Support for a Permanent Reauthorization of the Special Diabetes Program for Indians to Include Annual Funding Increases tied to Medical Inflation;
and,
Support for an Amendment to the Public Health Service Act to Permit Tribes and Tribal Organizations to Receive Special Diabetes Program for Indians Funds through Self-Determination and Self-Governance Contracts and Compacts
WHEREAS, the National Indian Health Board (NIHB), established in 1972, serving all Federally recognized American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) Tribal governments by advocating for the improvement of health care delivery to AI/ANs, as well as upholding the Federal government’s trust responsibility to AI/AN Tribal governments, does hereby establish and submit the following resolution; and
WHEREAS, the federal government has assumed trust obligations to AI/AN Tribes and Peoples in perpetuity for health care, education, public safety, land management, and other services established through over 300 Treaties signed between sovereign Tribal Nations and the United States that are further enshrined in the U.S. Constitution, Supreme Court case law, federal legislation and regulations, and presidential executive orders; and
WHEREAS, AI/AN Peoples are disproportionately impacted by type II diabetes and are 2.9 times more likely than Whites to be diagnosed with diabetes, 2.5 times more likely than Whites to die from diabetes, and 2.4 times more likely than Whites to be diagnosed with End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD); and
WHEREAS, the Bipartisan Budget Act of 1997 established the Special Diabetes Program for Indians (SDPI) under mandatory appropriations for the prevention and treatment of diabetes among American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) populations; and
WHEREAS, SDPI is directly responsible for a 54% reduction in ESRD rates among AI/ANs translating to up to 2,600 fewer ESRD cases from 1996 to 2013, and is also responsible for a 50% reduction in rates of diabetic eye disease in that time frame; and
WHEREAS, a 2019 report from the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation found that SDPI saves up to $52 million annually in Medicare expenditures; and