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Washington Highlights: February 5, 2010

President Releases FY 2011 Budget

President Obama Feb. 1 released his FY 2011 budget. The $3.8 trillion blueprint outlines the administration's fiscal policies and major budgetary initiatives. The president proposes to freeze "non-security" discretionary spending - i.e., appropriations for domestic programs - for the next three years while increasing funding for priorities such as research and education. For the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), the budget proposes $81.2 billion in discretionary spending, an increase of $2.3 billion (2.9 percent).

The following budget items are of interest to medical schools and teaching hospitals.

National Institutes of Health (NIH): The president proposes $32.089 billion in discretionary budget authority, a $1 billion (3.2 percent) increase over FY 2010. This includes $32.007 billion through the Labor/HHS/Education appropriation bill and $82 million for Superfund Research activities at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences from the Interior appropriation.

At a Feb. 1 briefing on the president's budget, NIH Director Francis Collins, M.D., Ph.D., reiterated the agency's new initiatives would revolve around five priorities, including:

  • applying "high throughput" technologies to understand fundamental biology and disease;
  • translating basic science into new and better treatments;
  • putting science to work for the benefit of health care reform;
  • encouraging greater focus on global health; and
  • reinvigorating and empowering the biomedical research community, including new scientists.

According to a summary prepared by NIH, the president's budget would fund a total of 9,052 competing research project grants (RPGs), a decrease of 199 RPGs from the estimated FY 2010 level. For noncompeting continuation awards, the budget provides inflationary increases of 2 percent. The average cost of competing RPGs also increases by 2 percent over the FY 2010 level. Due to the receipt of Recovery Act funds in FY 2009, NIH will temporarily suspend the NIH Director's Bridge Award program in FY 2011. The budget also proposes $824.4 million for the Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Awards, a 6.0 percent increase over FY 2010, which will be directed to training stipends. In addition, the budget includes a total of $500 million for Clinical and Translational Science Awards (CTSA).

As in previous years, the president's budget proposes to reduce the salary limit through a grant or other extramural mechanism from NIH, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration to Executive Level II ($179,700 in 2010). The current cap is at Executive Level I ($199,700 in 2010). AAMC, the Association of American Universities (AAU), and the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities issued a joint statement praising President Obama for the increased funding.

A summary of the FY 2011 President's Budget for NIH is available on the NIH Web site.

VA Medical and Prosthetic Research: The President's FY 2011 budget requests $590 million for VA research, a $9 million (1.5 percent) increase over the FY 2010 appropriation. For the first time, the President's budget also requests $60.5 billion in advance funding for FY 2012 VA medical care, a $2.4 billion (5 percent) increase over the FY 2011 advance appropriations. Congress appropriated $44.5 billion for VA medical care in FY 2010.

Health Professions: For Title VII health professions and Title VIII nursing education programs, the budget requests $503.9 million, a $5.9 million (1.2 percent) increase over FY 2010. The increase is designated for the Title VII workforce information and analysis program, which is proposed at $8.8 million, a 210 percent increase over FY 2010. The president recommends level funding for all other Title VII and Title VIII programs.

National Health Service Corps (NHSC): For the NHSC, the budget proposes $169 million, a $27 million (19 percent) increase over FY 2010.

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ): The budget boosts funding for AHRQ to $611 million in FY 2011, a $214 million (53.9 percent) increase over FY 2010. Within the total, the budget increases funding for "Patient-Centered Health Research" to $273 million, but cuts funding for Patient Safety Research and Crosscutting Activities.

Children's Graduate Medical Education (GME): The president proposes $318 million for the Children's program, the same funding level as FY 2010.

Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC): The budget requests $78 million for the ONC, a $17 million (40.4 percent) increase over FY 2010. The president proposes the funding level entirely through budget authority, unlike FY 2010, when $19 million was provided through Public Health Service Evaluation funds. Additionally, the budget materials cite $2 billion provided to ONC through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA, P.L. 111-5), as well as funds throughout HHS, as additional resources to help promote health information technology (HIT). Other HIT funding throughout HHS includes: $32 million within AHRQ for the use of HIT to enhance patient safety, $1 million in the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation for evaluation of EHR adoption, $1.6 million in the Office of Civil Rights for regional privacy advisors, and resources within the request for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to conduct the third year of a demonstration project to promote EHR adoption among small physician practices.

Emergency Preparedness: The budget requests $1.1 billion through the Public Health and Social Service Emergency Fund for the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response (ASPR), an increase of $162 million (14.7 percent) over FY 2010, to help achieve a previously announced initiative to "review the public health countermeasures enterprise." Within the ASPR total, the budget requests $476 million from the BioShield Special Reserve Fund to fund the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), including management costs associated with Project BioShield. The budget also "will permit the Secretary to make additional BioShield funds available for advanced research and development activities after notification of Congress" to "enable BARDA to target resources to the most promising countermeasure candidates whether through advanced development or through acquisition using Project BioShield." The budget also proposes $426 million for hospital preparedness cooperative agreements, as provided in FY 2010.

Additional HHS budget materials, including the Budget in Brief and links to individual agency budget justifications, are available on the HHS Web site.

Department of Education: Similar to the FY 2010 budget, the president's budget for FY 2011 proposes to eliminate the Federal Family Education Loan (FFEL) program and originate all new Stafford loans under the Direct Loan program beginning July 1, 2011. The budget also proposes to increase to $6 billion the total annual loan amounts available under the Perkins Loan program from its current $1 billion. However, this proposal would also eliminate the in-school interest subsidy on these loans. The President's budget reiterates the President's support for enacting the Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act (H.R.3221), which includes the President's legislative proposals. The House passed H.R. 3221 on Sept. 17, 2009, and the bill is expected to be part of a budget reconciliation package.

The budget also proposes to reduce the repayment formula of the Income-Based Repayment (IBR) program from 15 percent of adjusted gross income to 10 percent, as well as reducing the maximum loan repayment duration from 25 years to 20 years before forgiveness.

Additional materials on the budget for the Department of Education are available on the Department's Web site.

Centers for Disease Control (CDC): The president's budget recommends $6.34 billion in funding for the CDC, a reduction of $125 million (1.9 percent) bellow the FY 2010 enacted levels. The majority of the reductions in funding are seen in cuts to administrative functions, such as decreases in travel and reductions in advisory and assistance service contracts, while most programmatic funding levels are maintained at or above FY 2010 enacted levels. Programs that are subject to reductions in funding include vector-borne activities, including West-Nile Virus, congressionally-directed projects, and blood disorders, among others. The CDC will also receive a $225 million transfer from the Public Health and Social Services Emergency Fund to offset reduced budget authority for pandemic flu and for a portion of the Strategic National Stockpile activities.

National Science Foundation (NSF): The president's budget requests $7.42 billion for NSF, $551 million (8 percent) above the FY 2010 enacted level. The request also includes $6.02 billion for research and related activities, a $455 million (8.2 percent) increase over FY 2010.

The full budget request is available at the White House's Web site.

Contact:
Dave Moore, Senior Director
AAMC Government Relations
dbmoore@aamc.org
(202) 828-0525

Tannaz Rasouli, Senior Legislative Analyst
AAMC Government Relations
trasouli@aamc.org
(202) 828-0525

Matthew Shick, Senior Legislative Analyst
AAMC Government Relations
mshick@aamc.org
(202) 862-6116

Shannon Curtis, Legislative Analyst
AAMC Government Relations
scurtis@aamc.org
(202) 828-0558

President's Budget Assumes Creation of Fiscal Commission

The president's FY 2011 budget assumes creation of a bipartisan Fiscal Commission. The commission will be charged with recommending cost-cutting measures across the federal government, including Medicare and Medicaid, and to return the nation "to a sustainable fiscal path."

In a Jan. 28 letter to Senate Budget Committee Chair Kent Conrad (D-N.D.), Vice President Joseph Biden confirms an agreement between himself, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) for "congressional consideration of the Fiscal Commission's recommendations." Under the agreement, Majority Leader Reid commits to consider commission recommendations on the Senate floor. If the recommendations pass the Senate, Speaker Pelosi commits to bringing the measure for a House vote.

Contact:
Travis W. Crytzer, Legislative Analyst
AAMC Government Relations
tcrytzer@aamc.org
(202) 828-0418

Senate Democrats Plan to Introduce FMAP Extension Legislation

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-W.V.) Feb. 3 announced plans to introduce legislation extending by six months the increase in the Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP) that states currently receive under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA). The FMAP increase under ARRA is set to expire at the end of 2010 [see Washington Highlights, Feb. 13, 2009]. The House Dec. 16 passed (217-212) H.R. 2847, which includes a six-month extension to increased FMAP funding.

In a press release, Sen. Rockefeller said "We absolutely need this six months of relief while we weather this economic storm-too many families depend on this program for us to allow a shortfall of funding."

Contact:
Travis W. Crytzer, Legislative Analyst
AAMC Government Relations
tcrytzer@aamc.org
(202) 828-0418

Christiane Mitchell, Director, Federal Affairs
AAMC Government Relations
cmitchell@aamc.org
(202) 828-0526

Senate, House Committees Hold Hearing on President's Fiscal Year 2011 Health Care Proposals

The Senate Finance Committee on Feb. 3 and the House Energy and Commerce Committee on Feb. 4 held hearings with Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Kathleen Sebelius to discuss President Obama's FY 2011 health care budget proposal. Sec. Sebelius stood by President Obama's proposal stating that her budget priorities included, "fighting waste and fraud," "quality and access to health care," "public health security," and "economic security." Sec. Sebelius also stressed the administration's commitment to "put science first" and to ensure that "the investments we're making are guided by the best scientists and medical experts in the world."

During the Senate Finance hearing, Senator Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) reiterated the importance of Graduate Medical Education (GME), its current lack of funding, and the need to increase residency slots. In the Energy and Commerce hearing, Committee Chair Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) expressed the need to permanently reform the Medicare physician payment system. In response to both inquires, Sec. Sebelius expressed her commitment to working with the House and Senate to resolve both issues.

Both Finance Committee Chair Max Baucus (D-Mont.) and Energy and Commerce Chair Waxman explained the need to pass a comprehensive health care reform bill to create jobs, support small business, and strengthen the economy. Ranking Member Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) urged caution in increasing spending and a greater emphasis placed on curbing fraud and abuse.

Contact:
Travis W. Crytzer, Legislative Analyst
AAMC Government Relations
tcrytzer@aamc.org
(202) 828-0418

Shannon Curtis, Legislative Analyst
AAMC Government Relations
scurtis@aamc.org
(202) 828-0558

CMS holds listening session on 2011 Physician Quality Reporting Initiative

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Feb. 2 held a listening session to seek feedback on potential changes to the CMS Physician Quality Reporting Initiative (PQRI) for 2011. CMS requested comments on which measures to include for the 2011 program as well as suggested changes to the design of the program, such as reporting mechanisms, reporting periods, criteria for satisfactory reporting and group practice reporting option.

In the public comment period, several specialty societies noted frustration with the process and time to get measures endorsed. (Of the 146 measures submitted to CMS for 2011 PQRI, 109 are not currently endorsed.) Several commenters also mentioned that the current 80 percent reporting threshold for successfully reporting individual measures through claims data is difficult to achieve, particularly because professionals cannot resubmit submit claims to correct PQRI data submissions.

CMS did not address how PQRI might interact with the HITECH act, which requires quality reporting as one requirement for eligible professionals to receive funding for adopting certified electronic health record technology.

CMS will be accepting comments through Feb. 12 at PQRITEMP@cms.hhs.gov. Copies of the meeting agenda, slides, and the background paper can be downloaded from the PQRI Web site.

Contact:
Mary Patton, Senior Specialist
AAMC Health Care Affairs
mpatton@aamc.org
(202) 862-6297

On the Hill…

Rep. Steve Buyer (R-Ind.) Jan. 29 announced he would not seek re-election in November to focus his attention on his ill wife. Rep. Buyer has served in the House for 18 years and currently sits on the Energy and Commerce Committee and is Ranking Member of the Committee on Veterans Affairs.

Sen. Scott Brown (R-Mass.) was sworn in Feb. 4, assuming the seat held for almost half a century by the late Sen. Edward Kennedy. Sen. Brown represents the 41st Republican vote in the Senate, ending the Democrat's super majority.

On the Agenda in Washington

Feb. 8: National Advisory Council on Human Genome Research
8:30 a.m.; NIH Conference Center, 3635 Fishers Lane, Bethesda, MD

National Advisory Council for Human Genome Research will meet to discuss matters of program relevance.
Meeting:

Feb. 10: House Science and Technology Committee Hearing on FY 2011 Budget Request for Science and Technology Research and Development
10 a.m.; 2318 Rayburn House Office Building, Washington, D.C.
House Science and Technology Committee will hold a hearing on the fiscal 2011 budget request for science and technology research and development programs and hear testimony from Office of Science and Technology Policy Director John Holdren.

Feb. 10: House Veteran's Affairs Committee-Subcommittee on Health Hearing on FY 2011 Budget Request for the Veteran's Health Administration
2 p.m.; 334 Cannon House Office Building, Washington, D.C.
Health Subcommittee of House Veterans' Affairs Committee will hold a hearing on the fiscal 2011 budget request for the Veterans Health Administration.
Hearing:

Feb. 10: National Biodefense Science Board Advisory Committee Meeting
2 p.m.; Conference Call
National Biodefense Science Board will hold a conference call meeting to discuss and consider recommendations from the board's Medical Countermeasure Markets and Sustainability Working Group report titled "Inventory of Issues Constraining or Enabling Industry Involvement in Medical Countermeasure Efforts." Dial-In Information: 866-395-4129; pass-code "ASPR" Call 15 minutes prior to the beginning of the conference call to facilitate attendance.