![Senator Amy Klobuchar, Democrat of Minnesota, was part of a group of Democratic senators who wrote to the Ministry of Health and Social Services requiring responses to the agency's communications break.](https://npr.brightspotcdn.com/dims3/default/strip/false/crop/1024x683+0+0/resize/1100/quality/85/format/jpeg/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fnpr-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F7a%2F1a%2F6b5b72eb4ab486102a3af0ca7e00%2Fgettyimages-2194682847.jpg)
Senator Amy Klobuchar, Democrat of Minnesota, was part of a group of Democratic senators who wrote to the Ministry of Health and Social Services requiring responses to the agency’s communications break.
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In a letter sent Wednesday evening to the acting secretary for health and social services Dorothy Fink, a group of 34 Democratic senators called for the Federal Health Agency to end its frost on “external communications and funding” .
“We write to express our deep concern concerning the recent decision of the administration to freeze external communications and to suspend federal health funding at the Ministry of Health and Social Services (HHS),” the senators wrote. “The abrupt order has already disrupted patient care, public health monitoring, stopping funding for medical research and obstructed from critical regulatory processes.”
Senators Amy Klobuchar, D-MN, and Bernie Sanders, I-VT, who is a class member the letter. It was also signed by 32 other Democrats in the Senate.
Hhs published a memo Stoping almost all external communications on January 21. He ordered the agency staff to refrain from most communications, such as the publication of documents, advice or opinions, until these documents can be approved by “a man named presidential”.
THE note said the break was in place until February 1. But this deadline has been adopted, the senators write, and “it is not clear when these restrictions are lifted”.
The letter indicates: “Although limited exceptions exist for critical health, security or security problems, freezing has already seriously hampered the essential functions of public health and biomedical research.”
For example, the CDC has not published its weekly publication, the Weekly ratio of morbidity and mortalityOr MmwrThe weeks of January 22 and January 29, marking the first time in decades, the agency has not published the much appreciated pillar of public health communication. This week Mmwr I released Thursday.
When NPR asked HHS if the communications break had been lifted, Andrew Nixon, director of communications, said by e-mail that “there are several types of external communications that are no longer subject to break”.
“HHS has approved many communications related to critical health and safety needs and will continue to do so,” he added.
However, as NPR has reported, certain pages and sets of data that scientists rely on Still not available And many scientists are concerned about what can still be missed or modified. At the National Institutes of Health, decisions on new grants have been delayedNew research is blocked and there is a break in recruiting new patients for any clinical studies at the agency.
Senators demand “complete accounts” by February 10 of all communications that have been postponed or canceled, including scientific reports and updates, public health notices, grant decisions and more.
“The American people depend on the HHS agencies to provide precise and real-time information on diseases of diseases, medical research and regulatory decisions,” they wrote.
The Senators’ letter also refers to the financing problems which can be linked to the federal financing freezing announced in a service note of January 27 issued by the Management and Budget Office which froze most subsidies, loans and payments federal. The courts then blocked the prescription and it has since been canceled.
But the administration said its efforts to Examine and reintegrate federal expenses continue.
Certain health clinics which depend on federal funds to provide care has not been able to obtain their funding in recent days, because PBS reported.
Another group of Democratic senators, led by senators Tim Kaine and Mark R. Warner, D-VA sent a separate letter to HHS on Thursday, which raises concerns about it.
“Many beneficiaries who depend on federal funding still experience confusion and uncertainty, and have received little or no advice from the Trump administration on their funding,” said the letter.
It was signed by Kaine, Warner and 20 of their democratic colleagues in the Senate.
“Despite the ordinance of a judge blocking the freezing freezing, we are disturbed by reports according to which the health centers are unable to access funding duly appropriate by the congress,” they wrote. “The health centers receive little communication concerning these cancellations and the changes, and the communication they received from HRSA has not been clear, leading actions that can come into conflict with current judicial orders.”