The Great American Recovery Needs More Than a Slogan
On February 2, 2026, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. took the stage at SAMHSA's Prevention Day to announce a $100 million pilot program addressing homelessness and addiction, alongside a meaningful expansion of medication access for families affected by opioid use disorder. In the same speech, Kennedy characterized harm reduction as a "non-effective intervention" that "enabled future drug use." The contradiction captures the current state of American addiction policy: genuine progress on biomedical treatment access undermined by ideological rejection of the evidence-based strategies needed to keep people alive long enough to access that treatment.
The scope of the crisis is not in dispute. According to the White House fact sheet accompanying the Great American Recovery Initiative, 48.4 million Americans, or 16.8% of the population, live with substance use disorder. Nearly eight in ten did not receive treatment in 2024. These numbers should focus policymakers on removing every barrier between people and care. Instead, the administration is simultaneously expanding some pathways while actively dismantling others.
The Biomedical Frontier
One area of genuine scientific promise involves glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists, medications originally developed for diabetes and obesity that are showing unexpected potential for treating addiction. These drugs target the brain's mesolimbic reward pathways, and emerging research indicates they may modulate the dopamine neurotransmission involved in addictive behaviors.
The implications are significant. As the British Journal of Pharmacology notes, no FDA or EMA-approved medications currently exist for cocaine or stimulant use disorders. This treatment gap disproportionately affects marginalized communities, including LGBTQ populations where methamphetamine use remains a significant concern intersecting with HIV and HCV transmission.
Early evidence is encouraging. A large observational study using the VA database found that people with alcohol use disorder who used GLP-1 medications had a 50% lower rate of alcohol bingeing compared to those not on the medications. People with opioid use disorder on these medications had a 40% lower rate of overdose. Clinical trials are now underway for multiple substance use disorders, including a trial specifically enrolling people with both cocaine use disorder and HIV.
"This research is very important because alcohol and drug addiction are major causes of illness and death, yet there are still only a few effective treatment options," Dr. Lorenzo Leggio of the National Institute on Drug Abuse and National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism noted in October 2025.
The critical question is access. As Penn Medicine researchers have observed, "many who struggle with addiction are multiply marginalized, making access to these medications a potential concern." The VA study data came largely from older white males, and robust research across demographics remains necessary. Breakthrough treatments mean little if the people who need them most cannot obtain them.
Meaningful Progress
Credit where due: the administration has taken concrete steps to expand medication access for opioid use disorder. On February 2, the Administration for Children and Families announced that buprenorphine, methadone, and naltrexone now qualify as prevention services eligible for Title IV-E funding. States and tribes can receive a 50% federal match to provide these medications to parents when children are at imminent risk of entering foster care. The policy reflects sound reasoning: keeping families together through effective treatment generally serves children better than separation.
The December 2025 reauthorization of the SUPPORT Act extended substance use disorder programs through fiscal year 2030 after the original legislation had languished since its 2023 expiration. The bill passed with strong bipartisan support, 366-57 in the House and by unanimous consent in the Senate.
There is also useful historical precedent from the first Trump administration. In May 2020, HHS Office for Civil Rights Director Roger Severino secured an agreement with West Virginia establishing that people in recovery using medication-assisted treatment are entitled to ADA protections. "People in recovery from opioid use disorder should never be stigmatized for seeking appropriate medical treatment that can save their lives," Severino stated at the time. That principle should guide current policy.
Where Policy Contradicts Evidence
Against these advances stands a pattern of actions that undermine the stated goal of connecting people with treatment.
The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration has lost approximately one-third of its roughly 900 employees over the past year. In January 2026, the administration briefly cancelled nearly $2 billion in SAMHSA grants before bipartisan backlash forced a reversal within 24 hours. Providers report an environment where planning for the future feels impossible.
The administration proposed folding SAMHSA into a new "Administration for a Healthy America." Congress rejected this in the FY2026 LHHS appropriations package and added structural protections requiring 60 days' advance notice before HHS reorganizations affecting CDC functions and three days' notice before grant terminations. These guardrails exist because they proved necessary.
On harm reduction, the gap between evidence and policy is particularly troubling. The July 2025 executive order "Ending Crime and Disorder on America's Streets" directed SAMHSA to defund "so-called harm reduction" programs. A subsequent SAMHSA letter drew an explicit line between acceptable overdose reversal tools like naloxone and the "ideological concept of harm reduction."
This framing ignores the government's own evidence. In December 2025, the VA published an analysis of its harm reduction programs describing syringe services programs as "one of the most effective public health interventions ever devised." The data: SSPs decrease new HIV and HCV infections by up to 67%, increase the likelihood of achieving abstinence five-fold, and "do not enable or increase drug use, nor do they cause increases in crime."
The FY2026 appropriations bill maintains Section 525, the longstanding prohibition on using federal funds for sterile needles or syringes outside narrow outbreak exceptions. Report language frames harm reduction through an abstinence-first lens, treating harm reduction and recovery as opposing forces when the evidence shows they are complementary. Meeting people where they are is how you eventually connect them with treatment.
The Syndemic Reality
These policy contradictions have real consequences for communities facing intersecting epidemics. Syringe services programs are foundational infrastructure for preventing HIV and HCV transmission among people who inject drugs. Cutting STI prevention funding by $10 million while syphilis and congenital syphilis remain at historically high levels makes no public health sense.
The approach to homelessness reveals similar contradictions. The July 2025 executive order abandons Housing First, the evidence-based model that prioritizes stable housing as a foundation for recovery. In its place, the order directs agencies to prioritize jurisdictions that enforce bans on urban camping, loitering, and open-air drug use when awarding federal grants. It encourages states to expand involuntary civil commitment and conditions housing assistance on participation in behavioral health treatment. The Bipartisan Policy Center notes this approach may invite Fair Housing Act lawsuits, since conditioning housing on treatment could constitute discrimination against people with disabilities, including those with substance use disorder.
HHS’s $100 million STREETS Initiative operates within this enforcement-first framework. Kennedy described the model as finding people on the street and moving them "from crisis to detox treatment to housing to employment." Housing comes after treatment compliance, not before. The National Alliance to End Homelessness has been direct in its assessment: "Deinstitutionalization did not cause homelessness, and re-institutionalization will not solve it."
The 2024 Point-in-Time count recorded over 770,000 people experiencing homelessness, an 18% increase from the previous year and the largest annual jump ever recorded. Those most affected include people with mental illness or substance use disorder, LGBTQ youth, and veterans, as Harvard's Howard Koh has noted. A $100 million pilot serving eight cities cannot address a crisis of this scale, particularly when the broader policy framework criminalizes the people it claims to help.
Access barriers to existing treatments compound the problem. The Cato Institute reports that 80% of U.S. counties have no opioid treatment programs, and only 600,000 of the 8 million people meeting criteria for opioid use disorder received methadone in 2024. The bipartisan Modernizing Opioid Treatment Access Act would have enabled primary care prescribing of methadone; it was not reintroduced in the current Congress.
The Path Forward
The promise of emerging treatments like GLP-1 agonists cannot be realized without the infrastructure to deliver them. A breakthrough medication for stimulant use disorder means nothing to someone cycling between encampments and emergency rooms because Housing First was abandoned in favor of treatment mandates they cannot access. Flat funding for SAMHSA, restrictions on harm reduction, and criminalization of homelessness create gaps that no medication can bridge.
"If we want to create a world where there's opioid recovery, we need to also offer affordable housing and access to affordable food and improved access to health care," Dr. Sadie Elisseou of Harvard told Behavioral Health Business. This syndemic framing should guide policy. It currently does not.
The administration cannot simultaneously expand medication access, gut the agency responsible for treatment infrastructure, restrict the harm reduction programs that keep people alive and connected to care, and criminalize the circumstances of those most in need of help. These policies do not form a coherent strategy. They form a contradiction.
Congress rejected the administration's most extreme proposals through the passage of the L-HHS funding package, but holding ground is not progress. Advocates should monitor SAMHSA implementation closely, push for evidence-based harm reduction funding that aligns with the VA's proven model, defend Housing First against ideological attack, and ensure that new treatments reach marginalized communities rather than only those with private insurance and stable housing.
The tools to address substance use disorder exist. What remains absent is a policy framework that treats people who use drugs as deserving of care rather than punishment. Until that changes, the Great American Recovery will remain a slogan, not a strategy.
Leaked HHS Budget: Critical HIV Services Face Deep Cuts
A recently leaked budget document from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has revealed the Trump Administration's plans for sweeping cuts that would fundamentally reshape federal health programs. The 64-page "pre-decisional" budget proposal, first reported by The Washington Post, outlines a severe reduction in HHS discretionary spending from $121 billion to approximately $80 billion—a 33% cut. This proposal provides the first comprehensive look at the administration's vision for restructuring the nation's health infrastructure, including the creation of a new Administration for a Healthy America (AHA) while eliminating or consolidating many established agencies that form the backbone of our public health system. The proposed changes would profoundly impact HIV/AIDS programs, viral hepatitis services, substance use disorder treatment, and access to care for vulnerable populations, potentially reversing decades of progress in public health.
The Scale of Proposed Cuts
The magnitude of cuts outlined in the leaked budget document would fundamentally transform the federal health infrastructure in ways not seen in decades. The National Institutes of Health (NIH), America's premier biomedical research institution, would see its budget slashed by 42%—from $47 billion to just $27 billion. This dramatic reduction would be accompanied by a plan to reorganize NIH's 27 institutes and centers into just eight, eliminating some entirely while consolidating others into broader entities with less specialized focus.
Similarly devastating, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) faces a proposed 44% budget reduction, from $9.2 billion to approximately $5.2 billion. The document indicates the CDC would be refocused primarily on "emerging and infectious disease surveillance, outbreak investigations, preparedness and response, and maintaining the Nation's public health infrastructure."
Even more concerning, several agencies would be eliminated entirely as independent entities, including the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), the Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response (ASPR), and the Administration for Community Living (ACL). While some programs from these agencies would transfer to the proposed Administration for a Healthy America (AHA), many would be eliminated outright. As the leaked document itself states: "Many difficult decisions were necessary to reach the funding level provided in this passback."
Impact on HIV/AIDS Infrastructure
The proposed budget would effectively dismantle decades of federal HIV prevention and treatment infrastructure, threatening to reverse significant progress made toward ending the epidemic. Most alarming is the complete elimination of the CDC's Division of HIV Prevention (DHP), which has been the cornerstone of the nation's HIV prevention efforts. According to POZ, the division passes 89% of its funding directly to state and local HIV programs, with states like Alabama and Mississippi depending on it for up to 100% of their HIV prevention efforts.
The budget also eliminates the Ending the HIV Epidemic (EHE) initiative, which was launched during Trump's first administration and has produced a 21% reduction in new HIV transmissions within targeted jurisdictions. This initiative represented a rare bipartisan commitment to addressing the HIV epidemic through increased testing, prevention, and treatment resources.
The Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program, which provides essential care and treatment to over 550,000 people living with HIV who are uninsured or underinsured, would see significant cuts. The KFF analysis reveals that while core funding for grants to cities, states, and the AIDS Drug Assistance Program (ADAP) would be maintained, the budget eliminates support for dental services, AIDS Education and Training Centers, and demonstration programs.
Additionally, the Minority AIDS Initiative, which addresses the disproportionate impact of HIV on racial and ethnic minorities, would be eliminated entirely. This comes at a time when Black and Latino communities continue to face disproportionate HIV rates and could worsen existing health disparities.
"The scale of what is being lost is staggering," POZ reports. "According to recent analysis from amfAR, a 100% reduction in DHP funding will lead to 143,486 new HIV infections by 2030, 14,676 additional AIDS related deaths, and $60.3 billion in additional lifetime health care costs."
The proposal would move remaining HIV/AIDS programs under the new Administration for a Healthy America with reduced funding and an unclear structure, raising serious questions about program coordination and effectiveness going forward.
Viral Hepatitis, STIs, and Related Programs
The leaked budget proposal takes aim at viral hepatitis, sexually transmitted infections (STIs), and tuberculosis programs by consolidating their funding into a single, smaller grant program. According to POZ, "a proposal in the new budget to turn other CDC funding for viral hepatitis, STDs, and TB into block grants masks devastating funding losses as 'flexibility to address local needs.'" In reality, this consolidation would reduce overall funding by approximately $500 million, severely limiting the capacity to prevent and respond to outbreaks of these conditions.
Particularly concerning is the elimination of CDC's Global Health Center and the agency's critical STD laboratory, which MedPage Today confirms was shuttered during the recent mass layoffs. These cuts would dismantle essential testing infrastructure at a time when sexually transmitted infections are at record highs nationwide. The consolidation approach significantly weakens the specialized responses needed for these distinct but interconnected public health challenges, potentially allowing localized outbreaks to develop into broader public health crises without the targeted interventions currently in place.
Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Services
The proposed budget calls for the complete elimination of the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), the federal agency dedicated to addressing mental health and substance use conditions. The impact of this elimination would be compounded by severe cuts to services: Mental Health Services would see a 25% reduction, Substance Use Treatment funding would drop by approximately 13%, and most alarmingly, Substance Use Prevention would be nearly eliminated with a staggering 92% cut.
The proposal would eliminate 17 mental health programs and 23 substance use prevention and treatment programs. Harm reduction services, which are critical in preventing overdose deaths and the transmission of infectious diseases such as hepatitis C virus (HCV), are particularly targeted for cuts. The proposed budget would also end the Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinic program, which provides 24-hour crisis services regardless of patients' ability to pay.
As STAT News reports, "We continue to face a mental health and addictions crisis, and the need for effective federal leadership is more important than ever." These cuts come at a time when more than one in four people will experience a mental health or substance use problem, and over 209,000 Americans die annually from alcohol, suicide, and drug overdoses.
Rural Health and Access to Care
Rural communities would bear a disproportionate burden from the proposed budget cuts through the elimination of numerous programs specifically designed to support rural healthcare infrastructure. As detailed in the leaked document, the budget would eliminate State Offices of Rural Health, which coordinate statewide efforts to improve healthcare delivery in rural areas. The Washington Post reports that rural hospital flexibility grants, rural residency development programs, and at-risk rural hospitals program grants would all face elimination or significant cuts.
Additionally, critical telehealth funding would be eliminated at a time when remote healthcare services have become essential lifelines for rural populations. These programs have historically enjoyed strong bipartisan support due to their critical role in maintaining healthcare access for the approximately 60 million Americans living in rural areas.
Alan Morgan, CEO of the National Rural Health Association said, "Those are essential to ensuring access to care for rural Americans and critical to keeping rural hospitals open. If that would come to fruition it would be absolute shocking news, because these programs have had such bipartisan support."
The Advisory Board notes that these cuts would exacerbate the already fragile state of rural healthcare, where over 150 rural hospitals have closed since 2010, leaving many communities without access to emergency and essential medical services.
340B Program and Healthcare Costs
Amid the sweeping cuts to safety-net programs, the leaked budget also proposes significant changes to the 340B Drug Pricing Program, which provides discounted medications to hospitals and clinics serving vulnerable populations. HFES reports that the administration is "seeking new authority to regulate 'all aspects of the 340B Program'" and would require covered entities to report on their use of 340B savings.
According to Health Exec, the proposal would require facilities to "charge no more than the actual cost of acquiring and dispensing drugs to low-income patients." While greater transparency might be beneficial, these changes—combined with cuts to other safety-net programs—could restrict access to affordable medications for people living with HIV, hepatitis, and other chronic conditions who rely on safety-net providers participating in the 340B program.
Conclusion
Unlike during Trump's first term when Congress often rejected deep cuts to health agencies, the current political landscape offers much less hope for meaningful congressional pushback. Under the GOP-controlled Congress, recent reports show Republicans largely falling in line behind Trump's initiatives, with Reuters reporting that the president is "testing the U.S. Constitution's system of checks and balances" while congressional Republicans demonstrate "staunch support." This legislative acquiescence has extended to health policy, with little effective opposition to the administration's sweeping restructuring of federal health agencies.
Further complicating advocacy efforts, HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has eliminated a key avenue for public input by rescinding a 54-year-old policy that required public comment periods for rules on grants, benefits, and other health programs. This change, which came despite Kennedy's promises of "radical transparency," allows HHS to implement major policy changes without seeking feedback from affected communities, healthcare providers, or advocacy organizations.
In this environment, traditional advocacy approaches must evolve. In the absence of congressional intervention, our energy may be better spent:
Forming coalitions between patient groups, healthcare providers, private business, and public health organizations to amplify impact
Considering support for legal challenges to health policy changes implemented without adequate review
Carefully documenting and publicizing the real-world impacts of cuts to HIV services and other critical programs
Engaging with state officials who may have flexibility in implementing federal changes
Making use of remaining public comment opportunities when available, with a focus on evidence-based arguments
The proposed dismantling of federal HIV infrastructure represents an existential threat to decades of progress. While the political headwinds are strong, our collective advocacy efforts remain essential to protecting the health services that millions of Americans depend on.