January 17, 2026
Back to all stories

RFK Jr.’s Planned 'Administration for a Healthy America' Stalled Amid HHS Cuts

NPR reports that Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s promised Administration for a Healthy America (AHA) — a new umbrella agency he unveiled in March 2025 to replace much of HHS’s existing structure — still does not exist nearly a year later, even as major cuts have already hit departments like CDC, HRSA and SAMHSA. A June budget request sketches AHA as a home for programs in primary care, environmental health, HIV/AIDS, maternal and child health, mental and behavioral health, and workforce development, but Congress provided no funding and key Hill committee staff say there has been no outreach from Kennedy’s team to authorize or bankroll it. Instead, seven current and former federal health officials tell NPR that planning is happening in rushed, secretive internal meetings, with senior staff ordered to provide budget and personnel data on short deadlines at the direction of an opaque circle of Kennedy loyalists. HHS refused to answer specific questions and offered only a boilerplate statement that planning is "still underway," leaving rank‑and‑file employees unclear which programs and jobs will survive and how the rapid April 1, 2025 cuts tie into any coherent reorganization. The piece underscores a widening gap between the administration’s rhetoric about "eliminating the alphabet soup" at HHS and the actual state of play: a hollowed‑out department, no appropriated money or clear blueprint for AHA, and growing anxiety inside the federal health bureaucracy over whether there is a workable plan at all.

Federal Health Policy Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and MAHA

📌 Key Facts

  • RFK Jr. announced the Administration for a Healthy America in March 2025 as a sweeping replacement for many HHS agencies, saying he would 'eliminate an entire alphabet soup' while preserving core functions.
  • A June 2025 HHS budget request describes AHA as covering primary care, environmental health, HIV/AIDS, maternal and child health, mental and behavioral health, and workforce development programs now scattered across CDC, HRSA, SAMHSA and other offices.
  • Congress gave AHA no dedicated funding in the latest HHS appropriations, and Hill committee staff told NPR there have been no serious authorization or budget talks with Kennedy’s team.
  • Seven current and former federal health officials say AHA planning is being done through secretive, last‑minute data demands and closed meetings run by a small circle of unnamed Kennedy confidants, while many HHS staff and units have already been cut or eliminated since April 1, 2025.
  • HHS declined to answer detailed questions and issued only a brief statement saying planning for AHA is still underway, offering no timeline or public organizational chart.

📊 Relevant Data

In 2023, the maternal mortality rate for non-Hispanic Black women was 50.3 deaths per 100,000 live births, compared to 14.5 for non-Hispanic White women and 19.0 for Hispanic women.

Health E-Stat 100: Maternal Mortality Rates in the United States, 2023 — CDC

In 2023, the HIV prevalence rate for Black individuals was 1,245 per 100,000 population, which is 7 times higher than the rate for White individuals at 180 per 100,000.

AIDSVu Launches 2023 Data and Interactive Maps, Highlighting Progress and Persistent Challenges in the HIV Epidemic — AIDSVu

Among adults reporting fair or poor mental health, 50% of White adults received mental health services in the past three years, compared to 39% of Hispanic adults and 35% of Black adults.

Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Mental Health Care — KFF

Black and Asian populations experience the greatest absolute disparities in health burdens from PM2.5 and ozone pollution from oil and gas activities, with higher exposure rates compared to White populations.

The health burden and racial-ethnic disparities of air pollution from the oil and gas lifecycle stages in the United States — Science Advances

In 2023, only 5.7% of physicians in the US identified as Black or African American, despite Black individuals comprising about 13.6% of the population.

Black History Month 2025: The healthcare workforce and diversity initiatives — Chartis

Hispanic (45%), American Indian/Alaska Native (41%), and Black (36%) adults are more likely than White adults (32%) to report going without a recent visit to a dentist or dental clinic, indicating disparities in primary care access.

Key Data on Health and Health Care by Race and Ethnicity — KFF

📰 Source Timeline (1)

Follow how coverage of this story developed over time