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On March 27, Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said he planned to cut about 10,000 full-time jobs from the department in a sweeping “reorganization.” Less than a week later, the reduction in force (RIF) notifications were sent out, and in the very early hours of April 1, hundreds of employees found themselves locked out from their offices, often so abruptly their belongings were left behind. 

Most affected employees were told they would be placed on administrative leave; some were told to continue working until they can hand off their duties but they would be formally separated on June 2. Many of the email RIF notifications used the recommended wording provided by the US Office of Personnel Management: “This RIF action does not reflect directly on your service, performance, or conduct.” The HHS workforce is expected to be reduced from 82,000 full-time employees to 62,000. 

"The Trump Administration has launched an unprecedented attack on the federal health workforce," said House Energy and Commerce Committee Ranking Member Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ), during an oversight and investigations hearing on medical device technology and cybersecurity.

The cuts in personnel and programs are broad and deep, and touch every aspect of public health. Alzheimer’s disease programs are being eliminated, measles vaccine clinics are being shuttered, and tuberculosis, HIV prevention, and cancer research are being stalled. A Reddit thread for RIF notices from HHS employees had nearly 750 postings, suggesting a broad cross-section of individuals and departments had received them. 

Secretary Kennedy stated the layoffs and restructuring will save $1.8 billion a year. “We aren’t just reducing bureaucratic sprawl," he said in a statement. "We are realigning the organization with its core mission and our new priorities in reversing the chronic disease epidemic.” On the social platform X, Kennedy acknowledged, “This will be a painful period for HHS.”

Entire offices devoted to Freedom of Information Act-related requests, communications, and human resources were also shut down, according to multiple reports.

The agency's 28 divisions will be reformatted into a “new, unified entity” of 15 divisions—the Administration for a Healthy America, or AHA, aimed at carrying out Kennedy's “Make America Healthy Again” agenda. The AHA will include the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. The Administration for Community Living's functions will shift into the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the Administration for Children and Families, and the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE). ASPE will be combined with the Agency for Health Research and Quality into the Office of Strategy

 “This centralization,” HHS says, “will improve coordination of health resources for low-income Americans and will focus on areas including, Primary Care, Maternal and Child Health, Mental Health, Environmental Health, HIV/AIDS, and Workforce development.”

US Food and Drug Administration

An estimated 3500 full-time FDA employees are expected to receive RIF notices. The agency said reductions will not affect drug, medical device, or food reviewers or inspectors. 

Politico spoke with fired employees on condition of anonymity. According to them, Dr. Peter Stein, director of the FDA Office of New Drugs (OND), was let go. The policy office inside of OND was also eliminated. Another top FDA regulator, Dr. Brian King, the director of the Center for Tobacco Products (CTP), was placed on administrative leave, according to an email sent to his staff and obtained by Politico. “I encourage you to hold your heads high and never compromise the guiding tenets that CTP has held dear since its inception,” King wrote in the email to his staff. “We obeyed the law. We followed the science. We told the truth.” 

Julie Tierney, who was recently elevated to acting director of the FDA Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, according to an agency website, was also placed on administrative leave, according to 2 people familiar with the decision. The FDA Office of Strategic Programs, including its director, Sridhar Mantha, has been completely shuttered. Mantha cochaired the Artificial Intelligence (AI) Council at the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER), which helped develop policy around AI use in drug development and assisted the FDA in using AI internally.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

About 2400 CDC employees are expected to receive RIF notices. According to Government Executive, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) sustained more than one-third of the cuts at CDC. About 80% of the 1100 employees at the institute were laid off, including its director and deputy director. An HHS letter to a labor union said about 185 NIOSH employees would be let go in just the Morgantown, W. Va., location. However, NIOSH is apparently slated to be part of the newly created AHA.

Other layoffs hit the National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion; National Center for Injury Prevention and Control; the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and Tuberculosis Prevention; the Global Health Center; the National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities; and the National Center for Environmental Health. Two sources familiar with the firings said the Office on Smoking and Health was eliminated. The Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response, currently part of the US Public Health Service, will move to the CDC. 

A compensation program for employees who developed cancer due to radiation exposure while working for the federal government was also eliminated. Similarly, a national registry that tracks rates of cancer among firefighters was cut. One employee said NIOSH laid off veterinarians despite the bureau having laboratory animals that need care. 

National Institutes of Health 

NIH will lose 1200 employees, due to "centralizing” procurement, human resources, and communications across its 27 institutes and centers. According to the employees who spoke with Politico, scientists were also targeted, including National Institute of Nursing Research Director Shannon Zenk; National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Director Diana Bianchi; Emily Erbelding, who leads the Division of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases at National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseasesand National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities Director Eliseo Pérez-Stable. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Jeanne Marrazzo, who replaced Anthony Fauci, was also put on leave.

In his “welcome” email to staff, the new NIH director, Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, wrote: “I recognize that I am joining NIH at a time of tremendous change. Every inch of the federal government is under scrutiny—and NIH is not exempt. These reductions in the workforce will have a profound impact on key NIH administrative functions, including communications, legislative affairs, procurement, and human resources, and will require an entirely new approach to how we carry them out.”

Deep Cuts at Other HHS Agencies

As many as 500 to 600 people were let go at the Health Resource and Services Administration (HRSA). Its Bureau of Primary Health Care, which oversees the national network of health care centers that collectively provide care to 31 million people, was “severely impacted,” and the agency lost much of its regional staff, according to an article in Government Executive. “This will have an enormous impact on the program and viability of health centers,” an HRSA employee said. 

About 50% of the nearly 900 SAMHSA employees were laid off and its 10 regional offices were closed. SAMHSA will be “hamstrung for data,” according to an agency employee, who added contracts may be cut en masse due the departure of the contract management staff. They added that even if funding remains for the agency, the support systems for grantees were being decimated.

More than 800 people lost their jobs at the CDER, according to an official who was laid off; this part of the agency had around 6,000 employees before the cuts.

Indian Health Service

The IHS offers a rare bright spot. Although it was also in line for massive cuts, it has been spared, for now. According to a statement emailed to Native News Online, Secretary Kennedy said the Trump administration intends to prioritize the IHS.

“The Indian Health Service has always been treated as the redheaded stepchild at HHS,” Secretary Kennedy wrote. “My father often complained that IHS was chronically understaffed and underfunded. President Trump wants me to rectify this sad history. Indians suffer at the highest level of chronic disease of any demographic. IHS will be a priority over the next 4 years. President Trump wants me to end the chronic disease epidemic beginning in Indian country.”

March layoffs that had been announced for 1000 IHS employees were rescinded.

“We can confirm the layoffs were rescinded thanks at least in part to advocacy by the many Tribal organizations,” a spokesperson for the National Indian Health Board told Native News Online.

In fact, top career executives across the department are now being offered reassignments to the IHS, which employees must accept to keep their jobs. One executive who received the offer told Native News Online that no details on positions or location were provided, and they doubted that everyone who got such a notice would ultimately be matched to a suitable position. 

"Streamline the Agency"

The dramatic actions at HHS were not unexpected. In fact, employees had been in an unsettling limbo since Kennedy was appointed Secretary, not knowing when the axe would fall, or where, or on whom. Kennedy, when describing the restructuring plans, said, “We're going to streamline our agency and eliminate the redundancies and invite everyone to align behind a simple, bold mission. I want every HHS employee to wake up every morning asking themselves, ‘What can I do to restore American Health?’ I want to empower everyone in the HHS family to have a sense of purpose and pride and a sense of personal agency and responsibility to this larger goal.”

“The FDA as we've known it is finished,” Dr. Robert M. Califf, who served as FDA commissioner twice, wrote on LinkedIn. In an interview with CNN, Califf said he was dismayed to see how federal workers were being treated. 

“This is a sad and inhumane way to treat people,” he said. “It’s different when you’re a company and you’re out of money and you can’t pay people, but the federal government can pay people and do things in an orderly, respectful fashion—and not have them end up in line trying to get to work and have their badges not work as a way to fire them.” 

But the fired HHS employees aren’t the only ones who will bear the brunt of the cuts. “Today’s announcement is not just a restructuring of the Department of Health and Human Services. It is a catastrophe for the health care of every American,” Senator Ed Markey (D-MA) said in a press briefing.

Calling the cuts “a recipe for disaster,” former CDC director Tom Frieden said, “[Secretary] Kennedy claims that health care services will not be harmed by the dramatic downsizing, but he is wrong, and everyone who is paying any attention knows it.”

Senators Bill Cassidy (R-LA) and Bernie Sanders (I-VT), of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, announced Tuesday that they were inviting Kennedy to a hearing April 10 about the restructuring of HHS. “This will be a good opportunity,” Cassidy said in a statement, “for him to set the record straight and speak to the goals, structure and benefits of the proposed reorganization.”

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On March 27, Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said he planned to cut about 10,000 full-time jobs from the department in a sweeping “reorganization.” Less than a week later, the reduction in force (RIF) notifications were sent out, and in the very early hours of April 1, hundreds of employees found themselves locked out from their offices, often so abruptly their belongings were left behind. 

Most affected employees were told they would be placed on administrative leave; some were told to continue working until they can hand off their duties but they would be formally separated on June 2. Many of the email RIF notifications used the recommended wording provided by the US Office of Personnel Management: “This RIF action does not reflect directly on your service, performance, or conduct.” The HHS workforce is expected to be reduced from 82,000 full-time employees to 62,000. 

"The Trump Administration has launched an unprecedented attack on the federal health workforce," said House Energy and Commerce Committee Ranking Member Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ), during an oversight and investigations hearing on medical device technology and cybersecurity.

The cuts in personnel and programs are broad and deep, and touch every aspect of public health. Alzheimer’s disease programs are being eliminated, measles vaccine clinics are being shuttered, and tuberculosis, HIV prevention, and cancer research are being stalled. A Reddit thread for RIF notices from HHS employees had nearly 750 postings, suggesting a broad cross-section of individuals and departments had received them. 

Secretary Kennedy stated the layoffs and restructuring will save $1.8 billion a year. “We aren’t just reducing bureaucratic sprawl," he said in a statement. "We are realigning the organization with its core mission and our new priorities in reversing the chronic disease epidemic.” On the social platform X, Kennedy acknowledged, “This will be a painful period for HHS.”

Entire offices devoted to Freedom of Information Act-related requests, communications, and human resources were also shut down, according to multiple reports.

The agency's 28 divisions will be reformatted into a “new, unified entity” of 15 divisions—the Administration for a Healthy America, or AHA, aimed at carrying out Kennedy's “Make America Healthy Again” agenda. The AHA will include the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. The Administration for Community Living's functions will shift into the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the Administration for Children and Families, and the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE). ASPE will be combined with the Agency for Health Research and Quality into the Office of Strategy

 “This centralization,” HHS says, “will improve coordination of health resources for low-income Americans and will focus on areas including, Primary Care, Maternal and Child Health, Mental Health, Environmental Health, HIV/AIDS, and Workforce development.”

US Food and Drug Administration

An estimated 3500 full-time FDA employees are expected to receive RIF notices. The agency said reductions will not affect drug, medical device, or food reviewers or inspectors. 

Politico spoke with fired employees on condition of anonymity. According to them, Dr. Peter Stein, director of the FDA Office of New Drugs (OND), was let go. The policy office inside of OND was also eliminated. Another top FDA regulator, Dr. Brian King, the director of the Center for Tobacco Products (CTP), was placed on administrative leave, according to an email sent to his staff and obtained by Politico. “I encourage you to hold your heads high and never compromise the guiding tenets that CTP has held dear since its inception,” King wrote in the email to his staff. “We obeyed the law. We followed the science. We told the truth.” 

Julie Tierney, who was recently elevated to acting director of the FDA Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, according to an agency website, was also placed on administrative leave, according to 2 people familiar with the decision. The FDA Office of Strategic Programs, including its director, Sridhar Mantha, has been completely shuttered. Mantha cochaired the Artificial Intelligence (AI) Council at the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER), which helped develop policy around AI use in drug development and assisted the FDA in using AI internally.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

About 2400 CDC employees are expected to receive RIF notices. According to Government Executive, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) sustained more than one-third of the cuts at CDC. About 80% of the 1100 employees at the institute were laid off, including its director and deputy director. An HHS letter to a labor union said about 185 NIOSH employees would be let go in just the Morgantown, W. Va., location. However, NIOSH is apparently slated to be part of the newly created AHA.

Other layoffs hit the National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion; National Center for Injury Prevention and Control; the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and Tuberculosis Prevention; the Global Health Center; the National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities; and the National Center for Environmental Health. Two sources familiar with the firings said the Office on Smoking and Health was eliminated. The Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response, currently part of the US Public Health Service, will move to the CDC. 

A compensation program for employees who developed cancer due to radiation exposure while working for the federal government was also eliminated. Similarly, a national registry that tracks rates of cancer among firefighters was cut. One employee said NIOSH laid off veterinarians despite the bureau having laboratory animals that need care. 

National Institutes of Health 

NIH will lose 1200 employees, due to "centralizing” procurement, human resources, and communications across its 27 institutes and centers. According to the employees who spoke with Politico, scientists were also targeted, including National Institute of Nursing Research Director Shannon Zenk; National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Director Diana Bianchi; Emily Erbelding, who leads the Division of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases at National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseasesand National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities Director Eliseo Pérez-Stable. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Jeanne Marrazzo, who replaced Anthony Fauci, was also put on leave.

In his “welcome” email to staff, the new NIH director, Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, wrote: “I recognize that I am joining NIH at a time of tremendous change. Every inch of the federal government is under scrutiny—and NIH is not exempt. These reductions in the workforce will have a profound impact on key NIH administrative functions, including communications, legislative affairs, procurement, and human resources, and will require an entirely new approach to how we carry them out.”

Deep Cuts at Other HHS Agencies

As many as 500 to 600 people were let go at the Health Resource and Services Administration (HRSA). Its Bureau of Primary Health Care, which oversees the national network of health care centers that collectively provide care to 31 million people, was “severely impacted,” and the agency lost much of its regional staff, according to an article in Government Executive. “This will have an enormous impact on the program and viability of health centers,” an HRSA employee said. 

About 50% of the nearly 900 SAMHSA employees were laid off and its 10 regional offices were closed. SAMHSA will be “hamstrung for data,” according to an agency employee, who added contracts may be cut en masse due the departure of the contract management staff. They added that even if funding remains for the agency, the support systems for grantees were being decimated.

More than 800 people lost their jobs at the CDER, according to an official who was laid off; this part of the agency had around 6,000 employees before the cuts.

Indian Health Service

The IHS offers a rare bright spot. Although it was also in line for massive cuts, it has been spared, for now. According to a statement emailed to Native News Online, Secretary Kennedy said the Trump administration intends to prioritize the IHS.

“The Indian Health Service has always been treated as the redheaded stepchild at HHS,” Secretary Kennedy wrote. “My father often complained that IHS was chronically understaffed and underfunded. President Trump wants me to rectify this sad history. Indians suffer at the highest level of chronic disease of any demographic. IHS will be a priority over the next 4 years. President Trump wants me to end the chronic disease epidemic beginning in Indian country.”

March layoffs that had been announced for 1000 IHS employees were rescinded.

“We can confirm the layoffs were rescinded thanks at least in part to advocacy by the many Tribal organizations,” a spokesperson for the National Indian Health Board told Native News Online.

In fact, top career executives across the department are now being offered reassignments to the IHS, which employees must accept to keep their jobs. One executive who received the offer told Native News Online that no details on positions or location were provided, and they doubted that everyone who got such a notice would ultimately be matched to a suitable position. 

"Streamline the Agency"

The dramatic actions at HHS were not unexpected. In fact, employees had been in an unsettling limbo since Kennedy was appointed Secretary, not knowing when the axe would fall, or where, or on whom. Kennedy, when describing the restructuring plans, said, “We're going to streamline our agency and eliminate the redundancies and invite everyone to align behind a simple, bold mission. I want every HHS employee to wake up every morning asking themselves, ‘What can I do to restore American Health?’ I want to empower everyone in the HHS family to have a sense of purpose and pride and a sense of personal agency and responsibility to this larger goal.”

“The FDA as we've known it is finished,” Dr. Robert M. Califf, who served as FDA commissioner twice, wrote on LinkedIn. In an interview with CNN, Califf said he was dismayed to see how federal workers were being treated. 

“This is a sad and inhumane way to treat people,” he said. “It’s different when you’re a company and you’re out of money and you can’t pay people, but the federal government can pay people and do things in an orderly, respectful fashion—and not have them end up in line trying to get to work and have their badges not work as a way to fire them.” 

But the fired HHS employees aren’t the only ones who will bear the brunt of the cuts. “Today’s announcement is not just a restructuring of the Department of Health and Human Services. It is a catastrophe for the health care of every American,” Senator Ed Markey (D-MA) said in a press briefing.

Calling the cuts “a recipe for disaster,” former CDC director Tom Frieden said, “[Secretary] Kennedy claims that health care services will not be harmed by the dramatic downsizing, but he is wrong, and everyone who is paying any attention knows it.”

Senators Bill Cassidy (R-LA) and Bernie Sanders (I-VT), of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, announced Tuesday that they were inviting Kennedy to a hearing April 10 about the restructuring of HHS. “This will be a good opportunity,” Cassidy said in a statement, “for him to set the record straight and speak to the goals, structure and benefits of the proposed reorganization.”

On March 27, Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said he planned to cut about 10,000 full-time jobs from the department in a sweeping “reorganization.” Less than a week later, the reduction in force (RIF) notifications were sent out, and in the very early hours of April 1, hundreds of employees found themselves locked out from their offices, often so abruptly their belongings were left behind. 

Most affected employees were told they would be placed on administrative leave; some were told to continue working until they can hand off their duties but they would be formally separated on June 2. Many of the email RIF notifications used the recommended wording provided by the US Office of Personnel Management: “This RIF action does not reflect directly on your service, performance, or conduct.” The HHS workforce is expected to be reduced from 82,000 full-time employees to 62,000. 

"The Trump Administration has launched an unprecedented attack on the federal health workforce," said House Energy and Commerce Committee Ranking Member Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ), during an oversight and investigations hearing on medical device technology and cybersecurity.

The cuts in personnel and programs are broad and deep, and touch every aspect of public health. Alzheimer’s disease programs are being eliminated, measles vaccine clinics are being shuttered, and tuberculosis, HIV prevention, and cancer research are being stalled. A Reddit thread for RIF notices from HHS employees had nearly 750 postings, suggesting a broad cross-section of individuals and departments had received them. 

Secretary Kennedy stated the layoffs and restructuring will save $1.8 billion a year. “We aren’t just reducing bureaucratic sprawl," he said in a statement. "We are realigning the organization with its core mission and our new priorities in reversing the chronic disease epidemic.” On the social platform X, Kennedy acknowledged, “This will be a painful period for HHS.”

Entire offices devoted to Freedom of Information Act-related requests, communications, and human resources were also shut down, according to multiple reports.

The agency's 28 divisions will be reformatted into a “new, unified entity” of 15 divisions—the Administration for a Healthy America, or AHA, aimed at carrying out Kennedy's “Make America Healthy Again” agenda. The AHA will include the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. The Administration for Community Living's functions will shift into the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the Administration for Children and Families, and the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE). ASPE will be combined with the Agency for Health Research and Quality into the Office of Strategy

 “This centralization,” HHS says, “will improve coordination of health resources for low-income Americans and will focus on areas including, Primary Care, Maternal and Child Health, Mental Health, Environmental Health, HIV/AIDS, and Workforce development.”

US Food and Drug Administration

An estimated 3500 full-time FDA employees are expected to receive RIF notices. The agency said reductions will not affect drug, medical device, or food reviewers or inspectors. 

Politico spoke with fired employees on condition of anonymity. According to them, Dr. Peter Stein, director of the FDA Office of New Drugs (OND), was let go. The policy office inside of OND was also eliminated. Another top FDA regulator, Dr. Brian King, the director of the Center for Tobacco Products (CTP), was placed on administrative leave, according to an email sent to his staff and obtained by Politico. “I encourage you to hold your heads high and never compromise the guiding tenets that CTP has held dear since its inception,” King wrote in the email to his staff. “We obeyed the law. We followed the science. We told the truth.” 

Julie Tierney, who was recently elevated to acting director of the FDA Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, according to an agency website, was also placed on administrative leave, according to 2 people familiar with the decision. The FDA Office of Strategic Programs, including its director, Sridhar Mantha, has been completely shuttered. Mantha cochaired the Artificial Intelligence (AI) Council at the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER), which helped develop policy around AI use in drug development and assisted the FDA in using AI internally.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

About 2400 CDC employees are expected to receive RIF notices. According to Government Executive, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) sustained more than one-third of the cuts at CDC. About 80% of the 1100 employees at the institute were laid off, including its director and deputy director. An HHS letter to a labor union said about 185 NIOSH employees would be let go in just the Morgantown, W. Va., location. However, NIOSH is apparently slated to be part of the newly created AHA.

Other layoffs hit the National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion; National Center for Injury Prevention and Control; the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and Tuberculosis Prevention; the Global Health Center; the National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities; and the National Center for Environmental Health. Two sources familiar with the firings said the Office on Smoking and Health was eliminated. The Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response, currently part of the US Public Health Service, will move to the CDC. 

A compensation program for employees who developed cancer due to radiation exposure while working for the federal government was also eliminated. Similarly, a national registry that tracks rates of cancer among firefighters was cut. One employee said NIOSH laid off veterinarians despite the bureau having laboratory animals that need care. 

National Institutes of Health 

NIH will lose 1200 employees, due to "centralizing” procurement, human resources, and communications across its 27 institutes and centers. According to the employees who spoke with Politico, scientists were also targeted, including National Institute of Nursing Research Director Shannon Zenk; National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Director Diana Bianchi; Emily Erbelding, who leads the Division of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases at National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseasesand National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities Director Eliseo Pérez-Stable. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Jeanne Marrazzo, who replaced Anthony Fauci, was also put on leave.

In his “welcome” email to staff, the new NIH director, Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, wrote: “I recognize that I am joining NIH at a time of tremendous change. Every inch of the federal government is under scrutiny—and NIH is not exempt. These reductions in the workforce will have a profound impact on key NIH administrative functions, including communications, legislative affairs, procurement, and human resources, and will require an entirely new approach to how we carry them out.”

Deep Cuts at Other HHS Agencies

As many as 500 to 600 people were let go at the Health Resource and Services Administration (HRSA). Its Bureau of Primary Health Care, which oversees the national network of health care centers that collectively provide care to 31 million people, was “severely impacted,” and the agency lost much of its regional staff, according to an article in Government Executive. “This will have an enormous impact on the program and viability of health centers,” an HRSA employee said. 

About 50% of the nearly 900 SAMHSA employees were laid off and its 10 regional offices were closed. SAMHSA will be “hamstrung for data,” according to an agency employee, who added contracts may be cut en masse due the departure of the contract management staff. They added that even if funding remains for the agency, the support systems for grantees were being decimated.

More than 800 people lost their jobs at the CDER, according to an official who was laid off; this part of the agency had around 6,000 employees before the cuts.

Indian Health Service

The IHS offers a rare bright spot. Although it was also in line for massive cuts, it has been spared, for now. According to a statement emailed to Native News Online, Secretary Kennedy said the Trump administration intends to prioritize the IHS.

“The Indian Health Service has always been treated as the redheaded stepchild at HHS,” Secretary Kennedy wrote. “My father often complained that IHS was chronically understaffed and underfunded. President Trump wants me to rectify this sad history. Indians suffer at the highest level of chronic disease of any demographic. IHS will be a priority over the next 4 years. President Trump wants me to end the chronic disease epidemic beginning in Indian country.”

March layoffs that had been announced for 1000 IHS employees were rescinded.

“We can confirm the layoffs were rescinded thanks at least in part to advocacy by the many Tribal organizations,” a spokesperson for the National Indian Health Board told Native News Online.

In fact, top career executives across the department are now being offered reassignments to the IHS, which employees must accept to keep their jobs. One executive who received the offer told Native News Online that no details on positions or location were provided, and they doubted that everyone who got such a notice would ultimately be matched to a suitable position. 

"Streamline the Agency"

The dramatic actions at HHS were not unexpected. In fact, employees had been in an unsettling limbo since Kennedy was appointed Secretary, not knowing when the axe would fall, or where, or on whom. Kennedy, when describing the restructuring plans, said, “We're going to streamline our agency and eliminate the redundancies and invite everyone to align behind a simple, bold mission. I want every HHS employee to wake up every morning asking themselves, ‘What can I do to restore American Health?’ I want to empower everyone in the HHS family to have a sense of purpose and pride and a sense of personal agency and responsibility to this larger goal.”

“The FDA as we've known it is finished,” Dr. Robert M. Califf, who served as FDA commissioner twice, wrote on LinkedIn. In an interview with CNN, Califf said he was dismayed to see how federal workers were being treated. 

“This is a sad and inhumane way to treat people,” he said. “It’s different when you’re a company and you’re out of money and you can’t pay people, but the federal government can pay people and do things in an orderly, respectful fashion—and not have them end up in line trying to get to work and have their badges not work as a way to fire them.” 

But the fired HHS employees aren’t the only ones who will bear the brunt of the cuts. “Today’s announcement is not just a restructuring of the Department of Health and Human Services. It is a catastrophe for the health care of every American,” Senator Ed Markey (D-MA) said in a press briefing.

Calling the cuts “a recipe for disaster,” former CDC director Tom Frieden said, “[Secretary] Kennedy claims that health care services will not be harmed by the dramatic downsizing, but he is wrong, and everyone who is paying any attention knows it.”

Senators Bill Cassidy (R-LA) and Bernie Sanders (I-VT), of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, announced Tuesday that they were inviting Kennedy to a hearing April 10 about the restructuring of HHS. “This will be a good opportunity,” Cassidy said in a statement, “for him to set the record straight and speak to the goals, structure and benefits of the proposed reorganization.”

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