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Overview

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (PDF - 1.07 MB) was signed into law by President Obama on February 17th, 2009. It is an unprecedented effort to jumpstart our economy, create or save millions of jobs, and put a down payment on addressing long-neglected challenges so our country can thrive in the 21st century. The Act is an extraordinary response to a crisis unlike any since the Great Depression, and includes measures to modernize our nation's infrastructure, enhance energy independence, expand educational opportunities, preserve and improve affordable health care, provide tax relief, and protect those in greatest need.

Successful Commitment to Increasing Access to Health Care for People across the Country

Goal: Enable 1,129 Health Centers in 50 States and Eight Territories to Provide Expanded Service to Approximately 300,000 Patients

Why? As the cost of health care goes up and more people are losing coverage or even worse, losing their jobs, a growing number of people are turning to government sponsored health care for themselves and their families.

Results: 500,000 patients served!

Learn more about how this commitment was accomplished.

200-Days Milestone Report

HHS exceeds its 200-Day 300,000 patient goal, serving 500,000 patients in Community Health Centers!

Read the Vice President's remarks on the 200 Days of the Recovery Act

Learn how Recovery Act funding successfully increased access to health care.

Implementation

HHS is committed to a timely implementation. Plans for spending, reporting, auditing, and investigation of fraud and abuse of Recovery funds are being developed and will be made available here.

Total Obligated HHS Funds: $46.5 Billion (as of 09/30/09)

Total Gross Outlays: $33.0 Billion (as of 09/30/09)

List of Programs for Which Funding Has Been Announced:

Major Activities

As of September 30, 2009:

  • Cumulative Recovery Act Medicaid FMAP State draw downs total about $ 31.5 billion.
  • President Obama visited NIH and announced the total award of $5 billion for research grants, which he said was "the single largest boost to biomedical research in history." (Sept. 30)
  • Secretary Kathleen Sebelius announced the availability of a $125 million funding opportunity in cooperative agreements under CDC for States and Territories for chronic disease prevention and wellness programs. The funds are part of the "Communities Putting Prevention to Work" initiative that will make a total of $650 million available for public health efforts to address obesity, increase physical activity, improve nutrition and decrease smoking. (Sept. 29)