PROJECT INFORM IN OTHER MEDIA ... 2008
Governor proposes $11 million cut
to HIV/AIDS programs
by Matthew S. Bajko, Bay Area Reporter
January 17, 2008
(mention of Project Inform in bold below)
AIDS agencies across the state are reeling from the news that
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger is seeking $11 million in cuts to
HIV/AIDS programs as he grapples with a $14 billion state deficit.
The funding plan calls for a $7 million reduction to the AIDS
Drug Assistance Program; a $3.6 million cut for local HIV prevention
and housing programs; and a 10 percent reduction in Medi-Cal provider
reimbursement rates as well as elimination of several Medi-Cal
benefits such as optometry, podiatry, psychology, and adult dental
care.
"I would say people are very distressed by these cuts," said Anne
Donnelly, Project Inform's director of health care policy. "In
all fairness, this is a difficult year. Both the Legislature and
governor have been very supportive of HIV programs in general.
This is a structural deficit and everyone is taking a cut in this
environment."
"On the other hand, this budget cannot be balanced based on cuts.
These cuts are incredibly problematic," added Donnelly. "These
are cuts that will really hurt people."
The chair of the state Assembly's budget committee, openly gay
state Assemblyman John Laird (D-Santa Cruz), will preside over
a hearing on the proposed budget today (Thursday, January 17) in
Sacramento. Laird will face a gauntlet of special interests all
fighting against particular cuts in state programs, from closures
of state parks to reductions in Social Security benefits and education
spending.
"He is proposing draconian cuts to every piece of state services," Laird
said of Schwarzenegger's funding plan. "I think HIV advocates are
going to have to band together with advocates for education, parks,
health care in general and try for a global solution that helps
everybody."
Nevertheless, Laird said, "The message is—and I am speaking
for myself—I am going to fight to make sure nobody is negatively
impacted who has HIV by this budget."
Laird assailed what he saw as the governor's "cut and borrow" approach
to the budget.
"I really am looking for something that's not a cuts or borrow
only strategy to get us through this. The budget strategy for the
last five years has been cutting and borrowing, and we can't do
it anymore," said Laird. "We can't survive that way. If you borrow,
you are cutting future services."
Members of the California HIV Alliance, a coalition of seven AIDS
agencies from across the state, held a conference call Monday,
January 14 to begin mapping out a strategy on how to beat back
the cuts.
Along with meeting with state lawmakers, alliance members may
hold a lobbying day at the Capitol sometime in March. Those who
participated in the phone call said the group remains optimistic
that the HIV cuts will not be as drastic by the time a final budget
is passed sometime this summer.
"The mood is a little bit disheartened. We're committed to fighting
these cuts and feel we can make a pretty strong case why these
cuts will be particularly hurtful to people with HIV and AIDS," said
Courtney Mulhern-Pearson, a science and public policy analyst at
the San Francisco AIDS Foundation, in a phone interview Monday
afternoon. "We have a lot of allies on the Assembly and Senate
budget committees."
The group is also seeking a meeting with Dr. Michelle Roland,
the bisexual woman and former UCSF AIDS doctor whom the governor
appointed as chief of the state Office of AIDS last summer.
As someone who served on ADAP's Medical Advisory Committee and
was a founding member of San Francisco's ACT UP chapter, Roland
is seen as a fierce advocate for AIDS programs.
Donnelly said, "I am sure it is helpful that she does clinical
care and has some very good ideas, if the worse case scenario does
happen, where we can save some money to offset some of these cuts."
In an interview with the Bay Area Reporter this week,
Roland said she could not predict if there would be a reduction
in cuts to her office's budget. The budget cut is only 6 percent
of her total funding, "substantially less" than the 10 percent
cut most other state agencies are grappling with, noted Roland.
"I know the governor is really struggling with a huge budget deficit
and asking all programs to contribute to solving that," said Roland. "I
don't have any way of knowing what the final budget will look like.
There is a legislative process but I think it is wise for all of
us to assume this is close to what the final budget will look like."
A main priority for AIDS advocates will be restoring the funding
to ADAP. While the cuts to ADAP will not affect the formulary of
antiretroviral treatments, it will reduce the availability of drugs
for co-morbidities and opportunistic infections.
"We want lawmakers to restore that money," said Mulhern-Pearson. "If
the state takes away medications necessary to keep HIV-positive
individuals healthy while on antiretrovirals, and reduces reimbursements
to their health care providers, many low-income individuals living
with HIV will face new illnesses and have no choice but to turn
to hospital emergency rooms."
Reducing access to ADAP drugs will only cost the state more in
future medical bills, argued Mulhern-Pearson.
"The governor is cutting our ounce of prevention. Later we'll
have to pay for pounds of cure," she said in a statement released
last week.
AIDS Healthcare Foundation President Michael Weinstein has suggested
rather than cutting drugs from the ADAP formulary, the governor
and state lawmakers should reduce reimbursements to drug companies
and pursue purchasing drugs for ADAP and other state programs at
federal pricing levels.
"Those price savings alone could result in a 15 percent
savings to the state," stated Weinstein.
But Roland disagreed and said the state already receives two sets
of rebates from pharmaceutical companies. Asked if therefore there
is little room for negotiating lower prices, she said, "That is
correct. The model we use is significantly the most cost effective
model."
Drug price hike
ADAP programs across the country were dealt a funding blow by
the announcement this week that Bristol Myers Squibb would increase
prices between 6.9 percent and 9 percent for all of its HIV products.
According to the Fair Pricing Coalition, the company markets four
HIV drugs: Zerit, a 15-year-old drug whose sales have plummeted
in recent years because of side effects; Sustiva, a popular drug
the company acquired well after it was a already a success in the
marketplace and its development costs recovered; Atripla, a top
selling drug that combines Sustiva in a single pill with a two-drug
combination made by another company (Gilead); and Reyataz, a popular
drug sold to patients at all stages of HIV disease and the only
good-selling drug for HIV developed by Bristol alone.
"The last thing we need right now is a round of excessive price
increases for these drugs, which are already extremely expensive
and burdening the health care system," stated Paul Dalton of the
FPC and Project Inform. "Even though the increase to government
payers is limited to the increases in the Consumer Price Index,
these increases affect the co-pays that patients must pay out of
pocket. The price hikes also put pressure on other companies to
levy similar increases, triggering round after round of price escalation."
In California the dual news about cuts in ADAP and drug
price increases is "a double hit," said Donnelly. "Certainly,
a price increase is never good."
The state's AIDS funding cuts are included in the governor's 2008-09
$3.1 billion budget for California's Department of Public Health.
Only $368.9 million of the department's funds come from the state's
general fund.
The general fund reduction proposed in the CDPH budget is $26
million. The state Office of AIDS receives the largest share of
the department's general fund dollars.
According AHF, the overall budget represents a $246.2 million
decrease from the revised 2007-08 budget, including the $26 million
general fund reduction. AHF officials have questioned a $300,000
cut to the state's therapeutic monitoring program (TMP), which
covers viral load, genotype, and phenotype testing. The tests monitor
whether AIDS medicines—many paid for through the state's
ADAP program—are benefiting patients.
In early 2007, AIDS advocates statewide lobbied to restore a previous
$4 million budget cut to the program and successfully restored
the $4 million to the overall $8 million program. However, the
additional $4 million is not included in the new budget released
last week.
"This cut, announced today as a $300,000 cut, is in fact really
a $4.3 million cut to TMP, and increases the overall cut in AIDS
services to $15 million," said Joey Terrill, AHF's acting director
of public affairs, in a statement.
Project Inform raised concerns about the proposed cut to funding
for HIV counseling and testing programs. The agency worries if
enacted, the cut could potentially harm efforts to identify the
estimated 20 percent of HIV-positive Californians who are unaware
of their HIV status.
Donnelly said she is also concerned about the proposed 10 percent
reduction in Medi-Cal provider reimbursement rates.
"Provider rates are already low in California. It could cause
additional access issues," she said.
Compared to previous years where AIDS advocates were able to stave
off funding cuts, Donnelly said this year they may not be as successful
if lawmakers do not find a way to increase state revenues.
"California has definitely placed a priority on health care in
the past, at least for people with HIV and AIDS. I am always hopeful
we will find a way to rectify this," she said. "For me, this year
looks particularly problematic due to the apparent lack of willingness
to raise revenues. I think there are less obvious solutions on
the table this year."
Anyone interested in receiving updates on the budget should e-mail
SFAF's Mulhern-Pearson.