HR-1493-119
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 625.
Sponsored by Frank Pallone (D-NJ)
What it does
This bill would reauthorize federal programs related to traumatic brain injury (TBI) through 2030, extending funding for CDC surveillance and state grant programs that were previously authorized through 2024. It would expand data collection to include high-risk populations (such as domestic violence survivors and public safety officers), require the CDC to make aggregated TBI data publicly available online, add Tribal communities as eligible grant recipients, and direct the Secretary of Health and Human Services to study long-term conditions linked to TBI — including potential connections to dementia and mental health conditions — and report findings to Congress within two years.
Who benefits
Individuals who have experienced TBI, including veterans, athletes, domestic violence and sexual assault survivors, and public safety officers — groups explicitly identified as higher-risk. Tribal communities, who would gain new eligibility for state-level grant programs. Researchers and public health professionals who would gain access to expanded, publicly available CDC data. State and local health agencies that would receive continued federal grant funding. Nonprofit organizations contracted to conduct the long-term TBI study. Patients with chronic TBI-related conditions such as dementia or mental health disorders who may benefit from improved research and services.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who bear the cost of reauthorized appropriations. States and Tribal consortia that must maintain non-federal spending at prior-year levels (maintenance-of-effort requirement) to remain eligible for grants, which could strain budgets. Competing public health programs that may face indirect resource competition if discretionary funding is constrained. Organizations or researchers focused on other neurological conditions who may see TBI-specific programs prioritized over broader brain health funding.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that TBI affects an estimated 1.5 million Americans annually and that existing surveillance gaps — particularly for domestic violence survivors and first responders — leave high-risk populations without adequate data or services. They contend that extending the program through 2030 and adding Tribal communities as eligible recipients corrects a longstanding equity gap, and that the mandated study on long-term TBI effects, including links to dementia, addresses a critical and underfunded area of public health research with broad implications for aging Americans.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that reauthorizing these programs without demonstrated outcome data from prior funding cycles — the original authorization ran through 2024 — fails to establish whether federal spending has produced measurable improvements in TBI prevention or treatment. They contend that the maintenance-of-effort requirement imposes an unfunded mandate-like burden on states and Tribal governments with limited budgets, and that expanding program scope and eligible populations without a corresponding increase in authorized funding may dilute effectiveness across all target groups.