Shelby Reviews FY23 Defense Health Program Budget Request
WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator Richard Shelby (R-Ala.), vice chairman of the Senate Committee on Appropriations and its subcommittee on defense, today considered the Fiscal Year 2023 (FY23) budget request for the Defense Health Program during a defense appropriations subcommittee hearing. The four witnesses who testified in the hearing were Dr. David J. Smith, Performing the Duties of Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs; LTG Ronald J. Place, Director of the Defense Health Agency; Lt. Gen. Robert I. Miller, Surgeon General of the Air Force; LTG R. Scott Dingle, Surgeon General of the Army; and Rear Adm. Bruce L. Gillingham, Surgeon General of the Navy.
The Vice Chairman’s remarks, as prepared, are as follows:
“Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And, thank you to our witnesses for being here today.
“As we move past year two of the COVID-19 pandemic, I would like to recognize each of you for your commitment to our service members and to the nation as we continue to recover and move forward.
“We have expended a significant amount of resources on technological innovation and the delivery of medical services since the start of COVID-19. Today, I would like to hear how our dollars have been invested and the lessons you have learned while combatting this virus. I would also like to hear how you intend to apply that knowledge to prevent and fight future biological threats.
“Through medical research, innovation, education and training, the U.S. Military Health System remains the global leader in health care delivery on and off the battlefield.
“Maintaining this level of effort, however, will only get more expensive as the competition for scarce resources becomes more acute.
“To ensure continued excellence, we need to allocate our limited defense dollars only to those efforts that directly support and impact our warfighting capabilities.
“Our military’s health system conducts medical research on a wide variety of topics such as cancer, infectious diseases, traumatic brain injury, and burn research, among many others.
“Defense funding for these important research efforts has grown significantly over the years, notwithstanding the billions of dollars provided annually to NIH to conduct research in many of the same areas.
“In the FY22 Omnibus Appropriations Act Congress funded an Advanced Research Projects Agency within HHS for $1 billion.
“In this year’s budget, the President has requested an additional $5 billion for this effort.
“While the U.S. Medical Force and its mission will continue to be a high priority for the members of this subcommittee, the full committee must also ensure that medical research dollars are allocated appropriately.
“With that in mind, I look forward to reviewing the FY23 defense health budget, and to hearing your testimony today. Thank you.”
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