Community TEAMS Act of 2026
Sponsored By: Senator John Curtis
Introduced
Summary
Expands community-based training for medical students in rural and medically underserved communities. This bill would create a new federal grant program to fund clinical rotations and partnerships that encourage long-term physician practice in high-need areas.
Show full summary
- Medical students: More opportunities for clinical rotations in rural and outpatient settings through grant-funded placements aimed at building sustained training pipelines.
- Rural residents and patients: Communities could see increased access to quality care as training projects must describe how they will expand services across the continuum of care.
- Clinics and health centers: Rural health clinics, Federally Qualified Health Centers, and health facilities can join consortia with medical schools to host students and receive grants lasting 1 to 5 years.
- Medical schools and program design: Eligible applicants must form a consortium and submit plans showing project design, why federal help is needed, evaluation methods, and a plan to sustain the project after grant funding ends.
- Federal program timing: The bill adds this grant authority to the statute and shifts the program window to cover 2026 through 2030.
Your PRIA Score
Personalized for You
How does this bill affect your finances?
Sign up for a PRIA Policy Scan to see your personalized alignment score for this bill and every other piece of legislation we track. We analyze your financial profile against policy provisions to show you exactly what matters to your wallet.
Bill Overview
Analyzed Economic Effects
1 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
More medical student training in rural areas
If enacted, the bill would let the Director award grants to expand community-based training for medical students. Grants would support clinical rotations in rural and medically underserved areas, including outpatient settings. Grants would run for 1 to 5 years, as the Director decides. Eligible applicants would be consortia of one or more allopathic or osteopathic medical schools plus a rural health clinic, a Federally Qualified Health Center, or a health care facility in a medically underserved community. Applications would be filed in consultation with the State office of rural health and must include a project description; why Federal help is needed; quality improvement, evaluation, and sustainability plans; and a description of how access to care will increase. The bill would also add this training purpose to program priorities and shift the program authorization window to 2026 through 2030.
Free Policy Watch
You just read the policy. Now see what it costs you.
Pick a topic. PRIA runs your household against live legislation and sends you a free personalized readout.
Pick a topic to get started
Sponsors & CoSponsors
Sponsor
John Curtis
UT • R
Cosponsors
Angus King
ME • I
Sponsored 3/4/2026
Roll Call Votes
No roll call votes available for this bill.
View on Congress.govTake It Personal
Get Your Personalized Policy View
Take the PRIA Score to see how policy affects your household, then upgrade to PRIA Full Coverage for year-round monitoring.
Already have an account? Sign in