Tagged: Hospitals

Gibbons SFY 2026 Report: New Jersey Department of Health Presents Its FY 2026 Budget Proposal

This is the first in a series of posts that offers a detailed look into the budget proposals for the major departments that constitute the state government. On April 3, 2025, and April 7, 2025, New Jersey Department of Health (NJDOH) Commissioner Dr. Kaitlan Baston appeared before the Senate Budget and Appropriations Committee and the General Assembly Budget Committee, respectively, to testify and take questions on the NJDOH’s $1.4 billion proposed FY 2026 State budget. Backdrop of Federal Funding Cuts Last week, the Trump administration sought to cut over $11 billion in public health grants allocated to U.S. states during the COVID-19 pandemic. While the Trump administration’s efforts have been temporarily halted by a federal judge, the grant funding at risk is used by states to track, prevent, and control infectious diseases, including measles and bird flu. Commissioner Baston testified that nearly $300 million was cut from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which was earmarked, in part, for local public health department funding. The Commissioner also highlighted that the funding supported direct care and disease and addiction prevention efforts. Investments in New Jersey’s Hospital and Health Care System The NJDOH’s Health Systems Branch oversees and ensures appropriate care in more than 2,000 regulated facilities statewide, including hospitals, nursing homes, and other healthcare facilities....

Roll-Out of COVID-19 Vaccines in New Jersey

Pharmaceutical innovation has positioned the world to witness the beginning of the largest vaccination effort that humankind has ever seen. Vaccine doses for COVID-19 are arriving in New Jersey this week, and the first doses will be injected in the arms of frontline healthcare workers and seniors by the close of business today in Newark’s largest hospital. More important than today’s historic event, the current New Jersey plan to vaccinate 70 percent of the Garden State’s current eligible population is worth reviewing. As the COVID-19 vaccines roll out, New Jersey plans to follow the Phased Approach framework crafted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Under the CDC’s framework, the initial wave of vaccines will be administered first to healthcare personnel. More specifically, Phase 1A of New Jersey’s COVID-19 vaccination plan will include “any paid or unpaid persons serving in healthcare settings who have the potential for direct or indirect exposure to patients or infectious materials and are unable to work from home.” Examples of workers within healthcare settings who are eligible to receive COVID-19 vaccinations during Phase 1A include, but are not limited to: Licensed healthcare professionals, such as doctors, nurses, pharmacists, and dentists; Healthcare staff, including receptionists, janitors, clergy, mortuary services, and laboratory technicians; Consultants and per diem contractors who are...