During an appearance on the Katie Miller Podcast, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. made a surprising revelation about President Trump’s health metrics that has sparked considerable attention.
While discussing Cabinet members’ health habits, Kennedy was asked to identify who had “the most unhinged eating habits” among the administration. Without hesitation, he pointed to President Trump.
“The interesting thing about the president is that he eats really bad food, which is McDonald’s, and then candy and diet coke,” Kennedy explained during the episode. “But he has a constitution of a deity. I don’t know how he’s alive, but he is.”
Kennedy went on to clarify Trump’s dietary patterns, noting that the president claims he only consumes fast food when traveling. “He says that the only time that he eats the junk food is when he’s on the road and he wants to eat food from big corporations because he trusts it. He doesn’t want to get sick when he’s on the road,” Kennedy said. “But when he’s at Mar-a-Lago or at the White House, he’s eating really good food.”
Despite Trump’s seemingly contradictory diet, Kennedy painted a picture of remarkable vitality. “You get this if you travel with him, you get this idea that he’s just pumping himself full of poison all day long and you don’t know how he’s walking around, much less being the most energetic person any of us have ever met,” the HHS Secretary said.
Then came the most striking claim of the conversation. Kennedy stated that Dr. Mehmet Oz, currently serving in the Trump administration, had reviewed the president’s medical records and made an extraordinary finding.
“Dr. Oz looked at his medical records and said he’s got the highest testosterone level that he’s ever seen for an individual over 70 years old,” Kennedy revealed.
The HHS Secretary acknowledged the political value of this information, adding with a knowing tone, “I know the president will be happy that I repeat that.”
Kennedy’s remarks came during an interview in which he discussed his work on dietary guidelines, vaccine schedules, and the Make America Healthy Again initiative. The HHS Secretary has been vocal about promoting whole foods and eliminating processed foods from American diets.
The claim about testosterone levels remains unverified by independent medical documentation, as presidential health records are typically kept confidential unless specifically released by the president or his physician.