Title 25 › Chapter CHAPTER 18— - INDIAN HEALTH CARE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - HEALTH SERVICES FOR URBAN INDIANS › § 1653
Requires the Secretary, through the Service, to make contracts or give grants to urban Indian organizations so they can offer health care and referral help to urban Indians where those organizations are located. Each contract or grant must make the organization do 12 main things, such as estimate how many urban Indians live there and their health needs, check current health status and available public and private services, track who uses those services, help other providers serve urban Indians, teach people how to use services, offer basic health education and training, find gaps between needs and resources, recommend improvements to officials, and, when needed, provide or arrange direct care. The Secretary must set rules for choosing which organizations get contracts or grants. The rules must consider unmet needs, population size, how much other services are used, whether work would duplicate other projects, the organization’s ability and past performance, how suitable the activities are for the city, and involvement by other agencies. The Secretary must also fund health promotion and disease prevention. Grants may pay for free immunizations (with attention to population size, vaccine rates for infants/children/elderly, other free local options, and the group’s ability to provide them). Mental health grants need an approved needs assessment first and can fund assessments, outreach, outpatient care, and culturally based service models. Child-abuse grants also need an approved assessment and can fund prevention, training, and direct outpatient treatment for victims, families, and perpetrators.
Full Legal Text
Indians — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
25 U.S.C. § 1653
Title 25 — Indians
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73