Title 25 › Chapter CHAPTER 18— - INDIAN HEALTH CARE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - INDIAN HEALTH PROFESSIONAL PERSONNEL › § 1613a
Provides scholarships called Indian Health Scholarships to Indians who are enrolled full or part time in accredited schools training for health jobs. The Secretary, through the Service, decides who gets the scholarships and how they are spread across different health professions based on where Indian communities need more health workers. The scholarships follow the rules in another federal scholarship law (section 254l of Title 42) except for the special rules below. Recipients must repay the scholarship by working full time as a health professional. Work that counts includes jobs in the Indian Health Service, in programs run under the Indian Self-Determination Act, in programs helped under this chapter, or in private practice located in a health shortage area that serves many Indians (as the Secretary decides). If a recipient earns a medical, dental, optometry, podiatry, or pharmacy degree, the Secretary will delay the required service so the person can finish required internships, residencies, or other clinical training. That training time does not count toward the required service, and the service must start within 90 days after finishing training. A recipient may choose to serve on their tribe’s reservation or in programs that serve their tribe. Part-time students may get up to the part-time equivalent of 4 years of support; their required service equals either the part-time equivalent of one year per scholarship year or 2 years, whichever is greater, and their monthly stipend is cut pro rata. If, on or after October 29, 1992, a recipient falls below required grades, is expelled for discipline, quits training, or refuses scholarship payment, or otherwise breaks the contract, the United States can recover money under a set formula. Obligations end if the recipient dies. The Secretary can waive or suspend service or payment for impossibility, extreme hardship, or other good cause, and may, in cases of extreme hardship or good cause, waive recovery of funds. A scholarship payment obligation cannot be wiped out in bankruptcy unless the discharge happens more than 5 years after the payment first became due and the court finds nondischarge would be unconscionable. The Secretary must also create a Placement Office to place scholarship recipients into Service vacancies without following normal hiring rules.
Full Legal Text
Indians — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
25 U.S.C. § 1613a
Title 25 — Indians
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73