for the department to carry out its statutorily mandated functions." "This court cannot be asked to cover its eyes while the department's employees are continuously fired and units are transferred out until the department becomes a shell of itself," the judge wrote. He ordered the administration to not just reinstate the workers but also to halt implementation of Trump's March 21 directive to transfer student loans and special needs programs to other federal agencies. Education Department spokesperson Madi Biedermann said in a statement that the Trump administration would immediately challenge the ruling, which she said came from "an unelected judge with a political axe to grind." Skye Perryman, whose liberal legal group Democracy Forward represented the school districts and unions, said Thursday's ruling means "disastrous mass firings of career civil servants are blocked while this wildly disruptive and unlawful agency action is litigated." The department, which Congress created in 1979, oversees $1.6 trillion in college loans, enforces civil rights laws in schools and provides federal funding for needy districts. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon announced the mass layoff, known in government parlance as a "reduction in force," on March 11, which her agency said was being carried out as part of the Education Department's "final mission." Those job cuts were announced a week before Trump signed an executive order calling for the department's closure, following a campaign promise to conservatives aimed at leaving school policy almost entirely in the hands of states and local boards. In combination with 600 employees who took buy-out offers, the Education Department said the job cuts once implemented would leave it with 2,183 workers, down from 4,133 when Trump took office on January 20. In an interview at the time with Fox News, McMahon said Trump's "directive to me, clearly, is to shut down the Department of Education." She said that while Congress would be needed to close it, the layoffs were "the first step of eliminating what I think is bureaucratic bloat." Democratic attorneys general from 20 states and the District of Columbia as well as school districts and teachers' unions then sued, saying the cuts rendered the department unable to meet its duties of administering funding for schools and college student loans and enforcing civil rights law. (Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Mark Porter, Rod Nickel, Daniel Wallis, Alexia Garamfalvi and Deepa Babington)

US judge blocks Trump's plan to dismantle Education Department

US judge blocks Trump's plan to dismantle Education Department By Nate Raymond BOSTON (Reuters) -A federal judge blocked U.S. President...
Tim McGraw Gets Candid About How Meeting Wife Faith Hill 'Saved My Life': 'I Was a Wild Man'New Foto - Tim McGraw Gets Candid About How Meeting Wife Faith Hill 'Saved My Life': 'I Was a Wild Man'

Tracy Lawrence/Youtube; Amy Sussman/Getty Tim McGraw is opening up about how meeting Faith Hill changed his life "I couldn't have found a better woman," said the Grammy winner on Tracy Lawrence'sRoad Housepodcast McGraw and Hill have been married since 1996 and share three daughters Faith Hillmakes husbandTim McGraw's life better. In a new interview onTracy Lawrence'sRoad Housepodcast, McGraw opened up about how meeting Hill and entering a romantic relationship helped turn his life around. The pair, whoshares three daughters, met in 1994 before falling in love on tour and tying the knot in 1996. "I've been lucky. I've been very fortunate. First off, meeting my wife saved my life. I was a wild man," said the 58-year-old Grammy winner of Hill, 57. "I was having fun." "She turned my life around. I couldn't have found a better woman. Not only beautiful and talented, but just a good, good person. And then having our daughters," explained McGraw, who shares Gracie, 27, Maggie, 26, and Audrey, 23, with the "Breathe" singer. "It's life-changing. They make you a better person, and they certainly calm the demons in you." The "Live Like You Were Dying" artist recalled putting the girls through school, coaching their sports, making breakfasts and more, noting the experience of fatherhood "changed everything about my life." "It changed my perspective. It changed the way I thought about what my future would be. It certainly took me out of myself," said McGraw, who's been sober since 2008 and candidly spoken in the pastabout how Hill supported him in quitting alcohol. Kevin Mazur/Kevin Mazur/ Getty Elsewhere in the interview, he detailed feeling "lucky" to have accomplished so much in life before revealing what he considers the pinnacle of his career: "My tours with Faith." "The Soul2Soul tours with Faith, for a couple of reasons, because it's rare that people get to do that in this business, that a husband and wife get to go on tour at the pinnacle of their careers and get to do stuff together," said McGraw. The PEOPLE Appis now available in the Apple App Store! Download it now for the most binge-worthy celeb content, exclusive video clips, astrology updates and more! Terry Wyatt/Getty Images The pair has toured together several times throughout their careers, and their most recent run of Soul2Soul shows wrapped in 2018. "More importantly," added McGraw, "she makes me a better artist every time I have to sing with her. Because to me, I think Faith, when you listen to her music and you listen to her albums, I think she is probably one of the best singers in the world." "She just really has such a soulful voice, and her musical taste is just so incredible," said the musician. Read the original article onPeople

Tim McGraw Gets Candid About How Meeting Wife Faith Hill 'Saved My Life': 'I Was a Wild Man'

Tim McGraw Gets Candid About How Meeting Wife Faith Hill 'Saved My Life': 'I Was a Wild Man' Tracy Lawrence/Youtube; Amy Sus...
Brandi Glanville Says She's Been 'Hiding Out' Due to 'Cruel Comments on My Appearance' amid Facial DisfigurementNew Foto - Brandi Glanville Says She's Been 'Hiding Out' Due to 'Cruel Comments on My Appearance' amid Facial Disfigurement

BrandiGlanville/X;Paul Archuleta/Getty Brandi Glanville admitted she's been hiding due to negative comments she's gotten about her appearance after struggling with facial disfigurement from suspected "parasites" She said she's now ready to come back to social media "without all the filters and heavy edits" Glanville suspected she first contracted a facial parasite while traveling to Morocco for theReal Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip Brandi Glanvilleadmits that she's hiding as she continues to deal with unexplained health issues. On May 21, theReal Housewives of Beverly Hillsalum posted onXand explained that she's going to start getting back on social media and interacting with her followers. The 52-year-old said she took a brief hiatus because of the negative comments she's gotten while struggling with facial disfigurement from suspected "parasites." "I haven't posted much on any social site lately because I'm hiding out and don't want to deal with the cruel comments on my appearance," she wrote. "But I'll be posting and sharing authentically without all the filters and heavy edits.." The PEOPLE Puzzler crossword is here! How quickly can you solve it? Play now! Glanville has been open about her ongoing struggle with a suspectedfacial parasite, which she believes she contracted in Morocco while filming theReal Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip. The Bravo star said she's spent "over $113,000" of her own money seeking treatment for the mystery condition outside of her health insurance plan. However, she's seen no improvements since. BrandiGlanville/X Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Last month, sheposteda photo of a tub with a brown liquid substance, which she said was drainage from her face. "The clear plaque sitting on top like oily wax is produced all day by my face," she wrote at the time. "It drains down, eroding my teeth. I can't see & have 2 hard lumps under my left cheek bone. 1 on back of neck & jawbone. I need infectious disease Dr. that specializes in fungal infections? HELP." Earlier this year, the reality star said she'll "do anything" to resolve her facial disfigurement. "I'm sick of hearing myself complain. I'm sick of everything. I'm sick of the way I look. I'm sick of, like, just hiding out in my house," Glanville said on the Jan. 13 episode of her podcastBrandi Glanville Unfiltered."I'm sick of being sick. So if it bothers you and you're my friend and you call me and tell me we have to get over this, like, sick talk, I agree. I would like to get over the sickness altogether." But, Glanville said, "Let's try to be more positive moving forward. I'm saying that to myself right now … I mean, we have nowhere to go but up." Read the original article onPeople

Brandi Glanville Says She’s Been ‘Hiding Out’ Due to ‘Cruel Comments on My Appearance’ amid Facial Disfigurement

Brandi Glanville Says She's Been 'Hiding Out' Due to 'Cruel Comments on My Appearance' amid Facial Disfigurement BrandiG...

 

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