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US Public Health Neglected: Flat Or Declining Spending Left States Ill Equipped To Respond To COVID-19

Y. Natalia Alfonso, Jonathon P. Leider, Beth Resnick, J. Mac McCullough, David Bishai

2021Health Affairs80 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has prompted concern about the integrity of the US public health infrastructure. Federal, state, and local governments spend $93 billion annually on public health in the US, but most of this spending is at the state level. Thus, shoring up gaps in public health preparedness and response requires an understanding of state spending. We present state spending trends in eight categories of public health activity from 2008 through 2018. We obtained data from the Census Bureau for all states except California and coded the data by public health category. Although overall national health expenditures grew by 4.3 percent in this period, state governmental public health spending saw no statistically significant growth between 2008 and 2018 except in injury prevention. Moreover, state spending levels on public health were not restored after cuts experienced during the Great Recession, leaving states ill equipped to respond to COVID-19 and other emerging health needs.

Topics & Concepts

Public healthRecessionPreparednessState (computer science)Environmental healthCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)BusinessEconomic growthPandemicHealth policyHealth carePolitical scienceEconomicsMedicineDiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)PathologyKeynesian economicsLawComputer scienceNursingAlgorithmPublic Health Policies and EducationHealthcare Policy and ManagementPrimary Care and Health Outcomes