By David Kaufer

There’s a quiet purge underway at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), and unless you’ve been following the finer points of preventive care policy, you might’ve missed it. But make no mistake—this one matters.

According to recent reports, HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is planning to dismiss the entire membership of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF)—a panel of independent experts that issues evidence-based recommendations for screenings like mammograms, colonoscopies, and mental health assessments.

Why? Because the task force included “radical woke” language in its latest equity framework—phrases like pregnant persons, structural racism, and health disparities.

That’s all it took.


The Task Force That Quietly Saves Lives

For decades, the USPSTF has been a quiet engine of public health. Its recommendations determine which preventive services must be covered by insurance with no out-of-pocket costs under the Affordable Care Act.

It’s not flashy work—but it’s essential. The task force doesn’t regulate drugs. It doesn’t do enforcement. It reviews mountains of data to answer questions like:

Its decisions have shaped the health of millions of Americans. And that’s precisely why RFK Jr. now wants to control it.

Split-screen image showing a wellness pill bottle labeled “Approved by New HHS Panel” on the left, and a crumpled mammogram referral marked “Not Covered” on the right.
What gets approved—and what gets erased—when politics replaces science.

The Real Agenda Isn’t Science—It’s Ideology

This isn’t about making the panel “more evidence-based.” That’s a smokescreen. The USPSTF is evidence-based—by design. What RFK Jr. and his allies object to isn’t poor science—it’s science that names inequity.

They’re targeting the panel for acknowledging that:

This move echoes the broader right-wing strategy: frame any mention of injustice as “ideology,” then purge the institutions that dare to include it.


Supplements, Wellness, and a New Kind of Capture?

In a recent conversation, Dr. Alex Morozov, CEO of Eviva Partners, pointed out a chilling—and very plausible—next step:

“I wouldn’t be surprised if RFK Jr. replaces the panel with people who will approve wellness supplements and alternative health products for insurance reimbursement.”

That would be a full-circle moment for Kennedy—who made his name promoting anti-vaccine rhetoric and natural health remedies. Imagine a preventive services panel that recommends homeopathy over HIV prevention. Or a multivitamin instead of a mammogram.

This isn’t just hypothetical. It’s the logical endpoint of politicized panels and medical populism.


What’s at Stake

Let’s be clear about what we lose if this effort succeeds:

This is not a culture war issue. This is about whether your insurance covers your cancer screening or your child’s depression evaluation—and who gets to decide that.


What We Should Be Watching For

  1. New panel appointments: Will they have real clinical expertise, or ties to Kennedy’s wellness allies?
  2. Changes to recommendation criteria: Will equity frameworks be banned entirely?
  3. Reimbursement shifts: Will insurers be pressured to cover supplements or unproven therapies?

And perhaps most importantly—will the medical community speak up?


Final Thoughts

The phrase “pregnant persons” might make headlines. But the real story is far more dangerous: a government official quietly replacing science with loyalty, and disguising it as reform.

Let’s not wait until “preventive care” includes wellness crystals but excludes mammograms.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *