Administration for a Healthy America

The Administration for a Healthy America (AHA) is a planned operating agency within the U.S. Public Health Service in the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), to be created as part of the HHS reorganization of 2025 under the administration of President Donald Trump. Its creation was announced on March 27, 2025, and is planned to be established through the consolidation of multiple existing public health agencies.

Administration for a Healthy America
Agency overview
Preceding agencies
Parent agencyDepartment of Health and Human Services

The consolidation has a stated goal of improving efficiency and reducing redundancy within HHS, and is intended to improve coordination among similar programs and streamline the delivery of services, particularly for low-income populations. As of March 2025, the Administration for a Healthy America is in the early stages of implementation, and the long-term operational structure and leadership of the agency have not yet been finalized.

The creation of the Administration for a Healthy America and the broader HHS restructuring have drawn criticism from public health experts, former officials, labor unions and Democratic lawmakers.

Proposed organization

AHA's programs are planned to be aligned into several divisions. The Trump Administration's presidential budget request for fiscal year 2026 proposes the following functions for each division, most of which are transferred from the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) or Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health (OASH), or non-infectious disease programs of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

  • Primary Care: consolidating functions from the HRSA Bureau of Primary Health Care, Healthcare Systems Bureau, Federal Office of Rural Health Policy, and Office for the Advancement of Telehealth; CDC National Center for Injury Prevention and Control; OASH Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion and Office of Minority Health; and anti-doping programs transferred from the Office of National Drug Control Policy
  • Environmental Health: consolidating functions from the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health and the Safe Water Program from the CDC National Center for Environmental Health, and NIH's National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
  • HIV/AIDS: consolidating functions from the HRSA Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program, OASH Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy, and CDC's HIV/AIDS prevention and policy functions
  • Maternal and Child Health: consolidating functions from the HRSA Maternal and Child Health Bureau, CDC National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities, and OASH Office on Women's Health
  • Mental and Behavioral Health: most functions from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), and drug-free communities programs transferred from the Office of National Drug Control Policy
  • Health Workforce: functions from the HRSA Bureau of Health Workforce
  • Policy, Research, and Oversight: consolidating the Office of the Surgeon General from OASH, the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program and Covered Countermeasure Process Fund from the HRSA Healthcare Systems Bureau, the Alzheimer's Disease Program from the CDC National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, lead poisoning programs from the CDC National Center for Environmental Health, and data collection and public awareness functions transferred from SAMHSA

Some of these proposals can be implemented through administrative regulations directly instituted by the HHS Secretary through the federal rulemaking process, while others require Congress to pass legislation amending existing authorization bills.

History

The creation of the AHA was part of a broader restructuring of HHS in response to Executive Order 14210, "Implementing the President's 'Department of Government Efficiency' Cost Efficiency Initiative". The plan was announced by HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced on March 27, 2025, and included significant organizational changes, staff reductions and budgetary shifts across the department. The announcement made reference to the slogan "Make America Healthy Again", which was coined by Kennedy during his support of the Donald Trump 2024 presidential campaign to echo Trump's own Make America Great Again slogan.

More details about the reorganization were contained in the Trump Administration's presidential budget request for fiscal year 2026, which was released on May 30, 2025.

The US District Court for the Northern District of California issued a temporary restraining order (TRO) on May 9 enjoining implementation of Executive Order 14210 and related agency reduction in force (RIF) plans. The Ninth Circuit upheld the block, but the Supreme Court issued a temporary stay of the order. The US District Court for Rhode Island also issued a preliminary injunction on July 1 blocking the reorganization.

Predecessors

HRSA and SAMHSA headquarters at 5600 Fishers Lane in North Bethesda, Maryland
ATSDR headquarters at the CDC Chamblee Campus Building 107 in Chamblee, Georgia
NIOSH Taft Laboratory in Cincinnati, Ohio

The new agency is planned combine four existing HHS top-level agencies, and multiple components of another:

With the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention planned to narrow its focus to infectious disease, several of its components focused on chronic and non-infectious disease are expected to be transferred into AHA:

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