Biden-Harris Administration Fiscal Year 2025 Budget Tackles Youth Mental Health Crisis, Maternity Care Deserts, Gaps in Access to Primary Care (2024)

Budget also supports rural opioid treatment and recovery initiative, growing the health care workforce, and modernizing the organ transplant system

The President’s Fiscal Year 2025 Budget proposal for the Health Resources and Services Administration addresses head-on many of the most pressing health care challenges facing American families, including taking action on:

Youth mental health crisis: Recent data highlights the disturbing trends in youth mental health including nearly one-third of youth reporting experiencing poor mental health and 1 in 5 students reporting seriously considering attempting suicide. To respond to this moment, we need to make mental health and substance use disorder treatment readily available. The keys to increasing access to care are growing the behavioral health workforce and better supporting primary care providers in meeting behavioral health needs. We also need to build supports for young people among those they trust, which is often their peers.

That is why the President’s Budget invests in:

  • Training 12,000 new behavioral health providers to expand access to behavioral health treatment and services across the country.
  • Creating an innovative new youth peer-to-peer mental health support and career pathway program to train youth and young adults to support one another’s mental health needs while building an early behavioral health career pathway program for youth peers.
  • Supporting mental health training and support for pediatricians where pediatricians can directly access tele-consultation with psychiatrists and other mental health clinicians to support the mental health needs of their young patients and training.
  • Making mental health and substance use disorder a required service in community health centers that are the primary source of health care services, regardless of ability to pay, to more than 30 million people—including more than 8.5 million children—in some of the highest need urban and rural communities across the country.

Maternity Care Deserts: More than eight million women of childbearing age live in counties that lack a hospital with labor and delivery services. The March of Dimes estimates that nearly 150,000 babies a year are born in “maternity care deserts” that lack a hospital or birth center providing obstetric care and lack obstetricians or midwives. Well-trained health care providers are essential to improving health outcomes, identifying and addressing pregnancy-related complications, protecting women’s health, and ensuring every birth provides the best opportunity for a strong start.

That is why the President’s Budget invests in:

  • Building obstetric capacity in maternity care deserts to respond to obstetric-related emergencies in rural, urban, and suburban areas without ready access to labor and delivery services.
  • Training more Labor and Delivery Nurses and Certified Nurse Midwives to increase access to maternal and perinatal health care, particularly in rural and underserved communities.
  • Building a community-based doula workforce to support pregnant individuals and ensure their voices are heard and needs are met.
  • Expanding access to maternal mental health support to respond to maternal depression and increase access through the National Maternal Mental Health Hotline at 1-833-TLC-MAMA.

Closing gaps in access to primary care: Delayed care is often the result of barriers such as lack of primary care and behavioral health providers located in many rural or underserved communities, workforce challenges across the health care system, and lack of access to transportation, limited appointment availability, and limited operating hours for patients who require care outside of standard working hours. In 2020, 46 percent of households surveyed nationwide reported negative health consequences as a result of not being able to get an appointment when they needed it.

That is why the President’s Budget invests in:

  • A plan to create a pathway to double the federal investment in the community health center program to ensure that it can reach over 37 million people in need of and struggling to access primary care.
  • Expanding health center street medicine services to ensure people experiencing homelessness have access to primary care.
  • Expanding health center hours of operation to make it easier for people who work later shifts or face childcare or transportation issues to access primary care.

Meeting the opioid treatment and recovery needs of rural communities: Opioid use disorder is particularly concerning in rural communities and accessing treatment can be challenging due to geographic isolation, transportation barriers, and limited substance use disorder providers. In support of President Biden’s Unity Agenda, HRSA launched a Rural Opioid Treatment and Recovery Initiative to support establishing and expanding comprehensive substance use disorder treatment and recovery services in rural areas, including by increasing access to medications for opioid use disorder, such as buprenorphine.

That is why the President’s Budget invests in:

  • Creating more access to treatment in rural communities for people to receive medications such as buprenorphine to treat opioid use disorder and get recovery supports.
  • Supporting rural community activities such as mobile units providing medication for opioid use disorder and integration of this treatment into rural primary care settings.
  • Integrating supportive services—such as food access, housing support and employment training and opportunities, transportation to treatment, and other social determinants of health.
  • Expanding the rural substance use disorder workforce, including clinical providers and peer support professionals who help individuals find and sustain a path to recovery.

Growing the health care workforce: The National Center for Health Workforce Analysis has identified current projected shortages through 2035 in a wide range of health care occupations. At the same time, many training curricula and models for training health professionals, particularly in medicine, remain unchanged from decades ago; they do not fully leverage the technology available today. HRSA is committed to growing the health care workforce by funding new, leading-edge health profession education and training models and expanding the supply of health care professionals in underserved and rural areas.

That is why the President’s Budget invests in:

  • Providing scholarships and loan repayment to over 24,000 clinicians, nurses, and health professionals to provide health care in underserved and rural areas.
  • Making it possible for more than 1,800 medical and dental residents to work and train in underserved and rural communities.
  • Seeding new approaches to recruit and grow the health care workforce and deliver a more modern, robust, and diverse workforce pipeline.

Transforming the Organ Matching System to Better Serve Patients and Families: HRSA oversees the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network (OPTN), which was established by Congress nearly four decades ago and consists of a comprehensive network of transplant professionals and community members charged with increasing organ donation and operating and overseeing a fair and accountable system for allocating and transplanting organs in the United States. Across the nearly 40-year history of the OPTN, all functions of the OPTN have been managed by a single vendor and not competed separately based on technical expertise in areas like IT or operations. In 2023, Congress adopted the Administration’s proposal to update the decades-old statute, including allowing HRSA to make multiple different contract awards to benefit from best-in-class vendors in different areas to improve performance and innovation. Congress also adopted HRSA’s proposal to require the OPTN Board of Directors support contract be distinct from OPTN operations support contractors to strengthen OPTN accountability and oversight. The new law also eliminated the arbitrary appropriation cap to support this work.

That is why the President’s Budget invests in:

  • Doubling funding for the organ transplant system to increase competition and better serve the more than 100,000 people on the organ donor waitlist.

This information is also found in our printable factsheet (PDF - 113 KB).

Review the FY 2025 Congressional Budget Justification (PDF - 3 MB).

Biden-Harris Administration Fiscal Year 2025 Budget Tackles Youth Mental Health Crisis, Maternity Care Deserts, Gaps in Access to Primary Care (2024)

FAQs

What is the budget for FY 2025? ›

HHS proposes $130.7 billion in discretionary and $1.7 trillion in mandatory proposed budget authority for FY 2025.

What is the budget for the CDC in 2025? ›

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) budget request for FY 2025 includes $9.683 billion in discretionary budget authority, Prevention and Public Health Funds, and Public Health Service Evaluation Funds, which is $499.2 million over the FY 2023 appropriation.

What is the Samhsa budget for FY 2025? ›

SAMHSA's proposed FY2025 budget is $8.1billion, $612 million more than FY 2023 Final. The FY 2025 budget provides $3.5 billion for SAMHSA's mental health activities. The proposed investments will address suicide prevention, increase crisis response, and provide direct services to people experiencing homelessness.

What is the budget for NIH 2025? ›

On behalf of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), I am transmitting the Congressional Justification of the NIH request for the fiscal year (FY) 2025 budget. This request for a total program level of $50.1 billion that will support NIH's mission to turn biomedical research discoveries into better health for all.

How much is the military budget for 2024? ›

Washington, D.C. – The Fiscal Year 2024 Defense Appropriations Act provides $825 billion in total funding.

What is the federal increase for 2025? ›

This includes a 5.2 percent 2024 federal pay raise and 2.0 percent 2025 federal pay raise consistent with the President's pay proposal.

How does the CDC get funding? ›

CDC receives funding through the budget and appropriation process. Congress is responsible for passing appropriation legislation. The authority for Congress to legislate and appropriate arises from the U.S. Constitution.

Did the Senate pass the spending bill? ›

Washington, D.C. – Today, the Senate voted 72-24 to send the final set of bicameral, bipartisan fiscal year 2024 appropriations bills to the President's desk to be signed into law.

What is the CDC fy25 budget justification? ›

The Fiscal Year 2025 President's Request for CDC invests in the foundational capacities necessary to position the Investing in the nation's health data ecosystem is critical to knitting public health and the health delivery system together to optimize our ability to truly protect health.

Who mental health 2024? ›

It's Mental Health Awareness Week from 13-19 May, it happens every year and is a time for people to think about mental health. This year the theme is around how moving can help to make you feel good.

What is the SAMHSA grant? ›

Mandated by Congress, SAMHSA administers the Substance Use Prevention, Treatment and Recovery Services Block Grant (SUBG)​ noncompetitive, formula grant through SAMHSA's Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT) Performance Partnership Branch, in collaboration with the Center for Substance Abuse Prevention (CSAP) ...

How much money does the government give to mental health? ›

The Fiscal Year (FY) 2025 President's Budget includes $8.1 billion for the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), $612 million more than the agency's FY 2023 enacted budget.

What disease gets the most funding? ›

No other factor predicted funding in multivariable models. Conditions receiving the most funding greater than expected based on disease burden were AIDS ($2474 M), diabetes mellitus ($390 M), and perinatal conditions ($297 M).

Who gets the most NIH funding? ›

Top 10 largest NIH grants funding research in 2023
  • Early Onset AD Consortium – the LEADS Study. ...
  • National Centralized Repository for Alzheimer's Disease and Related Dementias (NCRAD) ...
  • IU/JAX/PITT MODEL-AD Center. ...
  • IU School of Medicine Alzheimer's Disease Drug Discovery Center (TREAT-AD)
Feb 20, 2024

What is the NIH postdoc salary in 2024? ›

Purpose
Career LevelYears of ExperienceStipend for FY 2024
Postdoctoral0$61,008
Postdoctoral1$61,428
Postdoctoral2$61,884
Postdoctoral3$64,356
4 more rows
Apr 23, 2024

What is the budget for the FDA fy25? ›

The Budget request put forth by the Administration while albeit more reasonable than previous years, it still increases federal spending and ignores our current fiscal environment. For FY 2025, FDA's request totals $7.2 billion, which is $500 million above the FY 2024 enacted level.

What is the USDA budget for fy25? ›

USDA's fiscal year 2025 budget request totals $25.1 billion, an increase of $2.2 billion, or almost 10%, over last year's levels. As we review the request, we need to have an honest discussion about USDA's priorities and where our constituents' hard-earned taxpayer dollars make the greatest impact.

What does FY2025 mean? ›

Related Definitions

FY2025 means the Recipient's Fiscal Year 2025, commencing on July 1, 2023 and concluding on June 30, 2025.

Has the US government passed a budget for 2024? ›

Senator Collins was a lead negotiator of the bipartisan legislation. Washington, D.C. – Today, by a vote of 75-22, the U.S. Senate passed the six-bill Fiscal Year 2024 (FY24) appropriations package.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Edmund Hettinger DC

Last Updated:

Views: 5793

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (58 voted)

Reviews: 89% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Edmund Hettinger DC

Birthday: 1994-08-17

Address: 2033 Gerhold Pine, Port Jocelyn, VA 12101-5654

Phone: +8524399971620

Job: Central Manufacturing Supervisor

Hobby: Jogging, Metalworking, Tai chi, Shopping, Puzzles, Rock climbing, Crocheting

Introduction: My name is Edmund Hettinger DC, I am a adventurous, colorful, gifted, determined, precious, open, colorful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.