- The states, cities seeing an influx of older adults
- Insurers Hedge on Trump-Backed Pledge To Improve Denials Process
- Watch: ‘Robust’ Primary Care, Transparency Top Employers’ Reform Wish List
- The hospital profitability divide: 10 things to know
- A rural hospital is building AI with an NP leading the way
- Foundation Medicine launches 'Quality First' initiative to stand out in cancer testing market
- Iowa dentist disciplined for unsanitary practice conditions
- ADA honors 10 new dentists for excellence in field
- Orthodontist pay vs. cost of living by state
- Oral surgeon pay vs. cost of living by state
- Wildfire smoke strafes Midwest, Northeast: 6 things healthcare leaders should know
- 9 pharmacy groups warn revised ACIP charter could delay vaccine access: 6 notes
- Private equity’s legal playbook for physician practices
- The outpatient orthopedic model built around doing less
- Where ASCs can find cost savings after the easy wins are gone
- NYU Langone grows South Florida presence with 2 practices
- The hidden cost of the GLP-1 boom: 5 notes
- ‘Hospitals without an outpatient footprint will struggle’: Health systems race to build ASC networks
- ‘Hospitals without an outpatient footprint will struggle’: Health systems race to build ASC networks
- Montefiore leader joins Northwell hospital as CNO, VP of patient care services
- Bad debt, charity care surge continues to squeeze hospitals
- 3 cardiology societies urge CMS to update TAVR coverage rules: 5 priorities
- Missouri outlaws insurance time limits on anesthesia: 5 things to know
- Trump’s CDC Nominee Praises Vaccines, Without Vowing Independence From Kennedy
- Why ASCs should be watching the Medicare Advantage exodus
- LightForce Orthodontics appoints new CEO
- 39 behavioral health executive moves to know
- Good news for anesthesia
- MAX Surgical Specialty Management selects Sensei Cloud as enterprise practice management system
- Why some ASCs ‘are going to be left out’ of healthcare’s next era
- Median pay for anesthesiologists reaches $391K: Breakdown by state
- Is dental school becoming unattainable? 6 dentists weigh in
- Peak Dental Services becomes 1st DSO to deploy clinician well-being framework
- Aspen Dental continues expansion with South Carolina practice
- Texas safety net behavioral health provider projects $15M shortfall
- Lights, camera, action: CG Life to spotlight rare disease in dedicated film festival
- 4 dental deals totaling $308M
- Huahai poaches quality chief from Hengrui amid FDA manufacturing citations
- 24 new behavioral health study findings to know
- Maryhaven CEO steps down amid financial concerns
- Thriveworks launches insight dashboard for referring providers
- GE HealthCare, Catholic Health strike 10-year, $500M technology partnership
- What’s driving Arizona’s drug death surge? 6 things to know
- CMS proposal to block third-party vendors will upend remote monitoring services, health tech leaders say
- FDA Clears First Cholesterol Pill, Lipfendra, To Rival Costly Injections
- Statement on Regulation E-Delivery
- Paper Taper: Statement on Proposed Regulation E-Delivery
- Statement on Proposed Regulation E-Delivery
- One Of The Largest Epidural Studies Ever Delivers Reassuring News For Parents
- Bipartisan Senate bill seeks to build vigilance around foreign companies making drugs in US
- Coalition for Health AI launches implementation initiative for public health agencies
- Vanda shifts Nereus marketing into high gear with Schumacher IndyCar sponsorship
- Could A Vaccine Prevent Pancreatic Cancer In Those At High Risk?
- Heatwaves During Pregnancy Could Affect Baby's Brain Development, Study Suggests
- Brain 'Microstimulation' Works Long-Term To Restore Sense Of Touch After Spinal Cord Injury
- Otters, bears and Pharma Lions: inside Gilead’s bronze-winning Cannes spot
- 'Night Owls' At Risk Of Wider Waistlines, Unhealthy Hearts
- Facing Funding Losses, States Call Out Big Businesses With Employees On Medicaid
- Listen to the Latest ‘KFF Health News Minute’
- A Sales Tax on Doctor Visits and Medicine? In Missouri, Some Worry
- Readers Share Personal Insights on Deadly Denials and Pregnancy Centers
- Merck scores at FDA as Lipfendra becomes world's first oral PCSK9 treatment
- UnitedHealth Group to maintain 'restless' even after topping investor's Q2 expectations, CEO says
- 6 weeks into California’s psychiatric staffing mandate: What hospital leaders should know
- The best opportunities to expand behavioral healthcare access
- PsychPlus acquires Koa Health to scale mental health platform
- Senate HELP committee grills CDC nominee Erica Schwartz on vaccine policy, resistance to political interference
- 2 states join in expanding psychologist prescribing authority
- Ohio behavioral health clinic owners indicted in $9.3M Medicaid fraud case
- Bipartisan House bill tying doc pay to inflation earns resounding applause from providers
- West Tennessee Healthcare expands critical care support through eICU Program in partnership with Philips and hellocare.ai
- Sanofi opens new chapters in Pfizer, Moderna mRNA patent litigation sagas
- Novo gains head start on Lilly with European Commission approval of Wegovy pill
- Merck touts Keytruda front-line win in endometrial cancer subtype, marking a PD-1 first
- Wildfire Smoke Puts Millions At Risk Across Midwest, Northeast
- Lark Health, Samsung team up on AI-powered health coach for U.S. seniors
- 340B drug purchases hit at least $100B in 2025, administrator reports
- Buzzy Veradermics shows its oral minoxidil can tackle female pattern hair loss, too
- No patent protection for Stelara? No problem for J&J as Tremfya fills the void
- Amazon Pharmacy partners with eNavvi to provide real-time medication pricing, delivery info to providers
- Are Microplastics Linked To Higher Heart Attack Risk?
- Impulsivity In Third Grade Could Point To Future Struggles
- AI Can Create 'Ghosts' Of Lost Loved Ones, But Would You Want To Meet Them?
- Blood Test May Predict Alzheimer's Risk Up To 10 Years Before Symptoms Begin
- Kelun scores sac-TMT win in first-line NSCLC population missing from Merck’s massive phase 3 program
- OpenAI’s health AI chief: ‘Bet on the models getting better’
- Knee Pain? Ragged Cartilage? Research Suggests Surgery's Not The Best Answer
- THC/CBD Combo Might Ease Agitation In Late-Stage Dementia
- Facing Funding Losses, States Call Out Big Businesses With Employees on Medicaid
- Full-body scan startup Neko Health scores $700M to break into the U.S. market
- Elevance Health leaves D.C. Medicaid market, mulls future exits
- Sanofi teams up with Special Olympics Unified Football World Cup, raises respiratory health awareness
- Insilico signs on with CDMO Bora in $2.5B AI drug discovery deal
- CMS proposes major Medicare reforms to shift physician pay, phase out MIPS and expand ACO participation
- Judi Health rebrands PBM arm as Judi Rx, unveils Judi Care unit
- With FDA approval for its breast cancer blockbuster hopeful, Celcuity could ‘belong in the hands’ of a Big Pharma
- Anthropic bets bigger on healthcare with Optum tie-up, UST integration
- FTC, CVS unveil settlement in ongoing insulin pricing case
- HHS promises its final rule barring pediatric gender care providers from Medicare is still coming
- Director's Note on What to Expect at the 2026 Partnerships with Sites Summit
- AMA interoperability initiative brings structured clinical terminology to CPT codes
- Lettuce Suspected In Growing Multistate Cyclospora Outbreak
- Startup Sonata launches preventive healthcare membership, linking clinical decisions with AI
- Why Are Family Doctors Leaving The Workforce? Retirement, Burnout Creating A U.S. Primary Care 'Brain Drain'
- Huyabio scores with Opdivo combo in 'milestone' skin cancer trial
- Unruly Patients Are Stressing ER Staff, Undermining Care
- Pain Patients Should Taper Opioids At Their Own Pace, Study Suggests
- Heatwaves Raise Hospital Admissions For Mental Health Woes
- U.S. Gun Suicides Hit Record High, Even As Firearm Deaths Decline Overall
- AstraZeneca pays up to $1.5B for EGFR lung cancer drug Zegfrovy from its spinoff Dizal
- Worried About Your Aging Parents? Welcome To The Caregiving Club
- Knee Pain? Ragged Cartilage? Research Suggests Surgery’s Not the Best Answer
- Lawmakers Look To Make Abortion Shield Laws Less Dependent on Who’s Governor
- Real Chemistry builds body of AI healthcare commercialization tools with Anatomi launch
- Inside agency view: Havas SO on authenticity, connection and pushing back against the ‘sea of sameness’
- Cellares' recent automated cell therapy wins have 'opened the biotech floodgates'
- Insulet, Calm join forces for diabetes care offerings with ‘Mind in Range’ wellness tools
- Remarks before the American-Hellenic Chamber of Commerce
- What Is An Aortic Dissection? The Condition That Killed Sen. Lindsey Graham
- Weight-Loss Drugs Help, But Exercise Is Still The Key To A Healthier Heart
- FDA's latest onshoring move homes in on streamlined facility registration, foreign plant scrutiny
- Smartphones Can Increase Seniors' Risk Of Depression
- Pro Soccer Players Show Signs Of Shrinking Brains
- Adderall Misuse Falls Sharply Among Young Adults, Study Finds
- New KFF Poll Reveals Who Is Most Likely To Endorse Vaccine Myths
- A New Option For Long-Term Care Costs
- As GOP Cries Fraud, Newsom Backs Medicaid Spending on Housing and Food
- Katie Couric's Memory Loss Scare Puts Rare Brain Condition In Spotlight
- Mild COVID Can Lead To Long-Term Hidden Eye Problems
- LGBTQ+ People Less Likely To Be Screened For Some Common Cancers
- Smartphone App Uses Voice To Predict Asthma, COPD Flare-Ups
- Seniors Know How Sharp They Are At Any Given Time, Study Finds
- Patients Face A Thicket of Red Tape Trying To Maintain Consistent Health Coverage
- AI Can Detect Previously Invisible MS Scars In The Brain
- Remarks at the Society for Corporate Governance Conference
- GLP-1 Use Hits Record High As Medicare Opens Access To Weight-Loss Drugs
- Foundation Fights Medical Errors That Claim 200,000 U.S. Lives A Year
- New, Highly Accurate Brush Test Can Detect Mouth Cancer Within An Hour
- Innovative Hip Replacement Cuts Post-Surgery Risk Of Dislocation By 70%
- Global Study Finds Kids Worldwide Skipping Fruits And Vegetables
- Zimmer Biomet to Hire 500 in India as New Bengaluru Technology Centre Drives AI and MedTech Innovation
- AdaptHealth Investigates Data Breach After Social Engineering Attack, Possible Link to ShinyHunters Emerges
- Statement on the 2026 Regulatory Agenda
- Applying Agentic AI to Healthcare Delivery: The Key to True Transformation
- From Compliance to Clinical Action: Fixing the Broken Loop in Post-Market Surveillance
- SCAN Health Plan, Alignment Healthcare sue to challenge CMS' MA star ratings recalculations
- Regulatory tracker: Eisai, Biogen scoop up subQ Leqembi starter dose nod
- Remarks at the Economic Club of New York
- Is Your Organization Ready to Govern AI in Regulatory Affairs?
- CMS Proposes TAVR Medicare Coverage is Potential Boost for Edwards Lifesciences
Michigan healthcare freedom community forum
The Debt ceiling dispute in Washington will not affect most U.S. Government spending on health care because it is considered non discretionary. The only health related area which could be affected would be Science & Technology, which is discretionary. CDC might get trimmed!
Explainer: US debt ceiling focus on 'discretionary spending' means cuts ahead
By Jarrett Renshaw and Andy Sullivan - May 24, 2023WASHINGTON, May 24 (Reuters) - The central pillar of any debt-ceiling agreement between President Joe Biden and House Republican Kevin McCarthy is shaping up to be "discretionary spending" - the chunk of the United States' roughly $6 trillion annual federal budget that is set annually by Congress.
Talks are fluid as Biden and McCarthy work towards a deal to raise the $31.4 trillion debt ceiling and avoid a default as soon as June 1. But cuts to Social Security and Medicare programs that eat up most of the U.S. budget are already off the table.
Instead, funds for programs from education to rail safety to law enforcement could be cut, trims that economists warn will slow U.S. economic growth.
WHAT IS THE US DISCRETIONARY BUDGET?
Congress sets funding levels for discretionary spending every year, which powers a wide swath of military and domestic programs.
In 2022, discretionary spending reached $1.7 trillion, accounting for 27% of the overall $6.27 trillion spent, according to federal figures.
Military spending typically accounts for roughly half of that total, though the amount varies from year to year.
The other half is devoted to domestic programs like law enforcement, transportation, housing and scientific research.
Discretionary spending as a share of U.S. gross domestic product peaked in the late 1970s, and cuts have served as the backbone for several landmark budget deals since the 1980s.
HOW COULD DISCRETIONARY CUTS WORK?
Biden and Democrats have offered to hold discretionary spending flat from the current 2023 fiscal year, a cut from Biden's 2024 budget, and then cap spending in future years.
House Republicans passed a plan last month that would save $3.2 trillion by capping growth at 1% annually for 10 years.
Republicans say they will not accept a deal unless it results in the government spending less money than it did in the last fiscal year, and are pushing for cuts to 2022 levels.
Both sides are also at odds over how long any spending caps should last, with Republicans now offering caps for six years, and the White House only two.
Negotiators are avoiding the main driver of U.S. debt: rising retirement and health costs, driven by an aging population.
The Social Security pension program is projected to increase by 67% by 2032, and the Medicare health program for seniors will nearly double in cost during that period, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. Together, these programs account for roughly 37% of current federal spending.
MORE BATTLES AHEAD
If they can hammer out a general agreement on these levels and caps, if could help the United States avoid default, but would likely set up another series of budget battles, as lawmakers would still have to agree on funding levels for everything from fighter-plane construction to border enforcement.
Republicans have said they do not want to cut spending on national defense and veterans' care, which would require other programs to shoulder steeper cuts.
The Republican-led House Appropriations Committee has unveiled legislation that would boost spending on veterans' care, border security, and other priorities next year.
That would likely require cuts of more than 13% in other areas like scientific research and environmental protection if they want to keep overall spending at the same level as this year, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a left-leaning think tank.
The Democratic-controlled Senate is not likely to accept those figures - which could lead to a government shutdown if the two sides do not reach agreement by Sept. 30, the end of the fiscal year.
POLITICS OF CUTS
While Republicans on the federal level have generally pushed for funding cuts to these discretionary items and Democrats to increase them, Republican-leaning states tend to benefit more from federal domestic spending, according to a Reuters analysis.
"Spending restraint always sounds good in the abstract and sounds less good when you're talking about specifics," said Jan Moller, head of the Louisiana Budget Project, a nonpartisan think tank.
Even if Biden and McCarthy agree to spending caps in the years ahead, Congress might not stick to the agreement.
In 2011, Democratic President Barack Obama reached a deal with Republicans to save $1.8 trillion over 10 years through discretionary spending caps. But lawmakers opted to bypass those caps in the years that followed.
In the end, the agreement only saved $1.3 trillion, according to Brian Riedl, a fellow with the conservative Manhattan Institute.
Get MHF Insights
News and tips for your healthcare freedom.
We never spam you. One-step unsubscribe.























