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Dear Chair Tammy Baldwin, Ranking Member Shelley Moore Capito, Chair Robert Aderholt, and Ranking Member Rosa DeLauro:

As we transition out of COVID-19 as a public health emergency, it is abundantly clear our nation’s goals of having a system that ensures access to high quality healthcare for all is falling far short of its potential. We have all seen the deep racial, ethnic, geographic, and socioeconomic health disparities and inequities both within and beyond healthcare as people of color have disproportionately seen worse health outcomes, barriers to access, and low value care. For example, the opioid crisis, worsened by the pandemic, has ravaged American life as overdose deaths are the leading cause of injury-related death in the U.S. And yet, the nation is still grappling with how to deliver patient-centered care for those with substance use disorder. In parallel, the healthcare workforce is facing record burnout and attrition due to deteriorating mental health and added strains on institutional support. While policymakers and health systems take dramatic action to respond to existing healthcare challenges, they are doing so without sufficient research and evaluations on its impact on health outcomes, the value of care, and healthcare access.

The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) supports research to improve health care quality, reduce costs, advance patient safety, decrease medical errors, and broaden access to essential services. As the lead federal agency for funding health services research (HSR) and primary care research (PCR), AHRQ is the bridge between cures and care, and ensures that Americans get the best health care at the best value. The RAND Corporation released a report in 2020 as called for by the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2018, which identified AHRQ as “the only agency that has statutory authorizations to generate HSR and be the home for federal PCR, and the unique focus of its research portfolio on systems-based outcomes (e.g., making health care safer, higher quality, more accessible, equitable, and affordable) and approaches to implementing improvement across health care settings and populations in the United States.” AHRQ offers valuable insights on every facet of the health care system. For example, the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine 2021 report on Implementing High Quality

Primary Care highlighted the value of and need for federal investments in AHRQ through the National Center for Excellence in Primary Care Research.

While the vast majority of federally funded research focuses on one specific disease or organ system, AHRQ is the only federal agency that funds research at universities and other research institutions throughout the nation on health systems—the “real-life” patient who has complex comorbidities, the interoperability of different technological advances, and the interactions and intersections of health care providers. For example, some failures in the COVID-19 response can be addressed with more attention to the root causes of, and strategies for, addressing barriers to healthcare access, including what can be done in primary care to address health equity, and more broadly what are the patient-oriented primary care quality measures that would facilitate more engaged patient care.

As the lead agency for health services research and primary care research, AHRQ provides the resources that policymakers, health system leaders, medical providers, and patients need to determine the effectiveness of health systems delivery. In order to deliver better outcomes, we need to be able to differentiate which healthcare interventions work, for whom they work, and how to implement them, and HSR, PCR, and AHRQ are the process through which we develop that knowledge. For example, the effectiveness of telehealth is diminished if we do not have an evidence-based approach to provide equitable access regardless of race, ethnicity, geography, or income, and addressing questions like this is where AHRQ has a proven track record. Funding HSR and PCR through AHRQ is a key part of how we can move forward from COVID-19, prepare for the next potential health crisis, and address failures in the healthcare system that Americans continue to face.

The benefits of investing in health services research through AHRQ transcend the pandemic and provide benefits in saved lives, better value care, and improved patient outcomes across the health system. For example, the implementation of just one AHRQ-funded study on reducing hospital acquired conditions prevented an estimated 20,500 hospital deaths and saved $7.7 billion in health care costs from 2014 to 2017. To maximize the translation of research findings across the public health and health care continuum to improved patient care and keep pace with the rapidly evolving and changing health care landscape, additional investments in AHRQ are needed.

For these reasons, as you draft the Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies appropriations legislation for fiscal year 2024, the 151 undersigned members of the Friends of AHRQ respectfully request no less than $500 million in funding for the Agency for Healthcare and Research and Quality (AHRQ). This request reflects an inflation adjustment from FY10 and the demonstrated need to expand and accelerate HSR investments to inform decision-making on the health care system as it recovers from the pandemic.

AHRQ is the federal vehicle for studying and improving the United States healthcare system, and it needs the resources to meet its mission and this moment. Through this appropriation level, AHRQ will be better able to fund the “last mile” of research from cure to care.

Thank you for your support of AHRQ and health services research. For more information, please contact Josh Caplan at [email protected].

 

Sincerely,

Academic Pediatric Association

Academy of Medical-Surgical Nurses

AcademyHealth

Alliance for Aging Research

Alliance for Patient Access Altarum

AMDA - The Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine

American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology

American Academy of Dermatology Association American Academy of Family Physicians

American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine American Academy of Neurology

American Academy of Nursing American Academy of Pediatrics

American Association for Clinical Chemistry

American Association for Dental, Oral, and Craniofacial Research

American Association for Physician Leadership

American Association of Colleges of Osteopathic Medicine

American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy

American Association of Nurse Practitioners

American Association of Public Health Dentistry

American Association on Health and Disability

American Brain Coalition

American Chiropractic Association

American College of Clinical Pharmacy

American College of Neuropsychopharmacology

American College of Nurse-Midwives

American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists

Alliance for Innovation on Maternal Health

American College of Physicians

American Epilepsy Society

American Gastroenterological Association

American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA)

American Health Quality Association

American Heart Association

American Medical Student Association

American Nephrology Nurses Association

American Neurological Association

American Nurses Association

American Occupational Therapy Association

American Osteopathic Association

American PediatricSociety

American Physical Therapy Association

American Psychiatric Association

American Psychological Association Services, Inc.

American Public Health Association

American Society for Nutrition

American Society for Transplantation and Cellular Therapy

American Society of Anesthesiologists

American Society of Clinical Psychopharmacology

American Society of Hematology

American Society of Nephrology

American Society of Pediatric Nephrology

American Society of Plastic Surgeons

American Statistical Association

Amputee Coalition

Arbor Research Collaborative for Health

Association for Clinical and Translational Science

Association for Prevention Teaching and Research

Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology

Association of American Medical Colleges

Association of Departments of Family Medicine

Association of Family Medicine Residency Doctors

Association of Maternal & Child Health Programs

Association of Medical School Pediatric Department Chairs

Association of Population Centers

Association of Program Directors in Radiology

Association of Schools and Programs of Public Health

Association of University Radiologists

Association of Women's Health, Obstetric and Neonatal Nurses

Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist

Avera Health Brown University

Carnegie Mellon University

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

Clinical Research Forum

Coalition for Clinical and Translational Science

College of Health and Human Sciences, Northern Illinois University

Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Consortium of Social Science Associations

Consumers Advancing Patient Safety

Council of Academic Family Medicine

Council of Medical Specialty Societies

Data Foundation

Duke Health

EBQ Consulting, LLC ECRI

Epilepsy Foundation

Federation of American Hospitals

Federation of Associations in Behavioral and Brain Sciences

HealthDataViz

Healthy Teen Network

Heart Failure Society of America Heart Rhythm Society

HIMSS

Jewish Healthcare Foundation Johns Hopkins Medicine

Kaiser Permanente Lakeshore Foundation

Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics

Lupus and Allied Diseases Association, Inc

March of Dimes

Marshfield Clinic Health System

Mothers Against Medical Error

National Association of Health Data Organizations

National Association of Nurse Practitioners in Women's Health

National Association of Pediatric Nurse Practitioners

National Ataxia Foundation

National Athletic Trainers' Association

National Eczema Association

National Hispanic Medical Association

National League for Nursing

National MS Society

National Nurse-Led Care Consortium

National Psoriasis Foundation

North American Primary Care Research Group

Northwestern University

Nurses Organization of Veterans Affairs (NOVA)

Oncology Nursing Society

Oregon Health & Science University

Pediatric Policy Council

Population Association of America

Preparedness and Treatment Equity Coalition

Public Health Institute

RTI International

SIDM

Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine

Society for Participatory Medicine

Society for Pediatric Research

Society for Women's HealthResearch

Society of Chairs of Academic Radiology Departments

Society of General Internal Medicine

Society of Hospital Medicine

Society of Teachers of Family Medicine

Spina Bifida Association

The Hilltop Institute at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County

The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America

The Society of Thoracic Surgeons Tulane University

United Ostomy Associations of America

University of California San Francisco

University of California System

University of MichiganInstitute for Healthcare Policy & Innovation

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

University of Oregon

University of Rochester

University of Washington UPMC

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Washington State University

Weill Cornell Medicine