{ "id": "IN10708", "type": "CRS Insight", "typeId": "INSIGHTS", "number": "IN10708", "active": true, "source": "EveryCRSReport.com", "versions": [ { "source": "EveryCRSReport.com", "id": 461471, "date": "2017-05-24", "retrieved": "2017-08-22T14:39:46.162177", "title": "President\u2019s FY2018 Budget Proposes Cuts in Public Health Service (PHS) Agency Funding", "summary": "The President\u2019s FY2018 budget proposes significant reductions in funding for the Public Health Service (PHS) agencies within the Department of Health and Human Services. The budget reflects the PHS agency funding priorities outlined in the budget blueprint released in March. Among other things, the President\u2019s budget would cut funding for medical research, public health prevention programs, and mental health services.\nThe proposed cuts are to discretionary funding, which is controlled through the annual appropriations process. PHS agencies also receive funding from various mandatory sources, several of which are set to expire at the end of this fiscal year. The budget proposes extending those funds through FY2018. \nResearch\nThe budget proposes reducing National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding for biomedical and behavioral research by more than $7 billion from the enacted FY2017 level to $26.920 billion. This would reverse recent legislative actions that have significantly increased NIH\u2019s budget. It would return NIH\u2019s funding in real (i.e., inflation-adjusted) terms to the levels of the late 1990s. \nLawmakers increased NIH\u2019s funding by $2 billion in FY2016, and again by the same amount in FY2017. NIH\u2019s FY2017 funding includes $352 million from the NIH Innovation Account, which was established by the 21st Century Cures Act. The act authorized annual transfers to the fund over a 10-year period totaling $4.796 billion. Each year, those funds are available to be appropriated to help support the Precision Medicine Initiative, the BRAIN Initiative, cancer research, and adult stem cell research. The FY2018 budget request for NIH includes $496 million authorized to be appropriated from the Innovation Account.\nThe budget proposes consolidating the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) within NIH as the National Institute for Research on Safety and Quality. Some lawmakers have recommended eliminating funding for AHRQ, saying that the agency\u2019s work overlaps with research already supported by NIH and the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Trust Fund (PCORTF). AHRQ\u2019s supporters argue that the agency has a distinct mission and that its research portfolio focuses on different questions.\nThe budget would reduce AHRQ\u2019s discretionary funding by $52 million from the enacted FY2017 level to $272 million. AHRQ also would receive about $100 million of PCORTF funding in FY2018\u2014similar to the amount it received in FY2017\u2014for use in disseminating and implementing the findings of comparative clinical effectiveness research funded by the PCORTF.\nPublic Health\nThe budget proposes reducing discretionary funding for public health and emergency preparedness programs administered by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Several CDC accounts also receive mandatory funds from other sources, notably the permanently funded Prevention and Public Health Fund. In addition, in FY2015 and FY2016, CDC received emergency supplemental appropriations totaling more than $2 billion to help respond to the Ebola and Zika outbreaks.\nOverall, the budget seeks to cut CDC\u2019s discretionary funding by almost $1.3 billion from the enacted FY2017 level to $4.992 billion. This includes a $326 million cut to CDC\u2019s chronic disease prevention programs, from the enacted FY2017 level of $778 million to $452 million. The budget proposes consolidating several chronic disease programs (e.g., for diabetes and heart disease) into a new $500 million block grant to allow states and territories to tailor spending to their specific challenges.\nThe budget proposes significant cuts to CDC\u2019s programs for immunization and respiratory diseases; HIV/AIDS, viral hepatitis, sexually transmitted diseases, and tuberculosis prevention; and emerging infections. Funding for CDC\u2019s centers on birth defects and developmental disabilities, environmental health, and global health also would be reduced.\nMedical Product Regulation\nThe Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is funded by a combination of annual discretionary appropriations and user fees, which the agency collects from manufacturers of certain FDA-regulated products. User fee collections have increased over the past 25 years, both in absolute terms and as a share of FDA\u2019s overall budget, and now account for more than 40% of FDA\u2019s funding.\nThe budget would increase FDA\u2019s funding by $361 million over the FY2017 enacted level to $5.116 billion. It does this by significantly increasing FDA\u2019s reliance on user fees. The budget proposes increasing user fee collections in FY2018 by about $1.3 billion from the FY2017 enacted level to $3.228 billion, while reducing FDA\u2019s FY2018 appropriation by almost $900 million from the FY2017 enacted level to $1.888 billion.\nCongress is in the midst of another five-year reauthorization of FDA\u2019s medical product user fee programs based on new and, in general, larger fee amounts negotiated by FDA and the drug and medical device industries. The user fee proposal in the budget exceeds the amounts that have already been agreed to and would require further negotiation with industry, which appears unlikely.\nHealth Care Services\nThe budget proposes cutting funding for the PHS agencies that provide health care services or help support safety net systems that deliver such services. While the budget maintains funding for the federal health centers program\u2014administered by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA)\u2014it proposes eliminating or significantly cutting funding for most of HRSA\u2019s health professions and nursing education and training programs, and several of the agency\u2019s rural, and maternal and child health programs.\nThe budget proposes extending funding for the Community Health Centers Fund, which provides HRSA with mandatory funds that support the National Health Service Corps and supplement the agency\u2019s discretionary funding for the health centers program. It also calls for extending mandatory funding for the maternal, infant, and childhood home visiting program.\nThe budget proposes reducing discretionary funding for the Indian Health Service (IHS) by $301 million from the FY2017 enacted level to $4.739 billion.\nFinally, the budget proposes reducing funding for the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMSHA) by $373 million from the FY2017 enacted level to $3.892 billion. The majority of the reduction would come from cuts to the mental health block grant and other programs that support community-based mental health services. Both SAMHSA\u2019s FY2017 funding and the FY2018 request include $500 million in new funding for state grants to address opioid abuse authorized to be appropriated by the 21st Century Cures Act.", "type": "CRS Insight", "typeId": "INSIGHTS", "active": true, "formats": [ { "format": "HTML", "encoding": "utf-8", "url": "http://www.crs.gov/Reports/IN10708", "sha1": "5909c3aaa66fcc059aceff29bf98e49f5b6cd892", "filename": "files/20170524_IN10708_5909c3aaa66fcc059aceff29bf98e49f5b6cd892.html", "images": {} } ], "topics": [ { "source": "IBCList", "id": 4921, "name": "Labor, HHS, & Education Appropriations" } ] } ], "topics": [ "Appropriations", "CRS Insights", "Health Policy" ] }