Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 6A— - PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - GENERAL POWERS AND DUTIES › Part Part B— - Federal-State Cooperation › § 247b–17
The Secretary of Health, working through the CDC, must set up and run HPV (human papillomavirus) tracking and special studies with States and others to find how common different HPV types are in different ages, places on the body, and regions. The CDC must collect specimens, test them in labs, and analyze the data. Within 1 year after the law takes effect, the Secretary must report progress to Congress. The Secretary must also carry out prevention research on HPV — including how diagnoses affect people, research to help make clear public and patient messages, surveys of doctors’ and the public’s knowledge and habits, and then create and share educational materials based on those findings. A progress report is due within 1 year after the law takes effect, and a final report with major findings and best prevention strategies is due within 3 years. The Secretary must prepare and share public and health‑care materials that explain how HPV spreads, its consequences (including its link to cervical cancer), what the science says about condoms and HPV, and the importance of regular Pap tests and other checks. Any mass‑produced STD materials from HHS or its partners must include medically accurate information about condom effectiveness. The Secretary must run a national campaign to raise awareness of gynecologic cancers for women and health providers, keep written materials available and give them on request, and put public service announcements in media telling women to talk to doctors and pointing out warning signs and risk factors using the best medical information. By 6 months after January 12, 2007, the Secretary must report to Congress on past and current HHS activities to raise cancer awareness, including FY2006 funding and other details; within 3 months after that report the Secretary must submit a strategy to improve efforts, after consulting qualified private groups including nonprofits. The Secretary must ensure full implementation by March 1, 2008 and certify compliance by April 30, 2008, or else provide quarterly explanations until compliance. The law authorizes $16,500,000 for fiscal years 2007–2009 and $18,000,000 for fiscal years 2012–2014.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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42 U.S.C. § 247b–17
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73