Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 6A— - PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III–A— - SUBSTANCE ABUSE AND MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES ADMINISTRATION › Part Part A— - Organization and General Authorities › § 290aa–17
The Secretary must create a program that gives up to 50 grants each year to eligible groups to run assisted outpatient treatment for people with serious mental illness. The Secretary must work with the Director of the National Institute of Mental Health, the U.S. Attorney General, the head of the Administration for Community Living, and the head of the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. Grants can only go to applicants that have not run an assisted outpatient treatment program before. Applicants will be judged on how well they might lower hospital stays, homelessness, jail time, and contact with the criminal justice system, and on how they might improve patients’ health and social outcomes. Programs paid by these grants must check patients’ medical and social needs, make and carry out treatment plans that say when court-ordered care is finished and track whether patients follow the plan and take medicines, provide case management, make proper referrals, review how the program is working under patients’ needs and state law, and measure results like health, jail rates, hospital use, and homelessness. By the end of fiscal year 2023, and every two years after, the Secretary must report to the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee and the House Energy and Commerce Committee on costs, public health results (for example death, suicide, substance abuse, hospitalization, and service use), incarceration and homelessness rates, patient and family satisfaction, and participant demographics. Each grant may be up to $1,000,000 for each fiscal year 2023 through 2027, set by the Secretary based on local population and estimated patients. Congress authorized $22,000,000 for each fiscal year 2023 through 2027 to carry out the program. Definitions: Assisted outpatient treatment — court-authorized, prescribed mental health care while living in the community. Eligible entity — county, city, mental health system, mental health court, or other state-authorized group that can run these programs. Secretary — Secretary of Health and Human Services.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 290aa–17
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73