Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 6A— - PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - HEALTH PROFESSIONS EDUCATION › Part Part A— - Student Loans › Subpart subpart ii— - federally-supported student loan funds › § 292s
Require medical schools that run special student loan funds to include rules in their loan agreements saying a student may get a loan only if the student agrees to start and finish a primary health care residency within 4 years of graduation and to work in primary health care for 10 years (counting the residency) or until the loan is fully paid, whichever comes first. If a student breaks that promise, interest on the loan will jump by 2 percentage points above the rate the student would have paid that year. The Secretary can partly or fully cancel or pause the school-service promise if keeping it is impossible, would cause extreme hardship, or would be unfair. If a student leaves school before graduating and never returns to any medical school, the obligation is waived; if the student later returns, the obligation is suspended for the time the student was not enrolled. The rule about agreeing to primary care does not apply to loans first made before July 1, 1993, or to loans made from certain “exempt” federal or school contributions (see definitions). Each school must yearly report where its graduates (those who finished about 4 years earlier) are training or practicing. For the one-year period ending June 30, 1997 and for each year ending June 30 after that, the school must meet at least one of three targets about those graduates: 50% in primary care training or practice; or 25% and at least 5 percentage points higher than the prior year; or be at or above the 75th percentile among similar schools. The Secretary will decide within 90 days after each year whether the school met a target. If not, the school must pay the Secretary 10% (for the year ending June 30, 1997), 20% (for the year ending June 30, 1998), or 30% (for later years) of the loan fund’s income for that year; payments are due within 90 days and may not come from exempt contributions. Payments will be used to add federal capital to loan funds of schools that meet the targets. Definitions (one line each): exempt contributions = certain federal or school funds excluded from penalties; income = principal, interest, and other earnings of the loan fund; primary health care = family medicine, general internal medicine, general pediatrics, preventive medicine, or osteopathic general practice. Congress says repaid loan money should be kept in this program and not sent to the U.S. Treasury.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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42 U.S.C. § 292s
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73