
‘MAHA Report' calls for fighting chronic disease, but Trump and Kennedy have yanked funding
Yet in its feverish purge of federal health programs, it has proposed eliminating the National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion and its annual funding of $1.4 billion.
That's one of many disconnects between what the administration says about health — notably, in the 'MAHA Report' that President Donald Trump recently presented at the White House — and what it's actually doing, scientists and public health advocates say.
Among other contradictions:
The report says more research is needed on health-related topics such as chronic diseases and the cumulative effects of chemicals in the environment. But the Trump administration's mass cancellation of federal research grants to scientists at universities, including Harvard, has derailed studies on those subjects.
The report denounces industry-funded research on chemicals and health as widespread and unreliable. But the administration is seeking to cut government funding that could serve as a counterweight.
The report calls for 'fearless gold-standard science.' But the administration has sowed widespread fear in the scientific world that it is out to stifle or skew research that challenges its desired conclusions.
'There are many inconsistencies between rhetoric and action,' said Alonzo Plough, chief science officer at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, a philanthropy focused on health.
The report, a cornerstone of President Donald Trump's 'Make America Healthy Again' agenda, was issued by a commission that includes Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and other top administration officials.
News organizations found that it footnoted nonexistent sources and contained signs that it was produced with help from artificial intelligence. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt described the problems as 'formatting issues,' and the administration revised the report.
Trump ordered the report to assess causes of a 'childhood chronic disease crisis.' His commission is now working on a plan of action.
Spokespeople for the White House and Department of Health and Human Services did not respond to questions for this article.
The MAHA report says environmental chemicals may pose risks to children's health. Citing the National Institutes of Health, it said there's a 'need for continued studies from the public and private sectors, especially the NIH, to better understand the cumulative load of multiple exposures and how it may impact children's health.'
Meanwhile, the administration has cut funding for related studies.
For example, in 2020 the Environmental Protection Agency asked scientists to propose ways of researching children's exposure to chemicals from soil and dust. It said that, for kids ages 6 months to 6 years, ingesting particulates — by putting their hands on the ground or floor then in their mouths — could be a significant means of exposure to contaminants such as herbicides, pesticides, and a group of chemicals known as PFAS.
One of the grants — for almost $1.4 million over several years — went to a team of scientists at Johns Hopkins University and the University of California-San Francisco. Researchers gained permission to collect samples from people's homes, including dust and diapers.
But, beyond a small test run, they didn't get to analyze the urine and stool samples because the grant was terminated this spring, said study leader Keeve Nachman, a professor of environmental health and engineering at Hopkins.
'The objectives of the award are no longer consistent with EPA funding priorities,' the agency said in a May 10 termination notice.
Another EPA solicitation from 2020 addressed many of the issues the MAHA report highlighted: cumulative exposures to chemicals and developmental problems such as attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, obesity, anxiety, and depression. One of the resulting grants funded the Center for Early Life Exposures and Neurotoxicity at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. That grant was ended weeks early in May, said the center's director, Stephanie Engel, a UNC professor of epidemiology.
In a statement, EPA press secretary Brigit Hirsch said the agency 'is continuing to invest in research and labs to advance the mission of protecting human health and the environment.' Due to an agency reorganization, 'the way these grants are administered will be different going forward,' said Hirsch, who did not otherwise answer questions about specific grants.
In its battle with Harvard, the Trump administration has stopped paying for research the NIH had commissioned on topics such as how autism might be related to paternal exposure to air pollution.
The loss of millions of dollars of NIH funding has also undermined data-gathering for long-term research on chronic diseases, Harvard researchers said. A series of projects with names like Nurses' Health Study II and Nurses' Health Study 3 have been tracking thousands of people for decades and aimed to keep tracking them as long as possible as well as enrolling new participants, even across generations.
The work has included periodically surveying participants — mainly nurses and other health professionals who enrolled to support science — and collecting biological samples such as blood, urine, stool, or toenail clippings.
Researchers studying health problems such as autism, ADHD, or cancer could tap the data and samples to trace potential contributing factors, said Francine Laden, an environmental epidemiologist at Harvard's T.H. Chan School of Public Health. The information could retrospectively reveal exposures before people were born — when they were still in utero — and exposures their parents experienced before they were conceived.
Harvard expected that some of the grants wouldn't be renewed, but the Trump administration brought ongoing funding to an abrupt end, said Walter Willett, a professor of epidemiology and nutrition at the Chan school.
As a result, researchers are scrambling to find money to keep following more than 200,000 people who enrolled in studies beginning in the 1980s — including children of participants who are now adults themselves — and to preserve about 2 million samples, Willett said.
'So now our ability to do exactly what the administration wants to do is jeopardized,' said Jorge Chavarro, a professor of nutrition and epidemiology at the Chan school. 'And there's not an equivalent resource. It's not like you can magically recreate these resources without having to wait 20 or 30 years to be able to answer the questions' that the Trump administration 'wants answered now.'
Over the past few months, the administration has fired or pushed out almost 5,000 NIH employees, blocked almost $3 billion in grant funding from being awarded, and terminated almost 2,500 grants totaling almost $5 billion, said Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), vice chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, at a June 10 hearing on the NIH budget.
In addition, research institutions have been waiting months to receive money under grants they've already been awarded, Murray said.
In canceling hundreds of grants with race, gender, or sexuality dimensions, the administration engaged in blatant discrimination, a federal judge ruled on June 16.
After issuing the MAHA report, the administration published budget proposals to cut funding for the NIH by $17.0 billion, or 38%, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention by $550 million, or 12%, and the EPA by $5 billion, or 54%.
'This budget reflects the President's vision of making Americans the healthiest in the world while achieving his goal of transforming the bureaucracy,' the HHS 'Budget in Brief' document says. Elements of Trump's proposed budget for the 2026 fiscal year clash with priorities laid out in the MAHA report.
Kennedy has cited diabetes as part of a crisis in children's health. The $1.4 billion unit the White House has proposed to eliminate at the CDC — the National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion — has housed a program to track diabetes in children, adolescents, and young adults.
'To say that you want to focus on chronic diseases' and then 'to, for all practical purposes, eliminate the entity at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention which does chronic diseases,' said Georges Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Association, 'obviously doesn't make a lot of sense.'
In a May letter, Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought listed the chronic disease center as 'duplicative, DEI, or simply unnecessary,' using an abbreviation for diversity, equity, and inclusion programs.
Within the NIH, the White House has proposed cutting $320 million from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, a reduction of 35%. That unit funds or conducts a wide array of research on issues such as chronic disease.
Trump's budget proposes spending $500 million 'to tackle priority activities to Make America Healthy Again,' including $260 million for his new Administration for a Healthy America to address the 'chronic illness epidemic.'
The MAHA report argues that corporate influence has compromised government agencies and public health through 'corporate capture.'
It alleges that most research on chronic childhood diseases is funded by the food, pharmaceutical, and chemical industries, as well as special interest organizations and professional associations. It says, for example, that a 'significant portion of environmental toxicology and epidemiology studies are conducted by private corporations,' including pesticide manufacturers, and it cites 'potential biases in industry-funded research.'
It's 'self-evident that cutbacks in federal funding leave the field open to the very corporate funding RFK has decried,' said Peter Lurie, president of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, a watchdog group focused on food and health.
Lurie shared the report's concern about industry-funded research but said ceding ground to industry won't help. 'Industry will tend to fund those studies that look to them like they will yield results beneficial to industry,' he said.
In search of new funding sources, Harvard's school of public health 'is now ramping up targeted outreach to potential corporate partners, with careful review to ensure the science meets the highest standards of research integrity,' Andrea Baccarelli, dean of the school's faculty, wrote in a June 11 letter to students, faculty, and others.
'It's just simple math that if you devastate governmental funding by tens of billions of dollars, then the percentage of industry funding dollars will go up,' said Plough, who is also a clinical professor at the University of Washington School of Public Health.
'So therefore, what they claim to fear more,' he said, will 'become even more influential.'
The MAHA report says 'the U.S. government is committed to fostering radical transparency and gold-standard science.'
But many scientists and other scholars see the Trump administration waging a war on science that conflicts with its agenda.
In March, members of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine accused the administration of 'destroying' scientific independence, 'engaging in censorship,' and 'pressuring researchers to alter or abandon their work on ideological grounds.'
In May, NIH employees wrote that the administration was politicizing research — for example, by halting or censoring work on health disparities, health impacts of climate change, gender identity, and immunizations.
Recent comments by Kennedy pose another threat to transparency, researchers and health advocates say.
Kennedy said on a podcast that he would probably create in-house government journals and stop NIH scientists from publishing their research in The Lancet, The New England Journal of Medicine, The Journal of the American Medical Association, and others.
Creating new government outlets for research would be a plus, said Dariush Mozaffarian, director of the Food is Medicine Institute at the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University.
But confining government scientists to government journals, he said, 'would be a disaster' and 'would basically amount to censorship.'
'That's just not a good idea for science,' Mozaffarian said.
KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF — the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism.
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Los Angeles Times
an hour ago
- Los Angeles Times
As Trump's raids ramp up, a Texas region's residents stay inside — even when they need medical care
WESLACO, Texas — These days, Juanita says a prayer every time she steps off the driveway of her modest rural home. The 41-year-old mother, who crossed into the United States from Mexico more than two decades ago and married an American carpenter, fears federal agents may be on the hunt for her. As she was about to leave for the pharmacy late last month, her husband called with a frantic warning: Immigration enforcement officers were swarming the store's parking lot. Juanita, who is prediabetic, skipped filling medications that treat her nutrient deficiencies. She also couldn't risk being detained because she has to care for her 17-year-old daughter, who has Down syndrome. 'If I am caught, who's going to help my daughter?' Juanita asks in Spanish, through an interpreter. Some people quoted in this story insisted that the Associated Press publish only their first names because of concerns over their immigration status. As the Trump administration intensifies deportation activity around the country, some immigrants — including many who have lived in Texas's southern tip for decades — are unwilling to leave their homes, even for necessary medical care. Tucked behind the freeway strip malls, roadside taquerias and vast citrus groves that span this 160-mile stretch of the Rio Grande Valley are people like Juanita, who need critical medical care in one of the nation's poorest and unhealthiest regions. For generations, Mexican families have harmoniously settled — some legally, some not — in this predominately Latino community where immigration status was once hardly top of mind. White House officials have directed federal agents to leave no location unchecked, including hospitals and churches, in their drive to remove 1 million immigrants by year's end. Those agents are even combing through the federal government's largest medical record databases to search for immigrants who may be in the United States illegally. Deportations and tougher restrictions will come with consequences, says Mark Krikorian, the director of the Center for Immigration Studies, a think tank that favors restrictive immigration policies. 'We shouldn't have let it get out of hand the way we did,' Krikorian says of the previous administration's immigration policies. 'Some businesses are going to have difficulties. Some communities are going to face difficulties.' Federal agents' raids began reaching deeper into everyday life across the Rio Grande Valley in June, just as the area's 1.4 million residents began their summer ritual of enduring the suffocating heat. This working-class stretch of Texas solidly backed Trump in the 2024 election, despite campaign promises to ruthlessly pursue mass deportations. People here, who once moved regularly from the U.S. to Mexico to visit relatives or get cheap dental care, say they didn't realize his deportation campaign would focus on their neighbors. But in recent weeks, restaurant workers have been escorted out mid-shift and farmers have suddenly lost field workers. Schoolchildren talk openly about friends who lost a parent in raids. More than a dozen were arrested last month at local flea markets, according to local news reports and Border Patrol officials. Immigrants are staying shut inside their mobiles homes and shacks that make up the 'colonias,' zoning-free neighborhoods that sometimes don't have access to running water or electricity, says Sandra de la Cruz-Yarrison, who runs the Holy Family Services, Inc. clinic in Weslaco, Texas. 'People are not going to risk it,' de la Cruz-Yarrison says. 'People are being stripped from their families.' Yet people here are among the most medically needy in the country. Nearly half the population is obese. Women are more likely to be diagnosed with cervical cancer and elderly people are more likely to develop dementia. Bladder cancers can be more aggressive. One out of every four people lives with diabetes. As much as a third of the population doesn't have health insurance to cover those ailments. And a quarter of people live in poverty, more than double the national average. Now, many in this region are on a path to develop worse health outcomes as they skip doctor appointments out of fear, says Dr. Stanley Fisch, a pediatrician who helped open Driscoll Children's Hospital in the region last year. 'We've always had, unfortunately, people who have gone with untreated diabetes for a long time and now it's compounded with these other issues at the moment,' Fisch says. 'This is a very dangerous situation for people. The population is suffering accordingly.' Elvia was the unlucky — and unsuspecting — patient who sat down for the finger prick the clinic offers everyone during its monthly educational meeting for community members. As blood oozed out of her finger, the monitor registered a 194 glucose level, indicating she is prediabetic. She balked at the idea of writing down her address for regular care at Holy Family Services' clinic. Nor did she want to enroll in Medicaid, the federal and state funded program that provides health care coverage to the poorest Americans. Although she is a legal resident, some people living in her house do not have legal status. Fewer people have come to Holy Family Services' clinic with coverage in recent months, says billing coordinator Elizabeth Reta. Over decades, the clinic's midwifery staff has helped birth thousands of babies in bathtubs or on cozy beds in birthing houses situated throughout the campus. But now, Reta says, some parents are too scared to sign those children up for health insurance because they do not want to share too much information with the government. 'Even people I personally know that used to have Medicaid for their children that were born here — that are legally here, but the parents are not — they stopped requesting Medicaid,' Reta says. Their worry is well-founded. An Associated Press investigation last week revealed that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials have gained access to personal health data — including addresses — of the nation's 79 million Medicaid and Children's Health Insurance Program enrollees. The disclosure will allow ICE officials to receive 'identity and location information of aliens,' documents obtained by the AP say. In Texas, the governor started requiring emergency room staff to ask patients about their legal status, a move that doctors have argued will dissuade immigrants from seeking needed care. State officials have said the data will show how much money is spent on care for immigrants who may not be here legally. Federal law requires emergency rooms to treat any patients who come to the doors. Visits to Holy Family Services' mobile clinic have stopped altogether since Trump took office. The van, which once offered checkups at the doorsteps in the colonias, now sits running on idle. Its constant hum is heard throughout the clinic's campus, to keep medical supplies fresh in the 100-degree temperatures. 'These were hard-hit communities that really needed the services,' de la Cruz-Yarrison says. 'People were just not coming after the administration changed.' Immigrants were less likely to seek medical care during Trump's first term, multiple studies concluded. A 2023 study of well-child visits in Boston, Minneapolis and Little Rock, Arkansas, noted a 5% drop for children who were born to immigrant mothers after Trump was elected in 2016. The study also noted declines in visits when news about Trump's plans to tighten immigration rules broke throughout his first term. 'It's a really high-anxiety environment where they're afraid to talk to the pediatrician, go to school or bring their kids to child care,' says Stephanie Ettinger de Cuba, a Boston University researcher who oversaw the study. A delayed trip to the doctor almost cost 82-year-old Maria Isabel de Perez her son this spring. He refused to seek help for his intense and constant stomach pains for weeks, instead popping Tylenol daily so he could still labor in the farm fields of Arkansas, she says. He put off going to the hospital as rumors swirled that immigration enforcement officials were outside of the hospital. 'He waited and waited because he felt the pain but was too scared to go to the hospital,' she explains in Spanish through an interpreter. 'He couldn't go until the appendix exploded.' Her son is still recovering after surgery and has not been able to return to work, she says. Perez is a permanent resident who has lived in the United States for 40 years. But all of her children were born in Mexico, and, because she is a green card holder, she cannot sponsor them for citizenship. Maria, meanwhile, only leaves her house to volunteer at a local food bank. She's skipped work on nearby farms. And after last month's arrests, she won't sell clothes for money at the flea market anymore. So she stuffs cardboard boxes with loaves of bread, potatoes, peppers and beans that will be handed out to the hungry. Before the raids began, about 130 people would drive up to collect a box of food from Maria. But on this sweltering June day, only 68 people show up for food. She brings home a box weekly to her children, ages 16, 11 and 4, who are spending the summer shut inside. Her 16-year-old daughter has skipped the checkup she needs to refill her depression medication. The teenager, who checks in on friends whose parents have been arrested in immigration raids through a text group chat, insists she is 'doing OK.' Maria left Mexico years ago because dangerous gangs rule her hometown, she explains. She's married now to an American truck driver. 'We're not bad people,' Maria says from her dining room table, where her 4-year-old son happily eats a lime green popsicle. 'We just want to have a better future for our children.' Juanita, the prediabetic mother who hasn't filled her prescriptions out of fear, was not sure when she would brave the pharmacy again. But with a cross hanging around her neck, the devout Catholic says she will say three invocations before she does. Explains her 15-year-old son, Jose: 'We always pray before we leave.' Seitz and Martin write for the Associated Press.

USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
No, Trump's health condition doesn't give him 4 days left, as viral TikTok rumor claims
President Donald Trump, who turned 79 years old on June 14, 2025, was diagnosed with chronic venous insufficiency or CVI. A viral rumor is going around TikTok that President Donald Trump only has four days to live, but it isn't true. Trump was recently diagnosed with chronic venous insufficiency that has caused swelling in his lower legs. The White House physician described the condition as "benign and common," and the White House said it is common for people in their 70s. (Trump turned 79 years old on June 14.) Several videos on TikTok say the president only has four days left, some with hundreds of thousands of likes. There is no indication that is true. "The president remains in excellent health," White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said at the July 17 briefing, where she announced the condition. She also told reporters he wasn't in any pain. More: Can Donald Trump run for president in 2028? Constitution sets two-term limit White House gives Trump's health news update Photos from Trump's recent appearances have shown swelling around Trump's ankles and bruising on the back of his right hand. Leavitt gave an update on the results of the president's health tests on July 17 following media speculation about the visible symptoms. He was diagnosed with chronic venous insufficiency or CVI, which occurs when leg veins fail to send blood back to the heart properly. The bruising on the back of his hand was caused by frequent handshaking and aspirin, the White House said. As part of his testing, Trump underwent an echocardiogram, diagnostic vascular studies, bloodwork and ultrasounds. "Importantly, there was no evidence of deep vein thrombosis or arterial disease," White House physician Capt. Sean Barbabella said in a July 17 memo. "All (lab work) results were within normal limits." How old is Donald Trump? Trump turned 79 on June 14. He shares the record with former President Joe Biden for the oldest president at their swearing-in. When is Trump's term up? Trump is in his second term, which ends in 2029. Presidents are limited to two terms by the Constitution. Contributing: Joey Garrison and Adrianna Rodriguez, USA TODAY Kinsey Crowley is the Trump Connect reporter for the USA TODAY Network. Reach her at kcrowley@ Follow her on X and TikTok @kinseycrowley or Bluesky at @


Newsweek
2 hours ago
- Newsweek
Petition to 'Release Trump's FULL Medical Records' Grows
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. More than 8,000 people have signed a petition calling for President Donald Trump to release all his medical records. On July 17, the White House confirmed Trump had been diagnosed with chronic venous insufficiency following growing concerns about visible swelling in the president's legs and bruises on his hands. Newsweek has contacted the White House for comment via email. Why It Matters Historically, U.S. presidents and presidential candidates have released their medical information to build public trust and reassure voters. The issue has become more urgent as the median age of presidents in the U.S. has risen, with cognitive and physical decline becoming pointed campaign topics. The health of then-President Joe Biden was a major issue before he dropped out of the 2024 presidential race, with Trump repeatedly questioning whether he was fit for office. What To Know The author of the Care2 petition titled "Release Trump's FULL Medical Records NOW" wrote: "After everyone with eyes was able to plainly see Trump's swollen legs, discolorations, and other troubling symptoms, the White House FINALLY released a snippet of health information—Trump has 'chronic venous insufficiency.' In tones normally reserved for a hangnail, they said this was no big deal, very common, nothing to see here... "Except that this can indicate a very serious heart condition, possibly life-threatening, along with a range of other very dangerous ailments. But we don't have the full records, so we have to take the word of chronic liars. "Add your name, and demand that ALL Trump's medical records be released, as has been common practice for presidents for decades. "This also must include cognitive, memory, and related tests, given the rapidly worsening symptoms Trump has been showing on that front as well (including an utterly bizarre public rant about the Unabomber and Trump's uncle). "This man has his finger on the nuclear button, which is already frightening. But if he's falling apart physically and mentally, that takes it to a whole other level. And we need to know that, so we can act accordingly." The White House announced Trump's diagnosis in a memo from Sean Barbabella, the president's physician. "The president underwent a comprehensive examination, including diagnostic vascular studies. Bilateral lower extremity venous Doppler ultrasounds were performed and revealed chronic venous insufficiency, a benign and common condition, particularly in individuals over the age of 70," the memo said. Press secretary Karoline Leavitt later said in a news briefing that the president's medical team found "no evidence of deep vein thrombosis or arterial disease." She said Trump was not in any discomfort with the condition. The diagnosis came after members of the public began questioning photographs showing Trump with heavily swollen ankles. The president's health has long been a subject of public scrutiny, especially given his age. Trump, who turned 79 last month, became the oldest person to be inaugurated president when he began his second term in January. While Trump has released intermittent updates over the years, calls for full transparency have intensified, particularly following then-Vice President Kamala Harris' detailed medical disclosure in October. Trump has shared limited information—including a November 2023 letter from his physician, which describes him as being in "excellent health." The letter cited favorable lab results, weight loss and "exceptional" cognitive performance. However, it lacked specific metrics. The president also scored 30 out of 30 on a Montreal Cognitive Assessment in 2018, according to then-White House physician Ronny Jackson, but no recent cognitive evaluations have been released. His medical history includes high cholesterol, coronary artery disease and a COVID-19 hospitalization in 2020. According to various reports, Trump takes medications for cholesterol, cardiac prevention and rosacea. In 2024, he underwent cataract surgery and a colonoscopy that showed a benign polyp and diverticulitis. President Donald Trump in the East Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., on July 18. President Donald Trump in the East Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., on July 18. AP What Is Chronic Venous Insufficiency? CVI is a condition in which the veins in the legs are unable to efficiently return blood to the heart. This occurs when the one-way valves inside the leg veins—responsible for keeping blood flowing upward—become damaged or weakened. As a result, blood can pool in the lower extremities, leading to swelling, discomfort and a range of other symptoms. The condition is most often caused by factors such as aging, obesity, prolonged periods of sitting or standing, a history of blood clots (such as deep vein thrombosis), or the presence of varicose veins. Over time, the increased pressure from trapped blood can lead to visible changes in the skin and even open sores, particularly around the ankles. Symptoms of CVI include leg swelling, aching or cramping, heaviness, visible varicose veins, skin discoloration, and in more advanced cases, ulcers around the ankles. These symptoms often worsen after long periods of standing or sitting and improve with leg elevation. President Donald Trump's foot and swollen ankle as he sits with Bahrain's Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa in the Oval Office of the White House on July 16. President Donald Trump's foot and swollen ankle as he sits with Bahrain's Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa in the Oval Office of the White House on July 16. AP What People Are Saying Sean Barbabella, the president's physician, shared the following details from a physical in a memo shown to Newsweek in April: "President Trump remains in excellent health, exhibiting robust cardiac, pulmonary, neurological, and general physical function. His active lifestyle continues to contribute significantly to his well-being. "President Trump's days include participation in multiple meetings, public appearances, press availability, and frequent victories in golf events. President Trump exhibits excellent cognitive and physical health and is fully fit to execute the duties of the Commander-in-Chief and Head of State." Then-Vice President Kamala Harris said in October: "I put out my medical records. He won't put out his medical records. And you have to ask, why is this staff doing that? And it may be because they think he's just not ready, and [is] unfit and unstable and should not have that level of transparency for the American people." What Happens Next It remains to be seen how the administration will respond to concerns about Trump's health and the ongoing push for transparency.