Tribal leaders are meeting in the Washington, D.C.,
area this week to discuss their concerns and priorities for the Indian
Health Service (IHS) budget.
Representatives of all 12 areas of the IHS are using
the session to get a better handle on the way the agency's budget is
formulated. On Wednesday, they heard from top officials at the
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and from
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) within the White
House.
Government officials described the talks,
which have been held for several years, as productive.
They said they have tried to incorporate suggestions
made by tribal leaders into the budget.
"I find the consultation very helpful in that regard,"
said Kerry Weems, the acting assistant secretary for budget,
technology and finance at HHS.
But tribal leaders expressed frustration that their needs
aren't being addressed despite an abundance of evidence
showing that American Indians and Alaska Natives experience
the worst health conditions in the nation.
They repeatedly cited an apparent
"disconnect" between HHS and OMB, where the budget request
originates.
"Every year we come here, IHS says 4 percent [increase].
Last year we got 1 percent," said Don Kashevaroff,
president of the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium.
"Somewhere between the 4 and the 1, the president
didn't request it."
Tribes also were concerned that the rising
costs of health care aren't included in the budget.
In fiscal year 2005, the IHS is growing by just 1.6 percent
in the face of double-digit increases in health
service expenditures.
"We're going backwards," observed one tribal leader.
"We're aware that inflation occurs,"
Charles Montgomery, the OMB examiner who handles
the public health budget, later said.
"The honest answer is we don't always meet it. We have finite resources."
Montgomery also described the budget as "austere."
But Dr. Charles Grim, the director of the IHS, said his
agency has fared well in an era of restrained spending.
He tied increases in recent years to the ratings IHS programs
have received under the Performance and Results Act (GPRA)
and under the Program Assessment Rating Tool (PART),
a new initiative that President Bush brought
to OMB.
"We have actually made some strong showings," Grim told tribal leaders.
"We have had some of the best scores."
At the same time, Weems and Montgomery sought to downplay the
effect a PART score has on funding.
"It's another point in our decision making," said Weems.
"It's not the only thing that helps determine the federal budget."
Tribal leaders are worried that the GPRA and PART systems
are being handled inconsistently. They say negative
scores are used to justify cuts in the budget while positive
scores don't lead to increases.
"Even with the limited resources we receive, we are doing a
substantially good job," Rachel Joseph, chair of
the Lone Pine Paiute-Shoshone Tribe of California, said.
The session concludes today as tribal leaders finalize
their priorities and recommendations for the IHS budget.
They will also prepare for
another round of talks with HHS officials. On May 12-13,
the department will host its sixth annual budget
consultation in Washington, D.C.
Budget Documents:
HHS
Budget in Brief | HHS
Performance Plan | Secretary
Thompson's Remarks
Relevant Links:
National Indian Health Board -
http://www.nihb.org
Northwest Portland Area Indian Health Board -
http://www.npaihb.org
Indian Health Service - http://www.ihs.gov
Department of Health and Human Services - http://www.hhs.gov
Consultation session focuses on IHS budget
Thursday, April 29, 2004
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