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National News Texas: Cuts in AIDS Drug Plan Could Be CostlyDecember 17, 2002 Next year, two out of 10 Texans now enrolled in the AIDS Drug Assistance Program will be cut off under a plan to keep the financially drained initiative afloat. Of the 12,500 Texans enrolled in the program, 2,500 clients are expected to be cut from the program. Another 1,700 new clients who would have signed on to the program next year would be excluded based on new income guidelines the Texas Board of Health is expected to approve in February. The program has a $58 million annual budget, but with demand growing and drug costs soaring, the Texas Department of Health expects a shortfall of $34 million in the next two-year budget cycle, which starts in September. Department officials are proposing tightening income eligibility so that anyone making more than 140 percent of the federal poverty level, or $12,400 a year, no longer would qualify. Today, the income cutoff is 200 percent of the federal poverty level, or $17,720, but that can be raised to cover medication costs. That means an individual can now have an annual income of $26,000 and still get the benefit. Moore said the Health Department is concerned about how the cuts will effect clients. If its board approves the change, affected clients would get six months to move out of the program. The department will try to connect them with free drug programs offered by pharmaceutical companies, Moore said. Back to other CDC news for December 17, 2002 Austin American Statesman 12.14.02; Mary Ann Roser This article was provided by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is a part of the publication CDC HIV/Hepatitis/STD/TB Prevention News Update. |
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