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- The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services will cut 10,000 jobs.
- Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. aims to realign the department's core mission.
- Major agencies like the FDA and the CDC will see significant staff reductions.
WASHINGTON — The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services will cut about 10,000 full-time jobs and close half of its regional offices, it said on Thursday, a major overhaul of the department under Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
The latest job cuts, and about 10,000 recent voluntary departures, will reduce the number of full-time employees at the department to 62,000 from 82,000, the department said.
"We aren't just reducing bureaucratic sprawl. We are realigning the organization with its core mission and our new priorities in reversing the chronic disease epidemic," Kennedy said in a department statement.
President Donald Trump and billionaire ally Elon Musk, who oversees the DOGE cost-cutting initiative, have been gutting agencies as part of an effort to shrink the federal bureaucracy.
The agency plan involves cutting 3,500 full-time employees at the Food and Drug Administration, the department said in a fact sheet breaking down the cuts, adding that the cuts would not affect inspectors or drug, medical device, or food reviewers.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will see 2,400 staff cut and the Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response, currently an independent Health and Human Services agency with 1,000 employees, folded into it.
The National Institutes of Health will see a reduction of 1,200 employees across its 27 institutes and centers, the breakdown showed. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services was comparatively spared with a reduction of about 300 people.
"The only way to cut that high of a percentage of our staff, along with the 35% contracting cuts that are being directed, is to drastically scale back what NIH does across the board," said Nate Brought, the recently departed former director of the National Institutes of Health's Executive Secretariat.
As part of the restructuring, the department's 10 regional offices will be cut down to five and its 28 divisions consolidated into 15, including a new "Administration for a Healthy America," which combines offices that address addiction, toxic substances and occupational safety into one central office.
The administration will contain the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health, the Health Resources and Services Administration, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.
The changes centralize functions such as communications, human resources, IT, and policy planning that currently spread out across several health agencies, including powerful ones like the FDA, CDC, and the National Institutes of Health, which have traditionally operated somewhat independently from HHS and even the White House, despite reporting to the health secretary.
There are no additional cuts currently planned, the department said.
