Reflecting the Make America Healthy Again movement’s focus on diet, 53 medical schools across 31 states have agreed to update their approach to nutrition education at the behest of the Trump administration.
MAHA leaders say the agreements, unveiled at an event on Thursday, showcase their ability to find common ground with the medical establishment in the quest to combat chronic disease even amid major conflicts over issues like vaccine policy.
Agency officials said that each of the schools agreed to three specific actions:
- Performing a “comprehensive curriculum assessment” to understand the amount of nutrition education the schools currently offer
- Nominating a “faculty champion” to advance nutrition education
- Creating a public landing page with the school’s plan for getting to 40 hours of nutrition education or the equivalent starting in fall 2026
“To be clear, today’s announcement is not the Trump administration dictating medical curriculum,” health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said about the agreements, some details of which were reported earlier by The New York Times. “Today represents a mutual recognition that HHS and leaders in American medicine can come together to advance shared goals and interests.”