Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 6A— - PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - GENERAL POWERS AND DUTIES › Part Part D— - Primary Health Care › Subpart subpart v— - healthy communities access program › § 256
Lets the Secretary award grants to groups that build integrated health care systems for people who are uninsured or underinsured. Eligible applicants must be a consortium whose main goal is to provide coordinated care for a named community and that includes at least one of each: a Federally Qualified Health Center, a hospital with a low‑income use rate greater than 25 percent, a public health department, and a provider or organization that has traditionally served the uninsured (unless one of those providers does not exist, refuses, or sets unreasonable conditions). The application must define the community, list participating providers and their roles (including how much care they give to Medicare, Medicaid, State Children’s Health Insurance Program, and privately paying patients), describe proposed activities to improve coordination and access (including primary, specialty, substance abuse, and mental health services), show community involvement, plans to enroll people in eligible public or private coverage, plans for sustaining funding, an evaluation plan, sound finances, and a commitment to serve people regardless of ability to pay. No more than 35 new awards may be made in each of fiscal years 2003–2006. Grants generally run up to 3 consecutive fiscal years, with one extra year allowed only for “extraordinary circumstances” such as major disasters or severe local economic decline. Grant funds may be used mostly for system integration and service expansion, with examples like outreach, case management, transportation, provider networks, hiring and training, technology, shared information systems, eligibility processes, prevention and disease‑management tools, translation, and local access initiatives. Not more than 15 percent of a grant may pay for direct patient care, and the Secretary may use up to 3 percent of appropriated funds for technical help, evaluation, and spreading lessons. Grantees must report progress each year, have an independent financial audit, and keep non‑Federal spending at least at the level of the prior fiscal year. The Secretary must report to Congress by September 30, 2005 on how well projects worked. Demonstration awards may be made to historically black health professions schools for patient‑based research and related work. Funding was authorized for fiscal years 2002 through 2006 and no funds may be appropriated after September 30, 2006.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 256
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73