Thursday, June 27, 2024

Is Congressional Support for HIV Funding Waning?

By: Ranier Simons, ADAP Blog Guest Contributor

Federal funding is the backbone of many government functions and influences many aspects of our daily lives. Federal spending allows the Pentagon to function, supports educational programs such as Head Start, helps maintain our infrastructure, and, most importantly, affects healthcare. One aspect of healthcare with a heavy reliance on federal funding is HIV/AIDS. But has that funding kept pace with the need for people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA)?

Capitol Dome with money wallpaper as background
Photo Source: Medical Marketing & Media

The federal government invests both mandatory and discretionary spending regarding HIV. Mandatory spending is set by laws and statutes.[1] Some of the mandatory spending related to HIV services includes Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security Disability Insurance.[1] Discretionary spending is determined each year by Congress through the appropriations process. This includes programs such as the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program (RWHAP) and AIDS Drug Assistance Programs (ADAP). Although needs have increased and priorities have evolved, federal funding regarding HIV has remained essentially flat and, in some cases, faces threats of cuts, which could result in unsatisfactory health outcomes. This is especially true regarding HIV and aging.

Discretionary funding supports HIV treatment and continual testing programs, helps entities to provide and promote the utilization of PrEP, and even enables assistance with social determinants of health concerns such as housing instability. However, RWHAP's core budget has been left primarily flat since 2013, although it has added 50,000 patients.[2] The program serves low-income PLWHA. Over 50% of PLWHA are dependent upon the RWHAP annually for services needed to survive and thrive, such as medication and essential support services.[3] Likewise, Emily M. Schreiber, Senior Director of Policy & Legislative Affairs for NASTAD, points out that ADAP funding last increased in FY2014. From 2014 to 2022, ADAP client enrollment increased by 60 percent.

ADAP has increasingly relied on rebates from drug manufacturers under the 340B Drug Pricing Program, but ongoing abuses by big hospital systems and mega service providers threaten the solvency of that program. Congress is knocking on 340B's proverbial door, saying: "Show Me the Money".

Exacerbating the urgency for increased spending is more extended life expectancy. Advances in medical science, such as antiretroviral therapy, mean that PLWHA are living longer. More than 50% of PLWHA in the United States are over 50, with estimates projecting that by 2030 it will be 70%.[3] Living longer means that PLWHA are dealing with many HIV-associated non-AIDS health conditions partly stemming from HIV-related chronic inflammation in the body and long-term use of strong antiviral medications.[4,5] These include diabetes, cardiovascular disease, renal disease, and cancer. Moreover, PLWHA dealing with comorbidities must navigate multiple medications, increased risk for drug reactions, and coordinate multi-specialty care.[3] 

Chart showing flat federal funding over the last decade for the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program
Photo Source: Kaiser Family Foundation

Many PLWHA 65 years of age and older are covered by Medicare, and about 40% depend upon Medicaid.[3] Ten states have yet to expand Medicaid. Additionally, studies show that Ryan White-funded patients with private insurance have better health outcomes than those on Medicare. Carl Schmid, executive director of the HIV+Hepatitis Policy Institute, states, “With people living longer, we must sustain funding just to support the services for them, but at the same time, our goal is to bring more people into HIV care and treatment. Without that additional funding, our progress in ending HIV will remain basically stalled. While we are fighting proposed cuts, we must also examine ways to use the existing federal resources in different innovative ways to make the progress we need.”

PLWHA are also being affected by discretionary funding challenges with programs that are not expressly HIV related. One such program is the Teaching Health Center Graduate Medical Education program (THC). Most primary care medical residents receive their residency training in hospitals. The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services pays hospitals billions for primary care and other specialty residency training.[6] Conversely, the THC program trains residents in outpatient clinics instead of hospitals and has $215 million to spend through 2024. THC gives residents extensive community-based outpatient residency training in facilities such as federally qualified health centers and community clinics that are in underserved urban and rural areas.[6]

Data shows that graduates of THC residencies are more likely to remain and practice in local communities. Many PLWHA reside in underserved urban and rural communities. The THC program not only trains residents on how to care for these populations but is also a pipeline of an effective workforce to bolster care deserts. Many PLWHA in underserved areas have difficulty finding robust primary care services and infectious disease care. Effective primary care will lead to improved healthcare outcomes for PLWHA with comorbidities, in addition to enhancing their HIV care.

Attending physicians
Photo Source: The Wright Center

Nevertheless, unlike hospital residency programs, THC funding is not guaranteed and comes from discretionary Congressional appropriations. There are 82 THC programs in the United States. Despite proven success, the program is consistently financially tenuous. Due to not having stable, long-term, reliable funding, some of the THC programs have been put on hold or stopped.[6] It was created under the Affordable Care Act in 2010 and will run out of funding in December if its appropriations funding is not replenished.

It is important to note that federal domestic discretionary spending includes Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC) HIV prevention programs like the Ending the HIV Epidemic (EHE), RWHAP, ADAPs, National Institutes of Health (NIH) HIV/AIDS research, and even Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS (HOPWA).[1] President Biden’s fiscal year 2025 budget request eliminates barriers for Medicaid recipients to receive PrEP and proposes a program to guarantee PrEP for all uninsured and underinsured.[1] It also requests a new $10 million program to improve equity and civil rights through a DOJ program to eradicate outdated criminal statutes that target PLWHA.

The evolution of HIV is not stagnant or flat, nor should its funding be. The lives of PLWHA and efforts to end the HIV epidemic are too important to be left on unstable funding grounds due to the politicization of disease and misappropriation of scarce resources. House Republicans have expressed the desire to cut as much as 11% of a bill that supports HIV programs.[7] Failure to increase and innovate funding will adversely affect the progress that has been made as well as lead to avoidable poor healthcare outcomes and increased costs.

[1]  HIV.Gov. (2024, May 13). Federal HIV Budget. Retrieved from https://www.hiv.gov/federal-response/funding/budget

[2] Whitehead, S. (2024, June 19). Americans are living longer. Federal spending isn't keeping up. Retrieved from https://www.medpagetoday.com/hivaids/hivaids/110714?xid=nl_mpt_DHE_2024-06-19&eun=g1964022d0r&utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Daily%20Headlines%20Evening%202024-06-19&utm_term=NL_Daily_DHE_dual-gmail-definition

[3] Health Resources and Services Administration. (2023, December). HRSA Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program Parts and Initiatives. Retrieved from https://ryanwhite.hrsa.gov/about/parts-and-initiatives

[4] HIV.Gov. (2024, June 4). Aging with HIV. Retrieved from https://www.hiv.gov/hiv-basics/living-well-with-hiv/taking-care-of-yourself/aging-with-hiv#:~:text=Health%20Issues%20and%20Aging%20with%20HIV&text=In%20addition%2C%20while%20effective%20HIV,%2C%20renal%20disease%2C%20and%20cancer.

[5] Gallant, J., Hsue, P. Y., Shreay, S., & Meyer, N. (2017). Comorbidities Among US Patients With Prevalent HIV Infection—A Trend Analysis. The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 216(12).

[6] KFF Health News. (2024, June 13). Funding instability plaques program bringing doctors to underserved areas. Retrieved from https://www.usnews.com/news/health-news/articles/2024-06-13/funding-instability-plagues-program-bringing-doctors-to-underserved-areas?src=usn_tw

[7] Burke, J. (2024, May 21). Press Release: New CDC HIV Data Demonstrates the Impact of Flat Funding. Retrieved from https://hivhep.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/CDC-HIV-data-press-release-5.21.24.pdf

Disclaimer: Guest blogs do not necessarily reflect the views of the ADAP Advocacy Association, but rather they provide a neutral platform whereby the author serves to promote open, honest discussion about public health-related issues and updates.  

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