On top of layoffs, HHS ordered to cut 35% of spending on contracts

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Federal health agencies have to slash their spending by more than a third, on top of the 10,000-person staffing cuts.

The Trump administration is requiring the Department of Health and Human Services to cut spending on contracts by 35%, HHS spokesperson Andrew Nixon confirmed to NPR. The spending cut is across all divisions of HHS – which includes the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Institutes of Health, the Food and Drug Administration, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and other agencies. This comes on the heels of a nearly 25% staff reduction at HHS.

"The 35% reduction in HHS contracts is a strategic initiative across all divisions of HHS, with the goal of cutting unnecessary spending, saving taxpayer dollars, and streamlining operations," Nixon wrote in a statement. "Every agency within HHS is committed to reducing contract expenditures by this target. These cuts are designed to ensure that every dollar is used more efficiently while continuing to focus on our core mission of improving public health and services," he added.



HHS fired thousands of staffers this week, acting on its plan to dismiss 10,000 people , on top of around 10,000 people already leaving the agencies under the Trump administration's Fork in the Road offer and early retirement. With health agencies reeling from layoffs, these spending cuts will further weaken public health in this country, said Dr. Robert Steinbrook, health research group director at the consumer rights advocacy group Public Citizen via e-mail.

He called the cut "arbitrary and senseless." "Amid the disorganized mass layoffs of HHS staff and the reorganization of the agency, the rushed cuts are more likely to cause problems than to accomplish anything constructive," he added. "This is at best getting water from a stone," said Dr.

Georges Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Association, via e-mail. "They seem to be on a quest to totally destroy the infrastructure of the nation's public health system. It's amazing that they are looking to cut the parts of our health system that give the best value for prevention and wellness.

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