Kennedy nutrition pledge lacks enforcement as health costs rise

Kennedy nutrition pledge lacks enforcement as health costs rise

Spread the love

The federal government is spending $5 million on a voluntary medical school nutrition initiative, but fewer than 40% of the nation’s 202 accredited medical schools have signed on.

The Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Education announced that 73 schools have pledged to require at least 40 hours of nutrition education across four years of medical school beginning in fall 2026.

The initiative carries no enforcement mechanism, and schools that fail to meet their pledges will face no penalties.

Federal spending on Medicare, Medicaid and related health programs is projected to increase from $1.9 trillion in 2026 to $3.1 trillion in 2036, according to the Congressional Budget Office’s February 2026 Budget and Economic Outlook.

The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a nonpartisan fiscal watchdog, estimates federal health program spending has increased 80% over the past decade and will grow another 63% by 2036. CBO attributes that growth to an aging population and rising per-beneficiary health costs.

HHS launched a $2.1 million National Institutes of Health challenge grant as the first phase of a $5 million initiative to help institutions develop coursework, clinical training and research in nutrition science. Remaining funding will support nursing programs, residency programs and dietitian programs in subsequent phases.

HHS did not identify the budget line funding the initiative, has not published benchmarks to measure its success and did not respond to questions about when it would project cost savings.

Medical students reported receiving an average of 1.2 hours of formal nutrition education each year, according to a survey conducted in 2022 and published in the Journal of Wellness.

“We’ve let the medical schools be the adults in the room,” said Sam Waters, a counselor in HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s immediate office.

Dr. Jessica Snowden, vice chancellor for research at the University of Tennessee Health Sciences Center, one of the 73 signing schools, said nutrition is central to patient care.

“Nutrition is not a side issue in healthcare,” Snowden said. “It’s fundamental to many of the things that we need to have a healthy lifespan.”

More than 120 accredited U.S. medical schools have not signed the pledge, including Harvard, Johns Hopkins, Stanford, Columbia and Yale, according to directories maintained by the Liaison Committee on Medical Education and the American Association of Colleges of Osteopathic Medicine.

Harvard Medical School told The Center Square it has been expanding nutrition education since 2019 and is developing additional competencies, but did not say whether it considered and declined to sign the pledge.

Johns Hopkins and Stanford did not respond to requests for comment.

Eight major accrediting and testing organizations voluntarily committed to incorporating nutrition into physician training and licensing standards, including the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, the National Board of Medical Examiners and the Liaison Committee on Medical Education.

The National Board of Medical Examiners said about 15% of the United States Medical Licensing Examination sequence will assess nutrition-related knowledge, following enhancements to nutrition content announced in April across all three steps of the exam.

Kennedy said Monday the country “cannot solve the chronic disease burden without addressing nutrition.”

“We spend about 48 cents out of every federal dollar that Americans pay in taxes on healthcare,” Kennedy said.

Kennedy did not identify a source for the figure. A 2019 opinion piece by Dr. Marty Makary, then a Johns Hopkins professor who later served as Kennedy’s FDA Commissioner before leaving the post in May 2026.

Makary estimated that 48% of federal spending goes to what he called the “medical-industrial complex,” a broader category that includes pharmaceutical companies, medical device manufacturers and other health industries not captured in standard federal budget accounting.

Independent budget analyses using standard federal budget definitions put the figure lower. KFF, a nonpartisan health policy research organization, estimates federal health spending accounts for about 27 cents of every federal dollar. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, citing Congressional Budget Office data, puts the figure at 24 cents when counting Medicare, Medicaid, the Children’s Health Insurance Program and Affordable Care Act subsidies.

HHS did not answer questions about the methodology behind Kennedy’s spending claim.

The National Board of Medical Examiners did not respond to questions about whether its commitment to assess nutrition on licensing exams is binding or voluntary.

In a statement, HHS said the initiative aims to “reduce the growing financial burden of chronic disease on taxpayers.”

Kennedy has said nutrition education is central to reversing what he calls the chronic disease epidemic driving federal health costs.

“We’re training future physicians to address the root causes of diseases, not simply manage their consequences,” Kennedy said.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Screenshot 2025-11-26 at 7.32.09 AM

Village Hall to Get $412,000 Fire Sprinkler Replacement After System Failure

Village of Monee Board Meeting | August 13, 2025 Article Summary: Following the failure of the original 1997 fire sprinkler system due to corrosion, the Monee Village Board approved a...
crete-monee school district graphic.6

Crete-Monee Board Adopts School Improvement Plans for 2025-2026

Article Summary: The Crete-Monee Board of Education has approved the 2025-2026 School Improvement Plans (SIPs) for all eight schools in the district. The plans, which are a federal requirement for...
Exec Cmte 8.14.25.3

Executive Committee Considers $12,000 Strategic Planning Initiative with University of St. Francis

Article Summary: The Will County Executive Committee is considering a proposal from the University of St. Francis to lead a six-month, $12,178 strategic planning process. The initiative is aimed at...
crete-monee school district graphic.5

Board Approves Over $4.4 Million for Major Construction Projects

Article Summary: The Crete-Monee School Board authorized payments totaling over $4.4 million for significant construction and renovation work at Crete-Monee High School and Crete Elementary School. The payments cover ongoing...
Exec Cmte 8.14.25.2

Executive Committee Members Decry Roadside Litter, Call for Action Against Garbage Haulers

Article Summary: Will County Executive Committee members expressed frustration over what they described as a worsening problem of litter blowing from garbage trucks across the county. Members called for better...
crete-monee school district graphic.4

District Presses Village of Monee on TIF Expiration, Moves to Sell School Property

Article Summary: Crete-Monee officials are urging the Village of Monee to finalize the expiration of a key tax increment financing (TIF) district before a November deadline to ensure the school...
Ad Hoc.8.12.25.3

Will County Updates Solid Waste Ordinance, Increases Fines and Reporting to Landfill Committee

Article Summary: The Will County Ad-Hoc Ordinance Review Committee advanced an updated solid waste ordinance that doubles the maximum fine for violations and requires the county auditor's annual report to...
Ad Hoc.8.12.25.2

Citing Liability Concerns, Will County Committee Postpones Vote on Septic System Ordinance

Article Summary: The Will County Ad-Hoc Ordinance Review Committee postponed a vote on updating its sewer and sewage disposal ordinance after a member raised significant concerns about the county's liability...
Ad Hoc.8.12.25.1

Will County Moves to Repeal Obsolete 1972 Fire Hydrant Ordinance

Article Summary: An ordinance from 1972 regulating the placement and specifications of fire hydrants in Will County is set to be repealed after the Ad-Hoc Ordinance Review Committee approved its...
Committee of teh Whole 8.12.25

Will County Board Gets Back to Basics with Robert’s Rules of Order Training

Article Summary: The Will County Board Committee of the Whole received a detailed training session on Robert's Rules of Order from parliamentary expert Matthew Prochaska to clarify procedures for conducting...
Exec Cmte 8.14.25.1

Executive Committee Approves Amended Houbolt Bridge Agreement to Settle Litigation

Article Summary: The Will County Executive Committee has approved an amendment to the Houbolt Road Toll Bridge agreement, formalizing a settlement between the bridge operators and the City of Joliet....
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Board Committee of the Whole for August 12, 2025

The Will County Board’s Committee of the Whole dedicated its August 12 meeting to an in-depth training session on Robert’s Rules of Order, aiming to foster more efficient and orderly...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Ad-Hoc Ordinance Review Committee for August 12, 2025

The Will County Ad-Hoc Ordinance Review Committee advanced several updated chapters of the county’s public works code during its August 12 meeting, addressing topics from solid waste to waste hauler...
Screenshot 2025-11-26 at 7.30.24 AM

Monee Board Approves $1.7 Million Payment for Critical Water Main Redundancy

Village of Monee Board Meeting | August 13, 2025 Article Summary: The Monee Village Board authorized a substantial payment of over $1.7 million to Iroquois Paving for the Ridgeland and...
WCO-Landfill-8.5.25.2

Report Finding Few Trucks Littering Sparks Debate on Cleanup Responsibility

Article Summary: A Will County report found that a very small percentage of waste-hauling trucks are the source of litter on roadways near the county landfill, sparking a debate among...