U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has announced major plans to restructure the agency and lay off a quarter of its workforce.
Health and Human Services (HHS) is the United States’ principal agency for overseeing the nation’s health, similar to the UK’s Department of Health and Social Care. It is comprised of 28 agencies, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administration.
HHS will reduce its regional offices from 10 to five, and shape its 28 agencies into 15, including a new administration called the Administration for Healthy America.
It comes as part of President Donald Trump’s order, alongside the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), to optimise the government workforce by reducing federal bureaucracy and eliminating waste.
Reestablishing the department was also a part of Kennedy’s Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) vision, which he ran as a campaign slogan when he endorsed Trump, laying out his mission of saving Americans from a debilitating chronic disease epidemic.
Kennedy described Americans as living six years shorter than Europeans, calling the United States the sickest nation in the world and the highest in chronic disease.
“The U.S. ranks last among 40 developed nations in terms of health, but we spend two to three times more per capita than those nations,” he said.
“But all that money has failed to improve the health of Americans,” Kennedy said.
However, not everyone feels the same way about the restructuring.
“I have serious concerns about how this will impact Americans’ well-being now and long into the future,” he wrote.
The American Public Health Association vowed to fight back, with its Executive Director Georges C. Benjamin saying in a statement, “This is a nonsensical rearrangement of the agencies under their charge and an excuse to devastate the workforce for financial reasons.”
The HHS was created as the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare under President Dwight Eisenhower in 1953, and adopted its current name in 1980.