July 14, 2022
The U.S. House Committee on Appropriations has advanced funding legislation for FY 2023. The bill includes numerous provisions that ASHA has advocated for, including a $3.2 billion increase for IDEA, a $1 million increase for newborn hearing screening, and a $16.2 million increase for the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders. The bill also encourages the U.S. Department of Education to provide technical assistance to help audiologists and SLPs better support students with speech-language disorders in school settings and directs CDC to address disparities in pediatric hearing health care. Read more about these important developments and take action now to advocate on these and other key public policy priorities.
ASHA continues advocating against reductions to Medicare Part B reimbursement, most recently by sending a letter [PDF] to Congressional leaders opposing reinstatement of Medicare sequestration cuts. The sequestration and other Medicare related cuts were scheduled to reduce Medicare reimbursement by about 10% in 2022, but advocacy by ASHA and others secured significant mitigation at the end of last year. ASHA members can help support these efforts by contacting your federal elected officials.
Thank you, Lou, for your ongoing leadership!
"Advocacy to me is about insuring a productive future for our consumers, our colleagues and our professions."
—Louis Malerba, CCC-SLP, Member, Government Affairs and Public Policy Board