
Trump budget cuts funding for chronic disease prevention
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The federal health department last month cut 2,400 jobs from the CDC, whose National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion runs on the largest budget within the agency.
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Programs on lead poisoning, smoking cessation and reproductive health were jettisoned in a reorganization last month.
Overall, the proposed budget would cut the CDC's funding to about $4 billion, compared with $9.2 billion in 2024. The budget blueprint makes no mention of the Prevention and Public Health Fund, a $1.2 billion program.
If that figure is taken into account, the cut may be even larger than Trump's proposal indicates.
The agency would also lose a center focused on preventing injuries, including those caused by firearms, as well as programs for HIV surveillance and prevention, and grants to help states prepare for public health emergencies.
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According to the proposed budget, the cuts are needed to eliminate 'duplicative, DEI, or simply unnecessary programs.' Congress draws up the U.S. budget, but given the Republican majority and its fealty to Trump, it is unclear how much the proposal will change.
CDC officials had been told that the functions of the chronic disease center would be moved to a new agency within the health department called the Administration for a Healthy America.
And the proposal released Friday appears to allocate $500 million to the health secretary in part 'to tackle nutrition, physical activity, healthy lifestyles, overreliance on medication and treatments.'
But at the CDC, the chronic disease center's budget was nearly three times as large. And even if part of the chronic disease center is resuscitated in the AHA, it's unlikely that its new iteration would involve CDC scientists relocated from Atlanta.
'The actual subject-matter experts, who administer the programs, might not be there at CDC anymore,' said Dr. Scott Harris, state health officer at the Alabama Department of Public Health. 'We certainly don't have the same level of expertise in my state.'
The Department of Health and Human Services did not respond to a request for comment.
The CDC's chronic disease center ran programs aimed at preventing cancer, heart disease, diabetes, epilepsy and Alzheimer's disease.
But the center has also seeded initiatives further afield, ranging from creating rural and urban hiking trails to ensuring that healthy options such as salads are offered in airports. It also promoted wellness programs in marginalized communities.
Davis said her department was already reeling from cuts to programs to curb smoking and reduce lead poisoning and health disparities, as well as the rescinding of more than $11 billion that the CDC had been providing to state health departments.
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'I would take back COVID-19 in a heartbeat over what's happening right now,' Davis said.
In the proposed budget, the administration suggested that the eliminated programs would be better managed by states.
But state health departments already manage most chronic disease programs, and three-fourths of the CDC center's funding goes to support them.
Loss of those funds 'would be devastating for us,' said Harris.
Alabama has one of the highest rates of chronic diseases in the country, and about 84% of the public health department's budget comes from the CDC, Harris said. About $6 million goes to chronic disease programs, including blood pressure screening, nutrition education for diabetes and promotion of physical activity.
If those funds are cut, 'I am at a loss right now to tell you where that would come from,' he added. 'It just seems that no one really knows what to expect, and we're not really being asked for any input on that.'
Minnesota's vaunted health department has already laid off 140 employees, and hundreds more may be affected if more CDC funding is lost. Cuts to chronic disease prevention will affect nursing homes, vaccine clinics and public health initiatives for Native Americans in the state.
'The actions of the federal government have left us out on a flimsy limb with no safety net below us,' said Dr. Brooke Cunningham, the state's health commissioner.
Until recently, 'there seemed to be a shared understanding at the local, state and federal level that health was important to invest in,' Cunningham said.
The chronic disease center's work touches American lives in many unexpected ways.
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In Prairie Village, Kansas, Stephanie Barr learned about the center 15 years ago when, working as a waitress with no health insurance, she discovered a lump in her breast the size of a lemon.
Through the CDC's National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program, she was able to get a mammogram and an ultrasound, and staff members helped her enroll in Medicaid for treatment after a biopsy determined the lump was malignant, Barr said.
'It was caught in the nick of time,' said Barr, now 45 and cancer free.
(STORY CAN END HERE. OPTIONAL MATERIAL FOLLOWS.)
Since that program began in 1991, it has provided more than 16.3 million screening exams to more than 6.3 million people with no other affordable access, said Lisa Lacasse, president of the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network.
The organization is one of 530 health associations that have signed a petition asking lawmakers to reject the proposed HHS budget, which cuts the department's discretionary spending by about one-third. The signatories said the cuts would 'effectively devastate' the nation's research and public health infrastructure.
The budget also proposes dismantling disease registries and surveillance systems. 'If you don't collect the information or keep these surveillance systems going, you don't know what's happening, you don't know what the trends are,' said Dr. Philip Huang, director of Dallas County Health and Human Services.
'You're losing all of that history,' he said.
In a previous position as director of chronic diseases for Texas, Huang said he worked closely with CDC experts who successfully reduced tobacco use among Americans. 'Eliminating the Office on Smoking and Health is just craziness if you're still wanting to address chronic diseases,' he said.
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Smoking is still the leading cause of preventable death in the United States, causing more than 480,000 deaths each year, according to the CDC.
More than 1 in 10 American adults still smoke cigarettes regularly, but rates vary drastically by region, and CDC surveillance helps target cessation programs to areas where they are needed most.
'Smoking rates have come down, but if the federal government takes its foot off the gas, the tobacco companies are ready to pop back up again,' said Erika Sward, assistant vice president for advocacy for the American Lung Association.
She warned that tobacco companies are constantly developing new products such as nicotine pouches, whose use by teenagers doubled last year. 'It will take a lot more money to put the genie back in the bottle,' she said.
The CDC's chronic disease center works with communities and academic centers to promote effective programs, from creating quitting hotlines to reach young Iowans in rural areas to training members of Black churches in Columbia, South Carolina, to lead exercise and nutrition classes for their congregations.
In rural Missouri, dozens of walking trails have been developed in the 'boot heel' in the southeastern part of the state, an area with high rates of obesity and diabetes, said Ross Brownson, a public health researcher at Washington University in St. Louis who directs the Prevention Research Center in collaboration with the CDC.
'There's strong evidence now that if you change the walkability of a community, people will get more physical activity,' Brownson said. 'There aren't going to be health clubs in rural communities, but there is nature and the ability to have walking trails, and land is relatively cheap.'
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With CDC support, in Rochester, New York, people who are deaf and hard of hearing are being trained to lead exercise and wellness programs for other hearing-impaired people who can't easily participate in other gym classes.
In San Diego, researchers are testing ways to protect farmworkers from exposure to ultraviolet rays and heat-related illnesses.
'Once they are up and started, they are community-driven and don't depend on the government,' said Allison Bay, who recently lost her job managing such projects at the CDC.
The CDC's reorganization also eliminated lead-poisoning programs. Lead poisoning is also 'one of our greatest public health threats in the city of Cleveland,' said Dr. David Margolius, director of public health for the city.
The CDC does not directly fund Cleveland's lead programs -- the funding comes from the state. 'But just having the federal expertise to call on to help lead us toward a lead-free future, I mean, yeah, that has a big impact on us,' he said.
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