The ACA is Critical to the Health of all Americans, Particularly as the Nation Struggles to Contain the Coronavirus

(Washington D.C. – June 29, 2020)

The Trump Administration’s efforts to dismantle the Affordable Care Act (ACA), including urging the Supreme Court to overturn the act, is ill-conceived and puts the health of millions of Americans at risk during the worst public health crisis in over a century.

While always a bad idea, overturning the ACA as COVID-19 infection rates hit new highs in five states, would be catastrophic and could result in excess deaths. The loss of the ACA would also exacerbate the racial inequities that exist in healthcare access, adding to the disproportionate deaths of Blacks and other people of color due to the pandemic.

The ACA has been the law of the land for over a decade and millions of people rely on it for essential health services.  If the act was overturned, more than 20 million Americans who gained access to healthcare through the ACA created marketplace and Medicaid expansion would lose that coverage, including vital protections related to pre-existing conditions. Plus, the nearly 30 million Americans who have lost their healthcare due to COVID-19 layoffs would lose access to the critical back-up source for health coverage provided by the ACA marketplace.

There are also major implications for public health. If the law is overturned, it would gut the nation’s investment in public health by eliminating over $15 billion over the next 10 years (FY2021-FY2030) for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and other public health agencies. The Prevention and Public Health Fund, a dedicated funding stream created by the ACA and specifically designated for public health and prevention, funds approximately 11 percent of the CDC’s budget. These funds are put to work in every state to expand immunizations, prevent suicide, modernize laboratory and epidemiology services to detect and contain disease outbreaks, prevent childhood lead poisoning, and prevent diabetes and other chronic conditions.

Also at risk is the requirement that insurers cover recommended clinical preventive services without cost-sharing. These provisions have meant that an estimated additional 71 million Americans now have access to vaccines, tobacco cessation services, blood pressure and diabetes screenings and other life-saving services previously inaccessible to them.

Public Health Needs Our Support

(Washington D.C. – June 23)

John Auerbach, President and CEO of Trust for America’s Health, issued the following statement:

“As our nation struggles to manage the continued surge of COVID-19 cases, we need to strengthen the public health response.   Resistance to public health messages and threats to public health leaders and agencies undermine the efforts to protect the health and wellbeing of America’s residents.  We need to support the leadership of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and state, local, tribal, and territorial public health agencies in the efforts to re-open safely.

CDC, state, local, tribal, and territorial public health staff have been working around the clock for months to respond to the pandemic and protect the public, while often relying on overworked staff and inadequate systems that are the result of decades of underfunding.

CDC is a scientific agency that must be able to function in an apolitical manner.  We must amplify the unfettered voice of CDC, not stifle it.

The broad scope of CDC’s work – from chronic disease to injury prevention to environmental health to emergency preparedness to infectious disease – is critical.   It isn’t possible to effectively meet the needs of the American people if the scope is narrowed.   The COVID-19 pandemic demonstrates that the underlying health of Americans – including, for example, obesity, heart disease and diabetes – has a direct impact on the risk of serious illness and death. And the pandemic has also starkly highlighted the unacceptable health disparities related to racism and discrimination which can only be addressed with a sweeping health focus.

The mission of the CDC is clear and replicated in every state and local community’s public health department: save lives through sound public health.  Now more than ever we need them to accomplish their mission.”

Addressing the Crisis of Black Youth Suicide: Interview with Dr. Michael A. Lindsey

Dr. Lindsey is the executive director of the McSilver Institute for Poverty Policy and Research at New York University. He also leads the working group of experts supporting the Congressional Black Caucus Emergency Task Force on Black Youth Suicide and Mental Health. The Task Force report, Ring the Alarm: The Crisis of Black Youth Suicide, released in December 2019, is a comprehensive examination of the alarming rise in suicide rates for Black youth over the past generation; a survey of available data and evidence; and a call for policymakers and communities to take action to better understand and to reverse this emergent trend.[1]

 

TFAH: Please describe your work at the McSilver Institute.

Dr. Lindsey: We focus on the social determinants of mental health, as well as trauma and treatment disparities, all of which intersect with intergenerational poverty. If you are experiencing inequality related to, for example, food insecurity or underemployment, that has a psychological impact. We are looking for ways to break that cycle. We are committed to studying intergenerational poverty, not only to understand its consequences, but to also do something about it.


TFAH:
Where does your passion for your work come from?

Dr. Lindsey:
I’ve always been interested in mental health treatment disparities, particularly the lack of treatment access for serious mental health issues among Black people. I know the consequences of lack of mental health treatment. My passion derives from growing up in the Southeast section of Washington, D.C., where I saw the effects of drug use and undiagnosed, untreated addiction and mental health issues. I want to bridge that gap to make sure kids and families are connected to treatment in meaningful ways.


TFAH:
If you could recommend to policymakers one or two actions that would make a real difference on the social determinants of mental health, what would they be?

Dr. Lindsey: Let’s focus that a bit. And that’s a key point. Whatever we design as an intervention has to speak to the unique issues that are experienced by a specific group. For example, looking at the rising rates of suicide among Black youth. We need to have mental health professionals in schools, proportionate to the number of kids in that school. We can’t have one provider trying to serve 500 kids or even 100 kids; that’s too many. We also need to see more federal research dollars, specifically, for studying the increasing rate of Black youth suicide. The data are clearly telling us that Black youth are at high risk.


TFAH:
Does the research you are calling for need to be population-focused?

Dr. Lindsey: No question, it does. The research also needs to be gender-sensitive and culturally appropriate. We need to understand how families of color, in this case, Black families, resolve mental health challenges. For example, do we need to involve clergy in the intervention programs? Do we need services in non-traditional settings? Do we need to provide services in places other than those that the community believes are where “crazy people” go? Setting up services from the consumer perspective will help us establish services that are going to be meaningful.

TFAH: What’s the impact of the school environment on the lives of Black children? Are you concerned about school disciplinary policies that have unintended consequences for students who end up in trouble with the juvenile justice system?

Dr. Lindsey: This is something I’m particularly concerned about. For students of color, there’s implicit bias in how their behaviors are interpreted. If you have a White kid and a Black kid and a Latino kid—if the Black or Latino kid aggresses toward someone, the reaction is that kid is a bad kid, one who should be removed from school. But if a White kid acts up, he is perceived as having emotional challenges. The White kid is not suspended, he’s offered mental health services. It happens a lot.

When Black kids are suspended from school, they can be wayward in the community, they’re not engaged, their behavior comes to the attention of law enforcement—it’s a vicious cycle. It’s also tough for those same kids who are suspended from school to return to school because those school communities often don’t want them back. The largest number of students who have this lack of school engagement tend to be Black and Brown.

If we had intervened on those behaviors early on and gotten those kids to mental health treatment and associated services, we could have averted that later suspension from school. It’s a matter of how we interpret the behavioral presentations of kids. It happens to be that Black and Brown students are the ones who are not getting the requisite services surrounding their mental health.


TFAH:
What has been the impact of zero-tolerance policies in schools on students of color?

Dr. Lindsey:
Zero-tolerance has had a big impact on what I would call school persistence and staying connected to school among Black and Brown kids. Zero-tolerance policies do not work, and they disadvantage low-income kids and kids of color.


TFAH:
McSilver’s Step Up program is established in two New York City high schools. Can you tell us more about it?

Dr. Lindsey:
Step Up is focused on positive youth development. What we do is take students who are at risk for truancy or school dropout, and we wrap-around services to support them. It includes peer support—so a lot of peer-based mentoring—as well as professionally led activities to help kids stay on a positive course. The program has an 85 percent graduation rate; that’s about 10 percent higher than the general graduation rate in New York City. Programs like Step Up or school mental health services that can be offered to kids who are struggling can be very important to ensure that these kids stay connected.

TFAH: You led the expert working group that helped inform the work of the Congressional Black Caucus Emergency Task Force on Black Youth Suicide and Mental Health. What did the task force find and what did it recommend?

Dr. Lindsey: Black youth suicide and suicidal behaviors are rising. Black boys (ages 5 to 12 years old) are twice as likely to die by suicide as compared with their White peers. We led a study at the McSilver Institute that found that the self-reported suicide attempt rate for Black youth increased by 73 percent between 1991 and 2017; meanwhile, self-reported suicide attempt rates fell for White and Latino kids and for Asian and American Indian/Alaska Native kids during the same period.

What needs to be done is many of things we’ve talked about. We’re calling for mental health professionals in every school and for more National Institutes of Health funding. We’re calling for Mental Health First Aid to be widely implemented in schools. All the professionals in schools should be well-versed in the presentation of mental health issues, the signs that a student may be having trouble and how to get that student connected to supportive treatment.

We are also calling for more demonstration projects, programs that would implement evidence-based and best practices for clinicians and teachers and anyone who interacts with Black youth. We are calling for investment in demonstration projects to identify exemplars and then implement those programs at scale.


TFAH:
What is required to scale up promising programs?

Dr. Lindsey: We have a program called Making Connections. In this program, we are targeting kids who have depression. The program works to reduce stigma. It is designed to help families understand what mental health treatment is all about and to address any concerns they might have about it. It’s a promising program I’d like to see delivered at scale. In order to do that, we are going to have to invest dollars in understanding how this program works. We are currently funded by NIMH [National Institute of Mental Health], but we are going to need increased funding to be able to do this in other places. If we are going to deliver these programs at scale, we are going to have to engage in the research to take them to scale. That means establishing the efficacy of programs like Making Connections, but also determining how best to implement programs like it at scale.


TFAH:
Anything else you want to share?

Dr. Lindsey:
I’m reminded of the power of storytelling. We need to demonstrate how implicit bias is impacting Black and Brown kids, bias that is potentially an underlying feature of why we are seeing the rising suicide trends. We need to tell the story of implicit bias in compelling ways. I believe that will challenge folks to action. It’s also important to recognize the role that stigma and mistrust play in the disconnection from services. They play a huge role in terms of the disconnection from mental health treatment. We need to work on bridging those gaps between need and use of treatment.

[1] Watson Coleman B. Ring the Alarm: The Crisis of Black Youth Suicide in America. Washington, D.C.: Congressional Black Caucus Emergency TaskForce on Black Youth Suicide and Mental Health, December 2019. https://watsoncoleman.house.gov/uploadedfiles/full_taskforce_report.pdf (accessed April 30, 2020).

 

TFAH’s Statement on Racism and Health and Well Being in America

Trust for America’s Health (TFAH) stands in solidarity with those opposing racism and seeking racial justice. The recent horrific deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Ahmaud Arbery further expose the persistence of racism and racial violence in American society. We must remember the lives of so many Black people taken by such violence. We keep the families in our minds and hearts.

Systemic racism undermines equity and opportunity and is far-reaching – in health, education, economic opportunity, employment, housing, transportation, and criminal justice, only to name a few examples. The toll from racism on the lives and health of Black people and other people of color is vast.  It is seen in the impact of the disinvestment in and marginalization of communities of color, the unhealthy social, economic, and environmental conditions, and the lack of opportunities within community, work and school settings, which result in deaths at earlier ages and high rates of chronic and infectious diseases.  It is seen in the impact of racial violence as well as daily instances of prejudice and racial discrimination that result in adverse mental and physical health effects such as stress, trauma, and elevated blood pressure.  The recent cases of violence against Black people and the disproportionate impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on people of color have highlighted once again the importance of combating racism as a public health imperative.

At Trust for America’s Health, we envision a nation that values the health and well-being of all, where equity is foundational to policymaking at all levels of society.  Together with all justice-seeking people in America, we remain steadfast in advocating for policy solutions to achieve equity so that everyone has a fair and just opportunity for optimal health.

Las muertes anuales debidas al alcohol, las drogas o el suicidio excedieron los 150,000 según los datos más recientes, y podrían empeorar debido a COVID-19

A pesar de las disminuciones en las muertes por sobredosis de opioides en general, las muertes por opioides sintéticos, cocaína y otros psicoestimulantes aumentaron bruscamente y las muertes por alcohol y suicidio también aumentaron

 

(Washington, DC y Oakland, CA – 21 de mayo de 2020) – Los datos recientemente publicados muestran que 151,964 estadounidenses murieron debido al alcohol, las drogas o el suicidio en el 2018. Esta tasa nacional de mortalidad por alcohol, drogas y muertes por suicidio fue solo muy ligeramente inferior a lo que había sido en el 2017 a pesar del progreso en la reducción de algunos tipos de sobredosis de opioides, según un nuevo estudio realizado por Trust for America’s Health (TFAH) y Well Being Trust (WBT).

Por el año, las muertes por alcohol aumentaron un 4 por ciento y las muertes por suicidio aumentaron un 2 por ciento. Los nuevos datos también muestran un cambio continuo dentro de la crisis de opioides con reducciones en las muertes por sobredosis de opioides recetados, pero aumentan las muertes que involucran opioides sintéticos, incluido el fentanilo.

Las tasas de mortalidad de todos los opioides disminuyeron un 2 por ciento, pero la tasa de mortalidad de los opioides sintéticos aumentó un 10 por ciento. Además, las muertes por sobredosis con heroína fueron menores, pero las muertes por cocaína y otros psicoestimulantes, como la metanfetamina, el éxtasis, la anfetamina y los estimulantes recetados, fueron mayores.

Aunque todavía es inquietantemente alto, los datos del 2018 son la primera vez desde 1999, cuando comenzó la recopilación de datos actual, que no ha habido un aumento considerable en el alcohol, las drogas y las muertes por suicidio por una tasa de 100,000. Sin embargo, esta estabilización en la tasa de mortalidad no fue uniforme. Algunos lugares y grupos de población están experimentando tasas de mortalidad estables o decrecientes, mientras que las tasas entre otros grupos o en otros lugares continúan aumentando.

“Estos datos son un llamado a la acción”, dijo John Auerbach, presidente y CEO de Trust for America’s Health. “Sabemos lo que funciona para abordar las muertes por desesperación, pero el progreso ha sido desigual y las tasas de mortalidad continúan aumentando, con comunidades de color que experimentan tasas más altas de aumentos en las muertes inducidas por drogas y alcohol. Y hay otra preocupación inmediata: la crisis de COVID-19 ha aumentado las cargas sanitarias y las presiones económicas en muchas comunidades de color “.

Los indios americanos, asiáticos, negros, latinos y adultos mayores experimentaron aumentos en las muertes inducidas por drogas entre 2017 y 2018. Los negros y los indios estadounidenses tuvieron el mayor aumento absoluto. Los negros ahora tienen tasas más altas de sobredosis de opioides sintéticos (10.7 por 100,000), tasas de sobredosis de cocaína (8.8 por 100,000) y casi la misma tasa general de mortalidad inducida por drogas (21.8 por 100,000) que los blancos, después de décadas de tener tasas sustancialmente más bajas.

Los grupos de población que experimentaron tasas de mortalidad más bajas inducidas por drogas en el 2018 incluyeron adultos de 18 a 54 años y blancos.

“Simplemente, muchos estadounidenses están muriendo por causas prevenibles. Las profundas disparidades raciales de salud observadas en estos datos muestran que muchos grupos de minorías étnicas se están quedando atrás en nuestros esfuerzos de respuesta “, dijo Benjamin F. Miller, PsyD, director de estrategia de Well Being Trust. “La nación necesita un marco integral para la excelencia en la salud mental y el bienestar, uno que intencionalmente brinde soluciones para los indios americanos, negros, asiáticos y latinos. Con todas las demás inversiones relacionadas con COVID-19, es hora de que el gobierno federal invierta completamente en salud mental ahora y que todos los estados tomen medidas “.

La reducción de ciertas muertes por opioides sugiere que las políticas y los programas dirigidos a la epidemia de opioides pueden estar afianzándose en algunas poblaciones, pero muchos grupos raciales y étnicos no están viendo el mismo progreso que los blancos. La nación debe basarse en el pequeño grado de éxito y llevar el mismo enfoque a las poblaciones que están en mayor riesgo, especialmente los negros, los latinos y los indios estadounidenses.

Las recomendaciones de política descritas en el informe incluyen:

o Invertir en prevención abordando los factores importantes que crean las condiciones que mejoran los resultados. Numerosos factores contribuyen al bienestar o la falta de este, incluida la pobreza intergeneracional, el racismo sistémico, la discriminación étnica y la homofobia / transfobia se encuentran entre los factores sociales, económicos y ambientales que elevan el riesgo. Las agencias gubernamentales a todos los niveles deben tomar medidas para promover la equidad racial y combatir el racismo y la discriminación.

o Reducir los factores de riesgo y promover la resiliencia en niños, familias y comunidades. Apoyo de políticas y programas equitativos que reduzcan las experiencias traumáticas y adversas, como la exposición a la violencia, la vivienda inestable, la discriminación racial y étnica y el sesgo implícito, que tienen profundos impactos a largo plazo en el uso posterior de sustancias y la salud mental.

o Integrar, aumentar el acceso y mejorar la atención médica al involucrar a todos los sectores de la sociedad para abordar los trastornos de salud mental y uso de sustancias. Las escuelas, los lugares de trabajo, los centros comunitarios, las bibliotecas y los programas públicos deben incorporar formas de abordar los problemas de salud mental y adicciones, desde aumentar la conciencia y reducir el estigma, hasta proporcionar capacitación en intervenciones de crisis y facilitar referencias, e incluso integrar la atención médica en su programación donde sea posible.

o Limitar el acceso a medios letales de suicidio. Promover el almacenamiento seguro de medicamentos y armas de fuego proporcionando educación pública; restringir el acceso a armas de fuego a niños y personas en crisis o en riesgo de suicidio; y la creación de protocolos para proveedores de atención médica, consejeros y personal de primera respuesta sobre cómo interactuar y aconsejar a los pacientes y sus familias para crear entornos seguros. Implementar verificaciones de antecedentes universales para la compra de armas y órdenes de protección de riesgo extremo en todo el país, y ampliar los programas para involucrar a las partes interesadas, como el Proyecto Gun Shop, que educa al personal de las tiendas de armas sobre la prevención del suicidio.

 

Resumen de datos de 2018

Muertes por tipos de drogas

Muertes por sobredosis de opioides sintéticos: en el 2018, 31,355 estadounidenses murieron por sobredosis de opioides sintéticos; un aumento del 10 por ciento desde el 2017. En total, la tasa de mortalidad por sobredosis con opioides sintéticos ha aumentado casi 10 veces desde el 2013.

Muertes por sobredosis de cocaína: en el 2018, 14,666 estadounidenses murieron por sobredosis relacionadas con la cocaína; hasta un 5 por ciento desde el 2017. La tasa general de mortalidad por sobredosis de cocaína ha aumentado en un 187 por ciento desde el 2013.

Otras muertes por sobredosis de psicoestimulantes: en el 2018, 12,676 estadounidenses murieron por sobredosis de psicoestimulantes y 52,279 murieron en la última década debido al abuso de psicoestimulantes. La tasa de mortalidad por sobredosis de psicoestimulantes en el 2018 fue un 22 por ciento más alta que en el 2017.

Muertes inducidas por alcohol

En el 2018, 37,329 estadounidenses murieron debido a causas inducidas por el alcohol; La tasa de muertes inducidas por el alcohol en el 2018 fue un 4 por ciento más alta que el año anterior.

Las muertes inducidas por el alcohol son más altas entre los indios americanos (30.0 por 100,000) y adultos de 55 a 74 años (27.6 por 100,000). Todos los grupos de población tuvieron tasas más altas de muertes por alcohol en 2018 en comparación con el año anterior, excepto los jóvenes de 0 a 17 años, cuya tasa se mantuvo estable.

Muertes por suicidios

En el 2018, 48,344 estadounidenses murieron como resultado del suicidio. A nivel nacional, la tasa de suicidios de 2018 fue dos por ciento más alta que el año anterior (después de un aumento de cuatro por ciento en 2017). Las tasas de suicidio aumentaron en todos los datos demográficos, excepto en adultos de 18 a 54 años cuya tasa se mantuvo estable. Además, todos los grupos minoritarios raciales y étnicos experimentaron cambios proporcionales mayores en las tasas de suicidio que los blancos.

La muerte por suicidio en el 2018 fue más alta entre los hombres (23.4 por ciento por 100,000), aquellos que viven en áreas rurales (19.7 por 100,000), blancos (16.8 por 100,000) y nativos de los indios americanos / Alaska (14.1 por 100,000).

Tendencias estatales

Entre 2017 y 2018, 27 estados experimentaron tasas más altas (por encima del 0,04%) de muertes por alcohol, drogas y suicidio. Veintitrés estados y el Distrito de Columbia tuvieron menos muertes por alcohol, drogas y suicidio durante el mismo período.

Los estados con las tasas más altas de mortalidad por alcohol, drogas y suicidio en el 2018 fueron: West Virginia (84.9 por 100,000), Nuevo México (82.8 por 100,000), New Hampshire (68.2 por 100,000) y Alaska (67.8 por 100,000).

Los estados con las tasas más bajas de alcohol, drogas y suicidio en 2018 fueron: Texas (31.7 por 100,000), Mississippi (31.7 por 100,000) y Hawaii (34.6 por 100,000).

# # #

 

Trust for America’s Health es una organización sin fines de lucro y no partidista que promueve la salud óptima para cada persona y comunidad y hace de la prevención de enfermedades y lesiones una prioridad nacional. www.tfah.org. Twitter: @HealthyAmerica1

 

Well Being Trust es una fundación nacional dedicada a promover la salud mental, social y espiritual de la nación. Creado para incluir la participación de organizaciones de todos los sectores y perspectivas, Well Being Trust se compromete a innovar y abordar los desafíos de salud mental más críticos que enfrenta Estados Unidos, y a transformar el bienestar individual y comunitario. www.wellbeingtrust.org. Twitter: @WellBeingTrust

When Two Health Risks Merge – Rising Obesity Rates Put More Americans at Risk for Serious Health Impacts of the Novel Coronavirus

High obesity rates in communities of color may be one of a number of factors leading to severe COVID-19 impacts in those communities

(Washington, DC – May 6, 2020) – New data drawn from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) found that 42.4 percent of U.S. adults age 20 and older have obesity. That rate was up nearly three percentage points from the previous NHANES survey taken in 2015-2016 when 39.6 percent of the nation’s adults had obesity. After remaining relatively stable in the 2000s, these new data represent the third consecutive NHANES survey that found increases in the nation’s adult obesity rate of 2.8, 1.9 and 2.8 percentage points respectively.

The latest survey also showed a continuing pattern of higher rates of obesity in Black and Latino communities than in the White population. Among adults, the prevalence of both obesity and severe obesity was highest in Black adults compared with other races/ethnicities.

Rates of Obesity – U.S. Adults by Race:

  • Blacks – 49.6%
  • Latinos – 44.8%
  • Whites – 42.2%

Rates of Obesity – U.S. Adults by Race and Gender

  • Black Women – 56.9%
  • Black Men – 41.1%
  • Latina Women – 43.7%
  • Latino Men – 45.7%
  • White Women – 39.8 %
  • White Men – 44.7 %

Childhood obesity is also increasing across the country. Having obesity as a child puts you at a higher risk of having obesity as an adult.


Having obesity puts people at higher risk for severe COVID-19 impact
It is well-established that obesity is associated with serious health risks.  The risk of diabetes is closely associated with obesity. In addition, people with obesity have higher levels of pre-existing respiratory and cardiac disease which puts them at higher risk for serious impacts if infected by the novel coronavirus.  In a study in review for publication, researchers at New York University found that obesity is one of three of the most common risk factors for COVID-19 hospitalizations.

The COVID-19 crisis is disproportionately causing severe illness and taking the lives of Black Americans. As of April, of COVID-19 positive tests where the patient’s race/ethnicity was known, 28.5 percent were Black. Blacks make-up 13.4 percent of the U.S. population.  Additional examples include Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, Blacks are 28 percent of the county’s population but as of early April were 73 percent of its coronavirus deaths. In Michigan, Blacks are 14 percent of the state’s population and 41 percent of the state’s coronavirus deaths. In Chicago, Blacks are 23 percent of the city’s residents and 58 percent of its coronavirus deaths.

The social, economic, and environmental conditions that lead to higher rates of obesity and other chronic diseases in communities of color are tied to factors that also elevate the risk of COVID-19 related hospitalizations and death.  Factors such as lack of economic opportunities, for example in the form of good jobs with living wages, contribute to obesity by making it more difficult to afford healthier foods or have access to stores that sell affordable healthy produce.  Additional conditions in many communities of color that contribute COVID-19 infections, hospitalizations and deaths are living in multigenerational households, working in public-facing jobs that elevate COVID-19 risk (such as work in home health care, grocery stores, delivery services and the public transit system) and less access to healthcare.

“Numerous factors are leading to the tragic overrepresentation of people of color in the nation’s COVID-19 deaths, among them the number of people of color working on the frontlines as essential workers, where telework or physical distancing is not possible,” said Dr. J. Nadine Gracia, Trust for America’s Health’s Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer. “In addition, high levels of chronic disease within communities of color, such as diabetes and heart disease, are contributing to higher levels of COVID-19 deaths”.

The nation’s obesity crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic will continue to interact in additional ways. For example, food insecurity is associated with obesity. An additional contributing factor is lack of physical activity. Unfortunately, COVID-19 will increase both of those concerns as millions of families are currently food insecure due to job loss and many places to exercise such as gyms, community centers and parks are closed.

“The COVID-19 crisis has illuminated systemic and structural inequities that impact the health and well-being of people of color,” Dr. Gracia said. “The factors associated with maintaining a healthy weight are another example of the ways in which where people live, the neighborhood resources available, and the economic opportunities afforded to them drive their health, and are now driving their degree of health risk due to COVID-19.”

While federal and state leaders are immediately focused on protecting lives during the current crisis, investing in programs to stem the rise in the country’s obesity rates will not only improve Americans’ health, it will also make the country more resilient during future health emergencies.

Some of the federal policy actions TFAH recommends to reverse the country’s rising obesity rates are:

  • Congress should fully fund CDC’s Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity’s SPAN (State Physical Activity and Nutrition program) grants for all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Current CDC funding only supports 16 states out of 50 approved applications.
  • Congress should increase funding for CDC’s Racial and Ethnic Approaches to Community Health (REACH) program which works with community organizations to deliver effective local and culturally appropriate obesity prevention programs in communities that bear a disproportionate burden of chronic disease. Current funding only supports 31 grantees out of 261 approved applications.
  • Build capacity for CDC and public health departments to work with other sectors (such as housing and transportation) to address social determinants of health, the nonmedical factors that affect communities’ health status including rates of obesity.
  • Without decreasing access or benefit levels, ensure that anti-hunger and nutrition-assistance programs, like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC) follow the Dietary Guidelines for Americans and make access to nutritious food a core program tenet.
  • Expand the WIC program to age 6 for children and for two years postpartum for mothers. Fully fund the WIC Breastfeeding Peer Counseling Program.
  • Increase the price of sugary drinks through excise taxes and use the revenue to address health and socioeconomic disparities. Increasing the price of surgery drinks has been shown to decrease their consumption.
  • Enforce existing laws that direct most health insurers to cover obesity-related preventive services at no-cost sharing to patients. Comprehensive pediatric weight management programs and services should also be covered by Medicaid.
  • Encourage safe physical activity by funding Complete Streets, Vision Zero and other pedestrian safety initiatives through federal transportation and infrastructure funding.
  • In schools, strengthen and expand school nutrition programs beyond federal standards to include universal meals and flexible breakfasts, eliminate all unhealthy food marketing to students, support physical education programs in all schools and expand programs that ensure students can safely walk or ride bicycles to and from school.

See TFAH’s State of Obesity: Better Policies for a Healthier America 2019 for additional recommendations on how to stem the country’s obesity crisis. https://www.tfah.org/report-details/stateofobesity20

 

 

 

New Report Shows Hamstrung COVID-19 Response was Years in the Making

Funding for public health preparedness and response programs lost ground in FY 2020 and over the past decade.

(Washington, DC – April 16, 2020) – Chronic underfunding of the nation’s public health and emergency preparedness systems has made the nation vulnerable to health security risks, including the novel coronavirus pandemic, according to a new report released today by Trust for America’s Health.

The report, The Impact of Chronic Underfunding on America’s Public Health System: Trends, Risks, and Recommendations, 2020, examines federal, state, and local public health funding trends and recommends investments and policy actions to build a stronger system, prioritize prevention, and effectively address twenty-first-century health risks.

“COVID-19 has shined a harsh spotlight on the country’s lack of preparedness for dealing with threats to Americans’ well-being,” said John Auerbach, President and CEO of Trust for America’s Health. “Years of cutting funding for public health and emergency preparedness programs has left the nation with a smaller-than-necessary public health workforce, limited testing capacity, an insufficient national stockpile, and archaic disease tracking systems – in summary, twentieth-century tools for dealing with twenty-first-century challenges.”

Mixed Picture for CDC FY 2020 Funding

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is the nation’s leading public health agency. The CDC’s overall budget for FY 2020 is $7.92 billion – a $645 million increase, 9 percent over FY 2019 CDC funding, 7 percent in inflation-adjusted dollars. The largest FY 2020 increase was a onetime investment in buildings and facilities (+$225 million). Other increases included funding for the Ending HIV initiative (+$140 million) and small increases for suicide and chronic disease prevention programs.

Emergency Preparedness Funding Down This Year and For Over a Decade

Funding for CDC’s public health preparedness and response programs decreased between the FY 2019 and FY 2020 budgets – down from $858 million in FY 2019 to $850 million in FY 2020.  CDC’s program funding for emergency preparedness in FY 2020 ($7.92 billion) is less than it was in FY 2011 ($7.99 billion in FY 2020 dollars), after adjusting for inflation.

Funding for state and local public health emergency preparedness and response programs has also been reduced, by approximately one-third since 2003. And, of critical concern now, funding for the Hospital Preparedness Program, the only federal source of funding to help the healthcare delivery system prepare for and respond to emergencies, has been cut by half since 2003.

Federal action to enact three supplemental funding packages to support the COVID-19 pandemic response was critical. But they are short-term adjustments that do not strengthen the core, long-term capacity of the public health system, according to the report’s authors.  Sustained annual funding increases are needed to ensure that our health security systems and public health infrastructure are up to the task of protecting all communities.

The nation’s habitual neglect of public health, except during emergencies, is a longstanding problem. “Emergencies that threaten Americans’ health and well-being are becoming more frequent and more severe. These include wildfires and flooding, the opioid crisis, the increase in obesity and chronic illness, and this year a measles outbreak, serious lung injuries due to vaping, and the worst pandemic in a century. We must begin making year-in and year-out investments in public health,” Auerbach said.

In addition to supporting federal activities, federal monies are also the primary source of funding for most state and local public health programs. During FY 2018, 55 percent of states’ public health expenditures, on average, were funded from federal sources. Therefore, federal spending cuts have a serious trickle-down effect on state and local programs. Between FY 2016 and FY 2018, state expenditures of federal monies for public health activities decreased from $16.3 billion to $12.8 billion.   On top of federal cuts, some states have also reduced public health funding.  More than 20 percent of states (eleven) cut their public health funding between 2018 and 2019.

These funding cuts have led to significant workforce reductions in state and local public health departments. In 2017, 51 percent of large local public health departments reported job losses.  Some of the positions lost were frontline public health staff who would have been mobilized to combat the COVID-19 pandemic.

The report includes 28 policy recommendations to improve the country’s emergency preparedness in four priority areas:

  • increased funding to strengthen the public health infrastructure and workforce, including modernizing data systems and surveillance capacities.
  • improving emergency preparedness, including preparation for weather-related events and infectious disease outbreaks.
  • safeguarding and improving Americans’ health by investing in chronic disease prevention and the prevention of substance misuse and suicide.
  • addressing the social determinants of health and advancing health equity.

The report also endorses the call by more than 100 public health organizations for Congress to increase CDC’s budget by 22 percent by FY 2022.

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Trust for America’s Health is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization that promotes optimal health for every person and community and makes the prevention of illness and injury a national priority. Twitter: @healthyamerica1