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US seeks new nominees for key preventive health panel

By Thomson Reuters Apr 28, 2026 | 7:39 PM

By Deena Beasley

April 28 (Reuters) – The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, overseen by Secretary Robert ​F. Kennedy Jr., on Tuesday ‌asked for nominations to the influential task force that decides which preventive medical care is provided at no cost to ‌patients.

The ​Preventive Services Task ⁠Force, which typically ⁠has 16 members, last met over a year ago. Three successive planned meetings were canceled and new ​members have not been named to replace the five volunteers whose ⁠terms expired in ⁠December.

“That task force has been ​lackadaisical. It’s not been doing its ​job,” Kennedy told a House committee ‌earlier this month.

A division of HHS on Tuesday said it is seeking clinicians and researchers to be ⁠nominated to the task force “including but not limited to” specialties such as cardiology, oncology, ⁠obstetrics/gynecology, ‌pediatrics, family medicine and ⁠health economics. Nominations are due ​by ‌May 23.

Medical experts say Kennedy’s ​sidelining ⁠of the panel has delayed updates to screening guidelines for cancer, heart disease and other conditions.

(Reporting By Deena Beasley and Ahmed Aboulenein; Editing by ​Neil Fullick)