KFF Health News January 13, 2026
Alan Greenblatt

When one of Adam Burkhammer’s foster children struggled with hyperactivity, the West Virginia legislator and his wife decided to alter their diet and remove any foods that contained synthetic dyes.

“We saw a turnaround in his behavior, and our other children,” said Burkhammer, who has adopted or fostered 10 kids with his wife. “There are real impacts on real kids.”

The Republican turned his experience into legislation, sponsoring a bill to ban seven dyes from food sold in the state. It became law in March, making West Virginia the first state to institute such a ban from all food products.

The bill was among a slew of state efforts to regulate synthetic dyes. In 2025, roughly 75 bills aimed at...

Today's Sponsors

Venturous
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

Venturous

 
Topics: Govt Agencies, HHS
Charted: Where measles is surging (again)
Opinion: Our podcast ‘Why Should I Trust You?’ connects MAHA and public health. Here’s what we’ve learned
Journalists Mine News for Insights on Tylenol, Obamacare Credits, and Rural Health Funding
CDC pauses, then unpauses billions in public health infrastructure grants to states
US Withdraws from World Health Organization

Share Article