November 18, 2025

What Trump’s MAHA Report Means For Black Health—And Why We Shouldn’t Ignore It – Black Westchester

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There are moments in American politics that cut through the noise—not because of who’s speaking, but because of what’s being said. President Donald J. Trump’s unveiling of the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) report is one of those moments, and for Black America, it deserves serious attention.
For decades, our communities have been at the epicenter of every major public health crisis—diabetes, hypertension, obesity, asthma, mental illness, and prescription drug dependency. While politicians on both sides have offered slogans and photo ops, none have made a comprehensive, actionable move like this: rethinking food policy, reining in pharmaceutical prices, and calling out the systemic overmedication of our children. Like him or not, Trump is the first president to put the full weight of the federal government behind these issues in this way.
The MAHA report is not just about “making America healthy”—it’s about finally confronting the forces that have been making Black America sick.
Let’s start with food. We’ve long known that low-income, urban Black neighborhoods are flooded with ultra-processed foods, sugary drinks, and chemical-laced snacks. What most people don’t realize is that this toxic diet is often subsidized by taxpayer-funded programs like SNAP. Under the MAHA initiative, states are now being encouraged—and empowered—to remove junk food and soda from food stamp eligibility. That’s not “paternalism,” as critics will say—it’s policy with purpose. If we’re serious about reversing disease in our community, we need to stop funding what’s killing us.
The stakes are real. According to the CDC:
Next, look at what MAHA says about children. The report states plainly: “It’s common sense that overmedicating kids is dangerous.” In our public schools, particularly those in Black communities, it’s not uncommon to see boys as young as six labeled with behavioral disorders and placed on medication before they ever see a counselor. Black children are more likely to be misdiagnosed or overmedicated than their white peers, and yet less likely to receive consistent therapeutic care.
The MAHA report doesn’t just acknowledge this—it challenges it, pushing for a return to real inquiry, real solutions, and a culture that prioritizes mental wellness over pharmaceutical dependency.
But the most explosive part of Trump’s speech came when he addressed Big Pharma directly. He didn’t mince words. “We were subsidizing the whole world,” he said, referring to how the U.S. has paid up to 10 to 13 times more than other countries for the same drugs. His solution: Most Favored Nation pricing. In plain terms, the U.S. will only pay what the cheapest country pays for medicine.
For Black seniors, single mothers, and working-class families trapped in the cycle of unaffordable prescriptions, this could mean a 50% to 89% drop in drug costs. That’s not hypothetical—it’s transformative. Especially when you consider that over 45% of Black Americans rely on public insurance (Medicaid or Medicare), and prescription drugs represent a significant monthly expense for Black households.
Critics will focus on the politics. But politics is not our priority—outcomes are. For far too long, Black health has been treated as an afterthought, a campaign soundbite, or worse, a partisan weapon. Trump’s MAHA report doesn’t ask for permission from lobbyists. It doesn’t pretend that food deserts and Medicaid overuse are accidental. And it doesn’t shy away from naming names.
Is it perfect? No. Does it need pressure from the public to ensure it’s implemented fairly and fully? Absolutely. But it’s a start—and more than that, it’s a shift. A shift from lip service to legislative action. From dependency to prevention. From being ignored to being prioritized.
Black America cannot afford to let personal distaste for a politician override our assessment of the policy. We didn’t vote for diabetes. We didn’t vote for our children to be medicated into silence. We didn’t vote to pay 13 times more for medicine than people in Canada or France. But we did vote for change—and here it is, whether we expected it from this administration or not.
The challenge now is to engage it. Shape it. Demand that this plan serve us—not just in theory, but in practice. Because if the government is finally ready to make America healthy again, we need to make sure that includes Black America, too.
MAHA Report by Damon K Jones on Scribd



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The publication provides coverage of local events, politics, culture, and issues particularly relevant to African American residents. With a commitment to amplifying Black voices and perspectives, Black Westchester Magazine aims to inform, empower, and connect its readership through in-depth reporting and community engagement.
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