Five policy experts delved into details on how impending sequestration cuts will further disadvantage those who depend on federal assistance programs, particularly people of color, during a Thursday panel discussion at the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies.
At the event, entitled The Impact of Sequestration on the Health and Well-Being of Communities of Color and held on the eve of the sequestration’s March 1 effective date, panel members discussed the array of health, human development, and environmental programs that are important to communities of color and which face particularly devastating cuts. Among them are the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC), Head Start, HIV prevention and testing, and the federal program that provides low-income, uninsured, and underinsured women access to breast and cervical cancer screening and diagnostic testing.
Brian Smedley, Ph.D., Vice President of the Joint Center and Director of its Health Policy Institute, reported that the sequestration will result in 600,000 women, infants, and children losing WIC services, 70,000 children losing access to Head Start programs, 900,000 fewer patients served by community health centers and 25,000 fewer cancer screenings and 424,000 fewer HIV tests being covered by CDC funds. The proportion of people of color in each program ranges from 46 to 77 percent, he said.
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