More than 476,000 Americans are diagnosed with Lyme disease every year. Many more go undiagnosed. ER visits for tick bites just hit their highest springtime level in nearly a decade.
Washington finally noticed.
On May 29, HHS Secretary RFK Jr. announced a sweeping federal push against Lyme disease & tick-borne illness — one of the most significant in the department’s history. He delivered the news in New Hampshire, one of the hardest-hit states in the country.
Here’s what’s on the table:
- A multi-million-dollar CDC-led tick control pilot program targeting ticks on wildlife before they reach humans.
- Three new LymeX Innovation Challenges — up to $2.5M in prize funding — covering patient education, drug repurposing, & an AI sprint with a $1M grand prize for tools that help patients get faster answers.
- A new $10M Diagnostics Prize to accelerate next-gen Lyme testing.
- NIH is investing $50M/yr in Lyme research & $122M/yr in broader tick-borne disease research.
- A new public-private collaboration with ILADS — so patients can finally find experienced providers through hhs.gov/lyme.
The stated goal: reduce Lyme cases 25% by 2035.
For patients who’ve spent years being dismissed, gaslit, or undertreated — this level of federal acknowledgment matters. Whether the follow-through matches the announcement is the real question.
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