Last year, President Joseph R. Biden asked Congress to significantly increase IHS funding, but his proposal was cut to $400 million. “For years, IHS has been funded at a rate that is far below its level of need, and the results of this historical neglect can be seen in the disparities in health outcomes for AI/AN people,” William Smith, Valdez Native Tribe, Chairman of the National Indian Health Board (NIHB), wrote to the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, on the topic of the next IHS director. “Perhaps one of the greatest challenges facing the [Indian, tribal and urban] system is the chronic and severe underfunding and budgetary instability for health care and public health services infrastructure and delivery. Since its creation in 1955, IHS has been chronically underfunded, with annual appropriations never exceeding 50% of demonstrated need. This underfunding has contributed to substandard investment in health delivery systems, some of the worst health disparities among any US population and a severe lack of public health infrastructure and services for our people. At the start of the COVID-19 pandemic these vulnerabilities were starkly exposed and while Congress moved decisively to invest into Tribal health and public health, the new Director must work to maintain these one-time investments.”
Stacy Bohlen, NIHB chief executive, told The Oklahoman that tribal leaders will look to Tso to press Congress for more money and to secure mandatory full funding for IHS—in contrast with the current annual appropriations, where Congress includes IHS in much larger budget bills. “When those bills stall, so does the money tribal clinics need to pay employees and suppliers,” making it hard to recruit and retain employees. “In the Indian Health System,” Bohlen says, “we simply can’t afford that kind of vulnerability.”
Securing advance appropriations and, ultimately, full mandatory funding for IHS, Smith wrote in his letter to the Senate committee, “fulfills the commitment made to our people generations ago and breaks down the systemic healthcare funding inequities the federal government tolerates for Tribes.”
Tso emphasized her intent to “improve the physical, mental, social, and spiritual health and well-being of all American Indians and Alaskan Natives served by the Agency.” Tso “understands the healthcare needs that many first people of this country deal with,” President Nez said. “Her work ethic, value system and approach to problem solving demonstrates the resilience of Indigenous peoples and the commitment to combat the systemic inequities that impact tribal nations.”