Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 6A— - PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - GENERAL POWERS AND DUTIES › Part Part D— - Primary Health Care › Subpart subpart i— - health centers › § 254c–8
The Secretary, through the HRSA Maternal and Child Health Bureau, must keep running the Healthy Start program and can operate it across the country. The program gives grants to places with high or rising infant death rates to try to lower those deaths and help babies and mothers. People applying for grants must set up community groups for each project. Those groups should include local Title V agencies, current and former program participants, public health departments, hospitals, health centers, state substance abuse agencies, and other main local health providers. When choosing grants, the Secretary must look at causes of infant deaths (like low birthweight and social factors), places or groups with high death rates, whether the project works with the community, uses community-based services, offers broad women’s health care, and plans to collect data on results. The Secretary can also fund special projects for the U.S.–Mexico border, Alaska, or Hawaii. Grant holders must coordinate with State Title V agencies, and the Secretary must coordinate this program with other federal efforts to reduce infant deaths. For 2021 through 2025, Congress authorized $125,500,000 per year for the program. Each year up to 5 percent of that can be kept for coordination, sharing information, technical help, and data work. Up to 1 percent can be used for evaluations of the projects. Those evaluations must check whether projects reduced health gaps affecting racial or ethnic minority groups and may report on progress toward goals, suggested improvements, and how grantees worked with their communities. Not later than 4 years after March 27, 2020, the Comptroller General must do an independent review and send Congress a report on grant allocation, progress trends, program effects on outcomes and disparities, grantee performance and community coordination, and how well federal programs work together.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 254c–8
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73