Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 6A— - PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - GENERAL POWERS AND DUTIES › Part Part B— - Federal-State Cooperation › § 247b–4a
Creates a federal effort to help states find and help babies with hearing loss. It defines key terms briefly: newborn and infant hearing screening (tests that flag possible hearing loss), audiologic evaluation (detailed hearing tests and help options), medical evaluation (doctor exam to find medical causes and next steps), medical intervention (doctor-led treatment or surgery), audiologic rehabilitation (tools and training to improve communication), and early intervention (nonmedical family and child support and services). Health and Human Services, through HRSA, must give grants to states to build and run these statewide screening, testing, and follow-up systems and to track how well they work. The CDC must give technical help and do applied research to set data and quality standards, study costs and results, find causes and risks, check long-term child outcomes, and share data with birth-defect and developmental monitoring programs. The NIH (NIDCD) must keep researching better screening methods and intervention effectiveness. The program’s goals are that every baby born in U.S. hospitals and territories gets a hearing screen before leaving; babies born elsewhere who come to the U.S. by immigration or adoption get screened as soon as possible; babies not born in hospitals here are screened within the first 3 months; babies suspected of hearing loss get full audiologic and medical exams by 3 months so intervention can start before 6 months. Programs must connect families to medical care, hearing devices, rehabilitation, and early education and family supports, including services under IDEA part C. The agencies must work together and with federal, state, and local programs, professional groups, consumer groups, insurers, and industry. The law does not override any state law. Authorized funding: HRSA $5,000,000 for FY2000, $8,000,000 for FY2001, and whatever is needed for FY2002; CDC $5,000,000 for FY2000, $7,000,000 for FY2001, and whatever is needed for FY2002; NIDCD whatever is needed for FY2000–FY2002.
Full Legal Text
The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 247b–4a
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73