Are Federal Spending Cuts Endangering America's Most Vulnerable
CANN continues to monitor the restructuring of federal health agencies and the impacts of funding cuts on public health programs nationwide. This article is part of our developing coverage.
Two infants in Louisiana recently died from whooping cough—the first such deaths in the state since 2018. This tragedy comes amid a twelve-fold increase in whooping cough cases, from just 11 in 2023 to 149 in 2024, with 110 already recorded in the first three months of 2025 alone. These deaths occurred shortly after a February 13th decision by the Louisiana Surgeon General to end all vaccine promotion and outreach events statewide—the same day Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was confirmed to lead the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
These preventable deaths are the direct consequence of an intensifying assault on America's public health infrastructure, as the Trump Administration executes an $11.4 billion clawback of COVID relief funds from state health departments while simultaneously gutting federal health agencies through mass layoffs. The consequences of these dangerous, ideologically-driven policies are unfolding across the country and, as public health experts predicted, people are dying.
A System Already at the Breaking Point
Before these cuts, state and local health departments were already operating in a perpetual state of crisis. Years of chronic underfunding and staffing shortages had left America's public health system dangerously fragile and ill-equipped to handle emerging health threats.
In Utah, 70-90% of the state's public health funding comes from the federal government. Local health departments, particularly in rural and underserved areas, often function with minimal staff and resources, stretching their capacity to its limits to fulfill basic functions.
"This is going to be a major dent in our ability to be prepared for whatever new threat might come," warned Connecticut Health Commissioner Manisha Juthani. Philip Huang, Dallas County Health director, pointed out that even modest cuts can have outsized impacts on smaller departments: "It may not be in the millions, but these are really small health departments that have very few staff, very little capacity. And then if you hit those, then it starts to really impact their ability to respond."
The $11.4 Billion Clawback: A Devastating Blow
On March 25, 2025, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announced it was pulling back $11.4 billion in COVID-19 funding previously allocated to state and local health departments across the nation. The announcement came without warning, leaving health officials scrambling to assess impacts on critical programs and staff.
The administration's justification was blunt and misleading: "The COVID-19 pandemic is over, and HHS will no longer waste billions of taxpayer dollars responding to a non-existent pandemic that Americans moved on from years ago," said HHS Director of Communications Andrew Nixon in a statement to NBC News. This characterization fundamentally misrepresents how these funds were being used.
While the grants were initially authorized for pandemic response, they had evolved to support core public health functions: tracking infectious disease outbreaks, monitoring wastewater for early detection of disease spread, supporting community health workers in underserved areas, addressing health disparities, and maintaining vaccination programs for multiple preventable diseases.
The financial impact on states is severe: Texas faces the loss of $877 million, Florida $482 million, and North Carolina $100 million in cuts affecting immunization efforts and infectious disease monitoring. In Kentucky, $34 million in already-committed funds are now inaccessible, despite previous federal guarantees those funds would be available through March 2026.
Minnesota's Department of Health has issued layoff notices to 170 workers and rescinded offers to 20 new hires in response to losing $220 million in federal funding. This has resulted in slower responses to infectious disease outbreaks with fewer lab technicians and public health investigators.
The HHS Bloodbath: Dismantling Decades of Expertise
On April 1, 2025, HHS began executing the largest mass layoff in its history—eliminating 20,000 positions (10,000 through direct layoffs and another 10,000 through early retirement and voluntary separation offers).
The manner of these dismissals was particularly callous. According to the Associated Press, "Some staffers began getting termination notices in their work inboxes at 5 a.m., while others found out their jobs had been eliminated after standing in long lines outside offices to see if their badges still worked." Some workers who received layoff notices were directed to contact an EEO official who had died months earlier.
As the layoffs commenced, HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. tweeted triumphantly, "The revolution begins today!" When confronted by a fired HHS employee asking about the impact on people with disabilities, Senator Jim Banks responded, "You probably deserved it," then called the worker "a clown" as elevator doors closed.
Critical CDC and HIV Programs Decimated
MedPage Today reports that the hardest-hit areas of the CDC included centers focused on injuries, global health, chronic disease prevention, and infectious diseases including HIV, hepatitis, STIs, and tuberculosis. Directors of at least three major CDC centers were reassigned or placed on administrative leave.
The cuts strategically targeted offices serving vulnerable populations. The Administration for Community Living, which coordinates programs like Meals on Wheels, saw approximately 40% of its staff eliminated. The Office of Minority Health was largely dismantled, and entire offices were eliminated, including the Office of Science and Data Policy and Freedom of Information Act offices at the CDC.
The HIV+Hepatitis Policy Institute's Carl Schmid warned that the elimination of HHS's Office of Infectious Disease and HIV Policy would have lasting consequences:
"The expertise of the staff, along with their decades of leadership, has now been destroyed and cannot be replaced. We will feel the impacts of these decisions for years to come and it will certainly, sadly, translate into an increase in new HIV infections and higher medical costs."
These cuts follow the forced resignation of Dr. Peter Marks, the FDA's top vaccine safety official, who had resisted Kennedy's vaccine misinformation. In his departure letter, Marks wrote that "truth and transparency are not desired by the secretary, but rather he wishes subservient confirmation of his misinformation and lies."
Louisiana: Where Anti-Vaccine Policy Has Already Claimed Lives
Louisiana offers a foreboding preview of what happens when ideology trumps evidence-based public health practice. On February 13, 2025, Louisiana Surgeon General Dr. Ralph Abraham issued a directive ending all vaccine promotion and outreach events by the state health department.
Jennifer Herricks of Louisiana Families for Vaccines warned: "And the consequences of lower vaccination rates? More illness. More hospitalizations. More deaths." Tragically, her prediction has already come true for two Louisiana families who lost their babies to a vaccine preventable disease.
The memo came despite Louisiana experiencing its worst whooping cough outbreak in over a decade. Manning Family Children's Hospital in New Orleans has been admitting 1-2 children weekly for whooping cough, with cases statewide skyrocketing from 11 in 2023 to 149 in 2024.
By February 20—less than a week after the vaccine promotion ban—news outlets reported the first infant death from whooping cough. A second soon followed. Yet the health department did not officially confirm these deaths until March 28, more than a month later. In that belated announcement, Abraham did acknowledge that "vaccines are the best way to protect against infections, especially for babies," but this came after the vaccine preventable deaths had already occurred.
Vaccine Science Under Attack
During an American Public Health Association panel on vaccine science, Dr. Paul Offit of the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia compared the dismantling of public health agencies to an invasion "by a foreign nation" whose interest "is to destroy public health agencies." He emphasized that the HHS cuts will cause a significant loss of institutional knowledge vital for future public health emergencies.
Offit noted that NIH-funded research on mRNA technology "probably saved roughly 3 million lives" during the COVID pandemic. The dismantling of vaccine expertise comes amid a resurgence of vaccine-preventable diseases, with two deaths already reported in the measles outbreak affecting several states.
Public Health Leaders Unite in Opposition
Over 100 of the nation's most respected public health leaders—including former HHS Secretaries, CDC Directors, and state health officials—have issued an open letter urging Congress to halt the Trump administration's dismantling of public health infrastructure.
The letter, organized by For Our Health, warns: "This is a moment of profound danger for public health. The dismantling of CDC is not just an internal agency matter—it will leave states, communities and American families without the support they need to protect themselves from disease, misinformation and chronic illness."
Broader Impacts: New Threats for PLWH and Vulnerable Populations
For people living with HIV and other immunocompromised conditions, the dismantling of public health infrastructure creates particularly dangerous vulnerabilities. The elimination of the HHS Office of Infectious Disease and HIV Policy removes coordination for HIV programs across federal agencies.
With the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) facing staffing reductions, coordination of HIV prevention and treatment programs could be compromised. These structural changes risk undermining the health infrastructure that people living with HIV depend on for essential care.
The closure of wastewater surveillance programs eliminates a key early warning system for HIV cluster detection, while the decimation of health equity programs removes vital supports for marginalized communities disproportionately affected by HIV.
Breaking: Judge Blocks Funding Cuts as HHS Backtracks
In a significant development, U.S. District Judge Mary McElroy announced on April 3 she would issue a temporary restraining order blocking the Trump administration's $11.4 billion funding cuts to state health departments. During the hearing, McElroy stated that the 23 states and District of Columbia that filed the lawsuit "make a case, a strong case, for the fact that they will succeed on the merits."
This judicial intervention represents a critical, if temporary, reprieve for state health departments already reeling from layoffs and program cancellations. New York Attorney General Letitia James responded to the ruling by tweeting: "We're going to continue our lawsuit and fight to ensure states can provide the medical services Americans need."
Simultaneously, Secretary Kennedy has begun backtracking on the sweeping cuts, claiming it was "always the plan" to reinstate certain employees and programs after terminating them. Kennedy acknowledged that "personnel that should not have been cut were cut" and said some would be reinstated, including a CDC program that monitors blood lead levels in children.
This claim contradicts the chaotic, across-the-board nature of the cuts that eliminated entire divisions and critical public health functions. Kennedy's assertion that "we're going to do 80% cuts, but 20% of those are going to have to be reinstalled, because we'll make mistakes" reveals a reckless approach to public health administration where critical programs and expertise are eliminated first, with potential consequences evaluated only after damage is done.
These developments suggest mounting pressure against the administration's public health cuts is beginning to have an effect, reinforcing the importance of continued advocacy and legal challenges.
The Fight to Preserve Public Health: What Comes Next
The combined impact of the COVID funding clawback and HHS restructuring represents an unprecedented assault on America's public health infrastructure. Twenty-three state attorneys general have already filed legal challenges against the funding cuts, arguing they exceed executive authority and violate appropriations law.
Recent election results suggest the administration's approach to public health may be backfiring politically. In Wisconsin's Supreme Court race, liberal candidate Susan Crawford defeated her conservative opponent despite record spending by DOGE architect Elon Musk. Meanwhile, special elections in Florida districts that Trump won by 30 points saw Republican margins cut in half.
This political landscape creates an opening for effective advocacy. Congressional representatives, particularly those in vulnerable districts, may be increasingly receptive to constituent concerns about public health funding. The moment calls for coordinated action: contact your representatives to demand oversight hearings and funding restoration; document and report public health impacts in your community; and support organizations working to preserve essential health services.
The preventable deaths we're witnessing are the predictable consequence of policies that prioritize ideology over scientific evidence and public health. Our collective advocacy can make the difference between a temporary setback and lasting damage to our nation's public health infrastructure.