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Health services advocates are apprehensive about federal budget debate

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“We know we’d have layoffs and we know we’d have decreased access and we know that patients, especially uninsured patients, would start to use (hospital) emergency rooms. There’s no ambiguity on our part,” said Brian Toomey, the chief executive officer of Piedmont Health Services of Carrboro, N.C., which operates seven community health centers in the state and might lose about $500,000 in federal aid next year. “The average Piedmont patient typically comes three times a year at half the cost of a single emergency-room visit.”

NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH

It would lose $2.5 billion in fiscal year 2013, resulting in about 2,400 fewer bio-medical research grants, according to a report by the Democrats on the House of Representatives Appropriations Committee. The NIH invests about $31 billion a year in research.

FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION

The FDA might see a loss of $318 million next year, even as its number of inspectors has grown by more than 8 percent over the last two years. The testing of food, drugs and medical products from other countries probably would suffer. So would the evaluation of new drugs.

“So the one-year review period that FDA is trying to get at for most products, the average drug-approval time is going to slow for those products,” said Westmoreland, the law professor. “And somebody out there is waiting for an approved oncology drug to come onto the market.”

HIV/AIDS

These programs, along with services to fight viral hepatitis, would lose $659 million, resulting in more than 400 people with HIV not being diagnosed, while 5,000 low-income households with AIDS patients would lose federal housing support, according to the National Minority AIDS Council, the Foundation for AIDS Research and the National Alliance of State and Territorial AIDS Directors.

The federal AIDS Drug Assistance Program provides anti-retroviral medications for low-income people. An 8.2 percent funding cut would mean 15,700 fewer people served under the program, according to AIDS prevention groups.

“I would point out that most of those people have no place else to go for the drugs that they need,” Westmoreland said. “For them, AIDS will no longer, during the sequester, be a manageable medical condition.”

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