Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle A— - General Military Law › Part PART II— - PERSONNEL › Chapter CHAPTER 55— - MEDICAL AND DENTAL CARE › § 1073c
The Director of the Defense Health Agency must run and manage every military hospital and clinic that is not deployed. The Director must be a military officer with a rank equal to or higher than any service Surgeon General and must have joint experience. The Director will handle patient care, quality and provider privileges, budgets, information technology, supplies and equipment, building projects, policies, and any other duties the Secretary of Defense assigns. The Director can hire and evaluate facility commanders, control any middle organizations between the Agency and the facilities, decide what medical services each facility provides to meet commanders’ readiness needs, set workforce and manning levels with the military departments, fix staffing shortages, and choose facility leaders after considering service nominations. The on-site military commander must keep service members ready for duty and provide the care the Agency requires. The Secretary of Defense may make a facility’s military director a commanding officer for UCMJ purposes. The Secretary must set a timeline for moving responsibility for these facilities from the military departments to the Defense Health Agency. The Director must also work with the Joint Staff Surgeon to meet combat and operational medical needs of combatant commanders. The Secretary must create a professional staff inside the Agency. That includes an Assistant Director for Health Care Administration who must be a career appointee and report to the Director. The Assistant Director sets health care and clinic policies, budgeting priorities for direct care, and IT priorities. Four Deputy Assistant Directors will report to the Assistant Director: one for Information Operations (IT), one for Financial Operations (budget and finance), one for Health Care Operations (administration), and one for Medical Affairs (clinical quality, safety, education, and hiring civilian doctors). The Agency must also include two subordinate organizations: Defense Health Agency Research and Development (to coordinate military medical research funding) and Defense Health Agency Public Health (to unite military public health programs). The Secretary may let a military department keep a function if it is unique to that service and directly supports forces. The Secretary must consult with the services at least semiannually about research plans. Definitions: “career appointee” — as defined in title 5; “Defense Health Agency” — the Agency created by DoD Directive 5136.13; “military medical treatment facility” — a fixed DoD health-care facility outside a deployed setting or other locations the Secretary names.
Full Legal Text
Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
10 U.S.C. § 1073c
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73