New Report on Public Health Spending
Mar 2nd, 2010

New report on public health spending
Stateline.org
When cases of swine flu began to show up in
In a year when flagging state and local economies forced major cuts in public health spending, federal grants for disease prevention and emergency preparedness failed to fill the breach, according to a new report from The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Trust for
In 2009, federal grants to state for public health remained flat for the fifth consecutive year at about $13.5 billion not counting $1 billion in federal stimulus money, while state and local governments reduced their investment by $392 million, a 3.4 percent cut.
In addition, federal funding fails to reach the states that need it most, the report released March 1, says. In 2009, Midwestern states saw the lowest total funding, Southern states were next, and Northeastern states – among the healthiest populations in the country – received the largest per capita share of money from a myriad of separate grant programs administered by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
The disparities in federal funding results from the federal government’s failure to coordinate an array of separately administered programs and target them based on need, says Richard Hamburg, Deputy Director of Trust for
As a result, states with strong support for health care funding, less opposition by interests such as tobacco companies and influential representation in Congress tend to get the biggest share, regardless of their so-called burden of disease, Hamburg says. “It’s kind of a chicken and egg question. Are the states with the most funding healthy because they’ve traditionally had better public health services, or do healthier states – which typically have more resources – tend to be more aggressive in seeking federal funding?”
Download the full report here.