President Biden’s 2021 discretionary budget request includes 6.5 billion for the creation of a separate government healthcare research agency, outside the purview of Health and Human Services. The agency, entitled Advanced Research Projects Agency-Health (ARPA-H) is modeled after the defense agency DARPA. This analysis reviews why this proposal is a bad idea for healthcare, public spending and for governmental oversight. Here are the criteria the Biden Administration outlined for ARPA-H:
1. Research funding would not be subject to the normal Health and Human Services Agency grant vetting process
2. The focus would be on research that would not necessarily have a foreseeable payoff
3. Initial research would focus on three diseases Alzheimer’s, Diabetes, and Cancer
The creation of ARPA-H balloons federal spending for an unnecessary
healthcare agency with no clear mandate and porous accountability, while
competing for resources from existing healthcare research initiatives, which
have been vetted. Healthcare research in the U.S. is still largely funded by Health
and Human Services (HHS) through grant awards mostly to universities and nonprofit research groups.
The annual medical research allocation for all government agencies was 39.5
billion in 2017.
The ARPA-H agency creation proposal is not even supported by
many leading scientists, which are concerned that a huge introduction of
funding without clear guidance and controls would be harmful to healthcare
research initiatives.
Top Causes of Death in the United States
Further, the number one killer in the U.S. is heart disease,
which is largely preventable through public health education and early intervention.
Suicide, ranks as the tenth leading cause of death in the U.S.
According to the Center for Health Statistics suicide rates for America’s young
people increased by 57% between 2007 and 2018, including children as young as
ten. If that isn’t enough to wake you up, I don’t know what hole there is where
your heart should be. Even children can’t stand to live in the United States of
America. This factoid should be considered a public health crisis and scarcely
receives a mention. All we hear about are corporate profits and how we can’t
afford to provide healthcare or school lunches for everyone.
Creating competition versus cooperation for funding resources
among healthcare agencies is not in the best interest of public health. The tired
idea that competition makes everything better and lowers costs in healthcare is
not true. The U.S. has the most expensive healthcare system in the world, with
results that are no better than other countries and it spends 40% more than
most other industrialized nations. Yet, the U.S. doesn’t even provide healthcare
to all of its people, including children, whose distribution is immorally
dependent on their parentage and birthplace. The current profit-taking healthcare
climate has produced nonprofit hospitals making so much money they
have their own venture capital funds.
Creating Effective Healthcare Investment
All investments and interventions in national healthcare
should ask these three questions:
1. Is this necessary?
2. Who does it harm?
3. Should we be doing it?
An amorphous healthcare agency without the same rules for
government oversite is not the answer to improving population health for ALL of
the American people, who actually finance all government endeavors. Before we
saddle our children with another government agency, let’s fund and improve the
ones we already have which have demonstrated their value.
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https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/databriefs/db395.htm
Mervis, J. (2017, March 9). Data check: U.S.
government share of basic research funding falls below 50%. Retrieved
June 2, 2021, from National Science Foundation:
https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2017/03/data-check-us-government-share-basic-research-funding-falls-below-50
Research America An Alliance For Discoveries in
Health. (2018, October 1). US Investments in Medical and Health Research
Development 2013-2017. Retrieved June 2, 2021, from Research America.org:
https://www.researchamerica.org/sites/default/files/Policy_Advocacy/2013-2017InvestmentReportFall2018.pdf
Winter, L. (2021, April 12). President Biden
Proposes Creating Two DARPA-like Agencies. Retrieved from The
Scientist.com:
https://www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/president-biden-proposes-the-creation-of-two-darpa-like-agencies-68660
Winter, R. (2020, October 13). Unintended
Consequences of Pandemic Hospital Bailouts May Hasten Their Demise.
Retrieved from Straight Talk on Health Care:
http://healthpolicymaven.blogspot.com/2020/10/unintended-consequences-of-pandemic.html