Title 25 › Chapter CHAPTER 18— - INDIAN HEALTH CARE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER VI— - MISCELLANEOUS › § 1680c
Lets the Indian Health Service give care to some people who are not normally covered. Children under 19 who are the natural, adopted, step, foster child, legal ward, or orphan of an eligible Indian can get care if they are not already eligible. A tribe can make all spouses of its members who are not otherwise eligible into a class that can get care, but those spouses’ needs do not count when the Service decides how to allocate its resources. The Service can also treat people who are not eligible to stabilize medical emergencies, stop the spread of disease or other public health hazards, care for non‑Indian women who are pregnant with an eligible Indian’s child through pregnancy and postpartum, and treat immediate family members when the care is directly related to treating an eligible person. The Secretary can provide care in Service-run facilities to local ineligible people if the tribe asks and the Secretary and tribe agree it will not reduce services for eligible Indians. Tribes running health programs under an Indian Self‑Determination contract or compact may decide the same, taking that “no reduction” rule into account. People who get care may have to pay under a charge schedule that covers at least the actual cost. Collections, including Medicare, Medicaid, or CHIP payments (titles XVIII, XIX, XXI), go to the program’s account and may be spent for program purposes listed elsewhere. An indigent ineligible person may be treated only if a State or local government agrees to reimburse the Service. If a tribe or, in multitribal areas, at least 51 percent of tribes revoke agreement, the Service’s authority to serve those ineligible people ends at the end of the fiscal year following the revocation. Non‑Service practitioners may get hospital privileges to treat these patients and, for acts tied to those privileges, can be treated as federal employees for certain federal tort‑claim rules. Definitions: “eligible Indian” — an Indian already eligible for Service health care without using this part. “Non‑Service health care practitioner” — a practitioner who is not a Service employee and not an employee or contractor of a tribe operating under a contract or compact.
Full Legal Text
Indians — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
25 U.S.C. § 1680c
Title 25 — Indians
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73