White House budget proposes billions of dollars for cancer research, opioid crisis response

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President Joe Biden’s budget request to Congress proposes the creation of a new agency dedicated to cancer research, billions of dollars in funding to help end the opioid epidemic and an investment in the rural health workforce.

As Biden’s first budget request to Congress as president, it offers a look at his priorities on healthcare and education, with increases in discretionary — or optional spending — across the board.

A proposal detailing mandatory spending requests — which includes Medicaid and Medicare — will come later, White House officials said Friday.

The request released Friday by the White House Office of Management and Budget requests $6.5 billion to launch the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health within the National Institutes of Health.

The initial focus of the agency would be on cancer and other diseases like diabetes and Alzheimers, with the goal of driving “transformational innovation” in health research and speed health breakthroughs.

The requests also asks Congress to appropriate $10.7 billion to help end the opioid epidemic, with a focus on research, prevention, treatment and recovery services, particularly for Native Americans, older Americans and rural populations. It would also go toward medication-assisted treatment and expanding the behavioral health provider workforce.

That would amount to a nearly $4 billion increase over what was approved by Congress for 2021.

The White House also requested that Congress increase funding for HRSA programs that aim to increase the number of rural healthcare providers and help them stay open.

The White House is also asking Congress to approve $8.7 billion in funding for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which would be the largest increase seen in decades, to modernize public health department data collection and workforce training.

Citing the impact COVID-19 has had on mental health, the White House also asked Congress to double spending on the community mental health services block grant to $1.6 billion a year.

The White House also requested $670 million within HHS to help end the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the U.S. by increasing access to treatment and preventive care.

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