סעקרעטערי קענעדי זאגט אז דזשאנק דייעטס שאדט פאר די געזונט
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has launched a nationwide advocacy campaign highlighting the public health dangers of ultra-processed foods, framing them as central contributors to both obesity and malnutrition in the United States. Speaking in support of the “Eat Real Food” initiative, Kennedy emphasized that diets high in low-nutrition, calorie-dense products are damaging Americans’ health, noting that over 42 percent of adults in the U.S. are classified as obese according to CDC data.
Kennedy criticized the modern food system for promoting cheap, subsidized processed foods at the expense of nutritional quality, warning that these dietary patterns are driving a dual crisis in which individuals are simultaneously overfed and undernourished. He stated, “We’re being given food that is low in nutrition and high in calories — and it's destroying our health... We're seeing in our population people who are obscenely obese and, at the same time, malnourished.”
The initiative aligns with recently revamped federal Dietary Guidelines aimed at prioritizing whole foods, fruits, vegetables, and minimally processed staples over high-calorie, low-nutrient items. Kennedy cited research linking processed foods to elevated health risks, including a 2023 BMJ study that found consumption of ultra-processed products is associated with a 32 percent higher mortality risk.
As part of the campaign, Kennedy is traveling nationwide to raise awareness, engage stakeholders, and encourage reforms in both public and private sectors. The initiative also seeks to redirect federal incentives, historically favoring commodity crops used in processed foods, toward support for nutritionally dense alternatives that can improve overall population health.
Experts note that Kennedy’s approach addresses both the systemic and individual aspects of the obesity and malnutrition epidemic. By targeting food production, dietary guidance, and consumer behavior simultaneously, the “Eat Real Food” initiative aims to reduce preventable diseases such as diabetes, cardiovascular conditions, and nutrient deficiencies, while promoting sustainable, health-focused eating patterns.
The HHS secretary’s advocacy underscores a growing recognition that improving national health outcomes requires more than public awareness—it demands structural policy changes, industry engagement, and coordinated nutritional strategies to reverse decades of reliance on low-quality processed foods.