Stand up for the facts!
Our only agenda is to publish the truth so you can be an informed participant in democracy.
We need your help.
I would like to contribute
If Your Time is short
-
Although she has criticized the administration, Dr. Nicole Saphier is generally supportive of President Donald Trump, and her positions often align with the political and public health movement Make America Healthy Again.
-
Since May 2025, Saphier spoke regularly on her "Wellness Unmasked" podcast about the need for quality data for health care policy and medical-decision making.
In a Truth Social post announcing his next surgeon general nominee, President Donald Trump praised Dr. Nicole Saphier as "an INCREDIBLE communicator" who breaks down complex health issues for Americans.
Saphier, a radiologist and director of breast imaging at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Monmouth cancer center in New Jersey, has built her own social media following over the years.
She’s been a contributing opinion writer and guest on Fox News shows since 2018. She has authored three books, including 2020’s "Make America Healthy Again," a title that later became the Trump administration’s health policy slogan. She has more than 150,000 Instagram followers and gained more than 350,000 X followers before recently making that account private.
In May 2025, Saphier launched "Wellness Unmasked," a twice weekly podcast in which she discusses health and wellness topics and news. She also sells herbal tinctures that she promotes for calm and focus through her company DropRx.

A screenshot shows Dr. Nicole Saphier's podcast May 7, 2026.
Given Saphier’s influence and potential role as the "nation’s doctor," a term used to describe the surgeon general, we listened to her podcast to learn more about her views. Although she has criticized the administration, Saphier is generally supportive of Trump and her positions often dovetail with MAHA movement leaders on topics such as minimal COVID-19 mitigation measures. She champions the role of data and research in policy and medical decision-making.
Saphier’s selection comes after Trump’s previous nomination of Dr. Casey Means stalled in a Senate committee. Senators questioned Means’ qualifications and positions on vaccines. Before Means, Trump nominated and then withdrew Fox News contributor Dr. Janette Nesheiwat, who faced questions about her education and credentials before her confirmation hearing.
Despite her affiliation with MAHA, Saphier’s nomination prompted pushback from some of the movement’s activists.
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., however, described Saphier as "a long-time warrior for the MAHA movement." She is friends with Dr. Marty Makary, commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, with whom she co-authored a November 2021 Wall Street Journal opinion article about the COVID-19 vaccine for young children, saying the risk of complications from COVID-19 infection or the vaccine was "extremely low either way."
Here are a few things we heard on Saphier’s podcast.
1) She’s been critical of the administration but also embraced being ‘anti-establishment.’
Saphier stops short of issuing blanket praise for the Trump administration.
"I don’t agree with 100% of what’s going on at the HHS, specifically at the CDC right now," she said in an April 7 episode, referring to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
On X, in posts she later deleted, Saphier’s criticisms were sharper, CNN reported.
After U.S. health officials asked the Pan American Health Organization’s expert panel to delay a meeting about the country’s measles status as measles cases climbed, Saphier posted: "Seems like they may not want to admit the U.S. Measles elimination status is is gone until after midterm elections."
She repeatedly criticized Trump’s rhetoric around Tylenol being unsafe during pregnancy and for children.
On her Sept. 23 podcast, Saphier said watching Trump’s Tylenol press conference the day prior was "really painful."
"The problem I had was it was full of hyperbole and not only do facts matter, but the messaging matters too," Saphier said. "Even though what was said at the press conference yesterday was that they have found a study pointing to causation, that’s just not true."
At the same time, Saphier sometimes invokes skepticism toward longstanding traditional health care institutions. During the pandemic, for example, she opposed mask mandates and certain COVID-19 vaccine requirements.
She has also agreed with some of the Trump administration’s changing guidance on vaccines, including the decision to scrap a decadeslong policy recommending all newborns get a dose of the hepatitis B vaccine. Saphier describes herself as someone who favors "risk-based recommendations" over "one-size fits all" policies.
Speaking about dietary guidelines during her April 2 episode, Saphier said she doesn’t object to being "anti-establishment" because science is "never settled."
"People sometimes get mad at me because they feel like I’m not a loyalist, whether one way or the other," Saphier said during a Sept. 23 episode. She said she sees her role as to "tell you what I’m thinking and kind of make some sense of all this mess."
2) She talks about prioritizing evidence-based policy over ideology
In September, Saphier criticized a CDC vaccine committee for entertaining comments from people who are not medical professionals and who don’t understand vaccine data.
"It definitely felt like a lot of ideology was being presented, a lot of flawed data that in the real world of academia we would never even consider because a lot of it was not legitimate," she said, giving no specifics about whose comments she was targeting.
After U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth removed the flu vaccine mandate for service members, Saphier called for gathering data on the policy’s impact on defense readiness during the next flu season.
"That’s what we should be watching, because good health policy shouldn’t be driven by ideology or people trying to get political talking points," Saphier said in April. "It should be driven by evidence."
3) She champions long-term safety research, studies and data.
Saphier consistently advocates for data to assess health treatments.
Saphier has questioned whether people should commit to a lifetime of taking GLP-1 drugs for weight loss in the absence of long-term safety data. When talking about peptides, Saphier repeatedly lamented the lack of safety studies and research showing the benefits and risks of these injectable amino acid chains over long periods.
"You can talk about them all you want, but unless you have data showing a benefit or a lack of benefit, you know, it's really hard for me to get behind something," Saphier said.
In December, she said that an FDA communication purporting to link COVID-19 vaccines to children’s deaths was "opinion" because the administration provided no data backing the claims. She said she believed the Biden administration and pharmaceutical companies downplayed safety signals with the COVID-19 vaccines and children, but she said that concern about missing data cuts both ways.
"You can’t make a statement without having data because if you just manipulate words to promulgate fear and incite anger and other emotions without having the data, you know, you’re no better off," Saphier said.
Similarly, she expressed frustration that "no new data was presented" during Trump’s Sept. 22, 2025, Tylenol and pregnancy press conference. Officials had promoted a newly published metaanalysis that looked at a collection of studies on acetaminophen and autism which have identified correlation between the drug and autism.
"No one has been able to prove causative links between acetaminophen and autism spectrum disorder," Saphier said of the available research. She described the research as "unfinished" and called for scientists to "put more time and effort there."
In some areas, however, she showed willingness to draw conclusions ahead of definitive data: On certain gender-affirming medical treatments for minors, she both acknowledged the science is unsettled and said that her own "settled opinion is children who are dealing with gender dysphoria are suffering from a mental illness" and should not be given medications or surgery.
Despite the continued discussion of data and research, Saphier’s podcast does not regularly cite specific sources or provide "show notes" with citations where listeners could learn more.
PolitiFact Researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this report.
RELATED: Research doesn’t show using Tylenol during pregnancy causes autism. Here’s what else you should know
RELATED: RFK Jr. wants to delay the hepatitis B vaccine. Here’s what parents need to know.
Our Sources
Wellness Unmasked podcast episodes, accessed May 1-7, 2026
Fox News, Dr. Nicole Saphier: What is kratom? And why is it being promoted as a ‘wellness’ product to our kids? April 14, 2019
Fox News, DR. NICOLE SAPHIER: The alarming rise of this cancer in younger women, Nov. 23, 2024
The New York Times, House Republican Report Finds No Evidence of Wrongdoing by President Biden, May 10, 2023
CNN, House Republicans allege Biden family members received millions in payments from foreign entities in new bank records report, May 10, 2023
President Donald Trump’s Truth Social post, April 30, 2026
PBS News, Trump's new surgeon general nominee has both praised and criticized his administration, May 2, 2026
USA Today, President Trump nominates Dr. Nicole Saphier as US surgeon general, April 30, 2026
The Associated Press, Means' surgeon general nomination is stalled as senators question her experience and vaccine stance, March 25, 2026
The Associated Press, Trump pulls Casey Means' stalled surgeon general nomination. New pick is radiologist Nicole Saphier, April 30, 2026
Dr. Nicole Saphier’s Instagram account, accessed May 5, 2026
CNN, Exclusive: Deleted tweets reveal new surgeon general pick criticized Trump and RFK Jr. health policies, May 6, 2026
Politico, The new surgeon general nominee has a MAHA problem, May 2, 2026
The Guardian, Who is Nicole Saphier, Trump’s new nominee for US surgeon general?, May 4, 2026
Nicole Saphier’s X account, archived April 7, 2025
iHeart, Wellness Unmasked with Dr. Nicole Saphier, accessed May 6, 2026
CBS News, Trump's surgeon general nominee, Dr. Janette Nesheiwat, faces scrutiny over credentials, April 29, 2025
CBS News, Trump withdraws Dr. Janette Nesheiwat's surgeon general nomination, picks Dr. Casey Means instead, May 7, 2025
CIDRAP, US measles cases soar past 1,100, Feb. 27, 2026
Dr. Nicole Saphier’s archived X post, March 3, 2026
Dr. Nicole Saphier’s archived X post, Jan. 20, 2025
Dr. Nicole Saphier’s archived X post, Sept. 22, 2025
Dr. Nicole Saphier’s archived X post, Oct. 28, 2025
Amazon Books, Nicole Saphier, accessed May 6, 2026
The New York Times, Meeting on U.S. Measles Status Is Delayed Until November - The New York Times, March 2, 2026
Fox News, America is ‘no place’ for mask mandates: Dr. Nicole Saphier, Sept. 4, 2023
Dr. Nicole Saphier’s X account, archived April 7, 2026
Fox News, Dr. Saphier: ‘Groupthink’ from Biden on vaccines is ‘completely wrong,’, Sept. 10, 2021
DropRx, By Dr. Nicole Saphier, accessed and archived May 7, 2026
