Reynolds brings MAHA to Iowa with food dye bans, Ivermectin, and school physical fitness tests
Governor Kim Reynolds of Iowa signed a significant health and nutrition policy aimed at improving the state's public health. The legislation includes bans on certain artificial food dyes in school lunches and mandates physical activity for young students. Additionally, it allows over-the-counter sales of Ivermectin and requires medical students to receive nutrition education.
- ▪The legislation aims to improve nutrition and physical activity for school children in Iowa.
- ▪It prohibits the use of eight artificial food dyes in school lunches and mandates physical activity for younger students.
- ▪The law allows Ivermectin to be sold over-the-counter and requires medical students to engage in nutrition education.
Opening excerpt (first ~120 words) tap to expand
Gov. Kim Reynolds (R-IA) signed a sweeping piece of health and nutrition policy legislation on Wednesday, seen as valuable to the Make America Healthy Again movement. The legislation, passed by both chambers of the state legislature last month, delivers on issues important to federal Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., including improving nutrition and physical activity for school children as well as reforming food stamps. Recommended Stories Senate Democrats want home health for Medicare come 2028 Autopsy reveals Colorado teenager died after Planned Parenthood abortion CDC issues travel restrictions as Ebola spreads in Congo and Uganda “Iowa is an essential partner in the national movement to make America healthy again, as HHS advances reforms at the federal…
Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at Washington Examiner.