Connect with us

Health

Trump and a healthier America welcomed by doctors: 'New golden age'

Published

on

Trump and a healthier America welcomed by doctors: 'New golden age'

Join Fox News for access to this content

Plus special access to select articles and other premium content with your account – free of charge.

By entering your email and pushing continue, you are agreeing to Fox News’ Terms of Use and Privacy Policy, which includes our Notice of Financial Incentive.

Please enter a valid email address.

Having trouble? Click here.

With President Donald Trump back in the White House, many of America’s doctors are welcoming the new administration’s greater focus on health and wellness.

The Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) initiative — led by incoming Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. — aims to improve nutrition, eliminate toxins, preserve natural habitats and fight the chronic disease epidemic, according to its website.

Advertisement

Several physicians shared with Fox News Digital what they hope and expect to see on the health front during the next four years.

BMI IS WRONG WAY TO MEASURE OBESITY, RESEARCHERS SAY — HERE’S WHAT THEY RECOMMEND INSTEAD

‘Return to community and family’

As Trump takes back the White House, Dr. Marc Siegel, Fox News senior medical analyst, said he looks forward to a greater focus on mental health.

President Donald Trump departs an indoor Presidential Inauguration parade event in Washington on Monday, Jan. 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke) (AP Newsroom)

“The mental health epidemic is worsening, including among our teens,” he told Fox News Digital — a problem that he said is worsened by “social media overreach.”

Advertisement

“The best approach is connectivity, and a return to a time of community and family priorities,” said Siegel, who is also a clinical professor of medicine at NYU Langone Health. “I am hopeful that President Trump will emphasize this.”

“The best approach is connectivity, and a return to a time of community and family priorities.”

The doctor is also optimistic that the new administration will focus on pandemic preparedness, based on lessons learned from COVID-19.

In particular, Siegel said he hopes to see increased surveillance, advances in biotechnology and the use of artificial intelligence to track threats.

Personalized medicine will also be a focus in Trump’s White House, Siegel predicted, with an increased use of wearables.

Advertisement

Personalized medicine will also be a focus in Trump’s White House, Siegel predicted, with an increased use of wearables. (CyberGuy.com)

“We could save hundreds of billions of dollars with DOGE (Department of Government Efficiency) and HHS addressing health care rather than sick care,” Siegel said. 

“The focus will be on wellness, lifestyle, exercise and diet,” he added, along with a “war on ultraprocessed foods.”

‘Aspirational’ health and happiness

Dr. Ken Berry, a family physician and diabetes specialist in Tennessee, shared with Fox News Digital that he hopes Trump’s presidency will be a “new golden age for American health.”

“For too long, the practice of medicine has been polluted by corporate profits, questionable research, silenced physicians and misleading statements to the public,” said Berry, who helps patients overcome obesity, insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes.

Advertisement

SURGEON SHARES STORY OF INSURANCE PROVIDER CALLING DURING PATIENT’S SURGERY

“I hope to see a thoughtful re-evaluation of all existing research, the restoration of an unhindered doctor-patient relationship, the cessation of direct-to-consumer pharmaceutical advertising, and an end to Big Food’s misleading health claims,” Berry went on.

The doctor also encourages a “vigorous effort” to educate Americans on genuinely healthy food and lifestyle choices, along with a “renewed cultural appreciation for the idea that being healthy and happy is not only achievable, but also aspirational.”

Public health prioritized

Dr. Robert Lufkin, a California physician who is also a medical professor at UCLA and USC, applauded the new administration’s goal to address the rise in chronic diseases, including a focus on lifestyle factors and exposure to chemicals.

“I am excited about this administration’s possible health actions in several areas,” he shared with Fox News Digital.

Advertisement

One doctor said he hopes President Trump will emphasize connectivity among families and communities. (iStock)

In particular, Lufkin said the new administration aims to “prioritize research into environmental triggers such as pesticides, industrial pollutants and food additives.”

“They also plan to advocate for transparency in corporate practices and stricter regulation of industries contributing to environmental degradation,” he added.

NUTRITIONISTS REACT TO THE RED FOOD DYE BAN: ‘TOOK FAR TOO LONG’

Lufkin also highlighted MAHA’s goal to improve food safety and nutrition and to reduce exposure to unhealthy substances.

Advertisement

“This could be done by regulating harmful ingredients like artificial sweeteners, high-fructose corn syrup and chemical additives in processed foods,” he said.

Lufkin also supports the administration’s goal to restrict unhealthy foods for public assistance programs and to encourage local and sustainable farming.

Shifting the health care system’s focus from treatment to prevention is an important part of MAHA’s agenda, one doctor noted. (iStock)

Shifting the health care system’s focus from treatment to prevention is another important part of MAHA’s agenda, the doctor noted.

This could involve expanding alternative and holistic therapies and educating the public on the importance of lifestyle changes, including exercise, proper nutrition and stress management, he noted.

Advertisement

“Another goal is to minimize reliance on pharmaceuticals and encourage the use of natural treatments and non-drug interventions for common conditions,” Lufkin said.

The doctor also applauded the new administration’s plans to combat corporate influence in health care, and to “examine the pharmaceutical and chemical industries’ values of prioritizing profits over public health.”

Transparency in health care costs

Dr. Shana Johnson, a physical medicine and rehabilitation physician in Scottsdale, Arizona, said she hopes the Trump administration continues to build on its policy of increasing price transparency for clinics, hospitals, health insurers and pharmaceutical companies. 

“Hidden prices, manipulated many times over, have allowed Americans to be overcharged and exploited for profit, whether it’s generic medications being marked up by 1,000% or an emergency room visit for dehydration costing $5,000,” she told Fox News Digital. 

CHILDREN EXPOSED TO HIGHER FLUORIDE LEVELS FOUND TO HAVE LOWER IQS, STUDY REVEALS

Advertisement

In many cases, she noted, prices are “essentially hidden and manipulated,” which means the consumer has no idea of the cost basis or true value of a service.  

“I am seeing more price manipulation to make it look like health insurance is paying for services, when they are actually upcharging the service,” she said. 

“For example, if I pay the cash price for a mammogram, it is less expensive than if I use my health insurance,” Johnson went on. “This is true for generic drugs as well.”

Mental health resilience

The Trump administration has a “great opportunity” to address the growing mental health crisis in America, according to Jonathan Alpert, a psychotherapist in Manhattan and Washington, D.C.

“I truly believe the Trump administration has an opportunity and responsibility to address mental health in a way that helps people build resilience, not just catering to political or cultural trends,” he told Fox News Digital.

Advertisement

The Trump administration has a “great opportunity” to address the growing mental health crisis in America, a psychotherapist noted. (iStock)

One of Alpert’s big concerns, he shared, is that the “woke” culture may be inadvertently contributing to a mental health crisis. 

“While it’s important to validate emotions and acknowledge systemic challenges, there’s a growing trend of overpathologizing normal human struggles and promoting victimhood as an identity,” Alpert said. 

Rather than “overemphasizing individual traumas or identity-based grievances,” Alpert calls for a focus on accountability and personal growth.

“We need policies that foster self-reliance and mental toughness while still offering support for those who genuinely struggle.”

Advertisement

“We need policies that foster self-reliance and mental toughness while still offering support for those who genuinely struggle,” he said.

In Trump’s administration, Alpert said he hopes to see a commitment to mental health initiatives that foster both support and personal responsibility. 

“Not every challenge is trauma, not every disagreement is harmful and not every failure stems from systemic oppression.” (iStock)

“This includes improving access to therapy, but also addressing how social media, divisive rhetoric and identity politics are affecting young people’s sense of self-worth and mental health,” he said. 

“There’s a real danger in allowing cultural narratives to dictate how we approach mental health, turning it into a political battleground instead of a space for growth.”

Advertisement

      

“Not every challenge is trauma, not every disagreement is harmful and not every failure stems from systemic oppression,” Alpert went on. 

Rather than encouraging victimhood, therapy should help people take ownership of their lives, develop resilience and thrive despite adversity, according to the psychotherapist.

Prosperity through health

As Donald Trump assumes the presidency, the U.S. looks to his administration with hopes for “substantial improvements in public health,” according to Dr. Brett Osborn, a Florida neurosurgeon and longevity expert.

“A key expectation is a commitment to reforming health care policy to make it more accessible and affordable,” he told Fox News Digital.                        

Advertisement

Doctors support MAHA’s goal to improve food safety and nutrition and to reduce exposure to unhealthy substances. (iStock)

“This could involve fostering competition in the health care market (thereby driving insurance premiums down), enhancing price transparency at the hospital level, and expanding coverage options to ensure that families across all income levels receive adequate care.”

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR HEALTH NEWSLETTER

Osborn also hopes that the administration will tackle obesity by incentivizing healthier food options, more explicit nutritional labeling, and support for physical activity initiatives at schools.

“Furthermore, addressing food supplies in underserved areas could promote better access to fresh, nutrient-rich foods, reducing diet-related illnesses such as diabetes and heart disease,” he added.  

Advertisement

“Without health on an individual and national scale, the nation will continue to falter.”

Another expectation is an emphasis on preventive instead of reactive care, according to Osborn.

“Encouraging regular health screenings to identify risk factors for disease and supporting wellness education campaigns could significantly reduce the burden of preventable diseases,” he said.

For more Health articles, visit www.foxnews.com/health

Ultimately, Osborn went on, the new administration has the potential to prioritize health — “not just as a matter of policy, but as a cornerstone of national prosperity.” 

Advertisement

“Without health on an individual and national scale, the nation will continue to falter,” the doctor said. 

“However, as President Trump said during his inauguration speech, ‘From this moment on, America’s decline is over.’”

Health

Nearly half of seniors improve with age — and researchers think they know why

Published

on

Nearly half of seniors improve with age — and researchers think they know why

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Aging is often depicted as a steady decline, but new research suggests that many older adults actually improve over time.

Using more than a decade of data from a large, representative study of older Americans, Yale University researchers found that nearly half of adults 65 and older showed improvement in cognitive function, physical function or both.

The improvements were consistent across the study population, and were linked to the participants’ mindset about aging, according to a press release.

SOME 80-YEAR-OLDS STILL HAVE RAZOR-SHARP BRAINS — AND NOW SCIENTISTS KNOW WHY

Advertisement

“In contrast to a predominant belief or stereotype that age is a time of continuous and inevitable decline, we found evidence that a meaningful number of older persons actually show improvement over 12 years in cognitive and/or physical health,” lead author Becca Levy, a professor of social and behavioral sciences at Yale, told Fox News Digital.

The research, which was published in the journal Geriatrics, relied on data from the Health and Retirement Study, a federally supported, long-running survey of older Americans.

The results were consistent across the study population, rather than being limited to a small group of high performers. (iStock)

Researchers tracked changes in cognition using global performance tests and measured physical function based on walking speed, which was seen as a “vital sign” because of its strong links to disability, hospitalization and mortality.

Over a 12-year period, 45% of participants improved either mentally or physically. About 32% showed cognitive gains, while 28% improved physically, according to the study.

Advertisement

DOCTOR SHARES 3 SIMPLE CHANGES TO STAY HEALTHY AND INDEPENDENT AS YOU AGE

“If you average everyone together, you see decline,” Levy said. “But when you look at individual trajectories, you uncover a very different story. A meaningful percentage of the older participants … got better.”

TEST YOURSELF WITH OUR LATEST LIFESTYLE QUIZ

A participant’s beliefs about aging appeared to influence the results, as those with more positive age beliefs were significantly more likely to show improvements in both cognition and walking speed.

Over a 12-year period, 45% of participants improved either mentally or physically, researchers found. (iStock)

Advertisement

This remained true even after accounting for factors such as age, sex, education, chronic disease, depression and the length of follow-up. Improvements were seen even among participants who started with “normal” levels of function, not just those recovering from injuries or illness. 

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

“Individuals who have taken in more positive age beliefs … tend to have a lower stress response and lower stress biomarkers,” Levy said. Because age beliefs are modifiable, she noted, there could be a capacity for improvements later in life.

The study did have some limitations, the researchers acknowledged. It didn’t look at how muscles or brain cells change and adapt, which could help explain why people improved.

“Individuals who have taken in more positive age beliefs … tend to have a lower stress response and lower stress biomarkers,” the researcher said. (iStock)

Advertisement

Future studies should examine improvement patterns for other types of cognition, such as spatial memory, they added.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE HEALTH STORIES

“In addition, although our participants were drawn from a nationally representative sample, it would be useful to examine patterns of improvement in additional cohorts that have a greater representation of different ethnic minority groups,” the researchers noted in the study.

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR HEALTH NEWSLETTER

The authors said they hope the findings will debunk the myth that continuous physical and cognitive decline is inevitable.

Advertisement

“We found evidence that there could be psychological pathways, behavioral pathways and physiological pathways [by which age beliefs impact health],” said Levy. “It’s common, and it should be included in our understanding of the aging process.”

Continue Reading

Health

Male fertility rates crash as doctors reveal health threats: ‘Something very wrong’

Published

on

Male fertility rates crash as doctors reveal health threats: ‘Something very wrong’

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Scientists and physicians agree that there’s been a general decline in male fertility — but they aren’t sure why.

Social media buzz has pointed to a few environmental exposures as potential factors, including cellphones and electric vehicles.

But the reality is “more complicated” than that, according to experts who recently spoke to National Geographic.

ORIGIN OF DEADLY CANCER AFFECTING YOUNG ADULTS REVEALED IN ALARMING REPORT

Advertisement

Although it’s not clear whether the decline is at a stage where it should be considered a crisis, numbers show that overall fertility — demographically measured by the number of babies born compared to women of child-bearing age — has decreased.

Scientists and physicians agree that there’s been a general decline in male fertility. (iStock)

Dr. Alex Robles of the Columbia University Fertility Center in New York confirmed that clinical practitioners are “certainly seeing more couples where the male factor contributes to infertility.”

CELLPHONE HEALTH RISKS IN FOCUS OF NEW GOVERNMENT STUDY: ‘VERY CONCERNED’

“At least one-third of couples we evaluate have some male component,” he told Fox News Digital.

Advertisement

A 2017 meta-analysis published in Oxford Journals: Human Reproduction Update found that sperm counts in Western countries have declined by almost 60% globally since 1973. The 2023 update confirmed these same results.

Urologists can track declining fertility in sperm quality, while demographic data uses the number of babies born compared to women of child-bearing age as a benchmark, according to National Geographic. (iStock)

Lead study author and epidemiologist Hagai Levine warned that this trend could lead to human extinction if it isn’t addressed.

“This is the canary in the coal mine,” Levine, public health physician at the Hebrew University-Hadassah Braun School of Public Health, told National Geographic. “It signifies that something is very wrong with our current environment, as lower sperm counts predict morbidity and mortality.”   

DOCTORS WARN SOME POPULAR FOODS AND DRINKS COULD BE SECRETLY SABOTAGING MEN’S TESTOSTERONE LEVELS

Advertisement

These findings have been contradicted by other studies, however. A 2025 Cleveland Clinic analysis of studies from the last 53 years found sperm counts to be steady.

“There is no evidence to suggest that this decline is the cause of a precipitous decline in the ability to cause pregnancies,” primary study author Scott Lundy, a reproductive urologist at Cleveland Clinic, told National Geographic. “Most men, even with a modest decline in sperm counts, will still have no issues conceiving.”

Potential factors of decline

Multiple lifestyle factors can lead to a decline in male fertility, Robles noted, including obesity, smoking and diet, as well as environmental exposures and delayed parenthood.

National Geographic also reported that heavy drinking and marijuana use directly contribute to declining fertility and that quitting these habits, while also exercising and losing weight, can help.

Smoking of any kind can contribute to a decline in fertility, according to experts. (iStock)

Advertisement

Systemic inflammation, infection and disease can also have a “big, profound effect on the current status of fertility,” Lundy told National Geographic. 

Those who are getting over a fever from an infection, like the flu or COVID, will have a “drastically lower” sperm count for three months, he said.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Male infertility can also be a marker of overall health, according to Robles. “Poor semen parameters are associated with other medical conditions and may signal underlying metabolic, hormonal or environmental issues,” he told Fox News Digital.

Experts recommend seeing a doctor to discuss fertility concerns instead of relying on the internet. (iStock)

Advertisement

Allan Pacey, deputy dean of the Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health at the University of Manchester, told National Geographic that the decline could be caused by increased use of contraception, as well as men waiting longer to have children or choosing not to have them at all.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE HEALTH STORIES

Microplastics have also been raised on social media as a potential culprit, but the effects are unclear, according to experts.

There is some evidence of endocrine-disrupting chemicals — which are substances found in reusable plastics and some disposable products — altering male fertility, Lundy revealed to National Geographic.

Myths busted

Concerns have circulated on social media that keeping a cellphone in a front pocket could harm male fertility. While Lundy said such an effect is biologically possible, there is currently no scientific evidence supporting the claim.

Advertisement

Another common myth is that infertility is mostly a women’s issue, Robles noted, but male factors contribute to about one-third to one-half of all cases.

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR HEALTH NEWSLETTER

The claim that taking supplements can boost sperm counts is another common myth, he said, adding that it’s not backed by strong scientific evidence.

“Men should focus on factors that we know matter: maintaining a healthy weight, avoiding tobacco, limiting alcohol and managing chronic health conditions,” Robles advised. 

One common myth is that infertility is mostly a women’s issue, but male factors contribute to about one-third to one-half of all cases. (iStock)

Advertisement

Experts recommend seeing a urologist to address fertility concerns. Robles said his approach begins with an evaluation, semen analysis, hormonal testing and medical history, while also exploring lifestyle factors.

TEST YOURSELF WITH OUR LATEST LIFESTYLE QUIZ

In addition to traditional treatment options, Robles said his fertility center also uses advanced tools that incorporate AI and robotics.

“Technologies like this are expanding options for patients who previously had very limited paths to biological parenthood,” he said.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Health

Goodbye, Late-Night Cravings! How To Curb Hunger and Make Weight Loss Easier

Published

on

Goodbye, Late-Night Cravings! How To Curb Hunger and Make Weight Loss Easier


Advertisement





How To Curb Late-Night Cravings and Make Weight Loss Easier | Woman’s World




















Advertisement





Advertisement


Use left and right arrow keys to navigate between menu items.


Use escape to exit the menu.

Advertisement

Continue Reading

Trending