Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 6A— - PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - HEALTH PROFESSIONS EDUCATION › Part Part C— - Training in Family Medicine, General Internal Medicine, General Pediatrics, Physician Assistants, General Dentistry, and Pediatric Dentistry › Subpart subpart 1— - medical training generally › § 293k
The Secretary may give grants or make contracts with hospitals, medical schools, physician assistant programs, and qualified nonprofits to create and run primary care training. These awards can pay for residencies, internships, and other training in family medicine, general internal medicine, and general pediatrics; offer need-based traineeships and fellowships for students, residents, and practicing clinicians who plan to work in those fields; train doctors to teach in community settings; support physician assistant education; test and teach new care models such as patient-centered medical homes; and set up joint degree programs that combine public health with other health fields. Each award can provide payments for up to 5 years, and the Secretary may give priority to programs that train residents in rural or Tribal areas. The Secretary can also fund medical schools to build or improve academic units that boost clinical teaching, research, and teamwork in those same primary care fields and to link those units with community clinics. Preference goes to schools that start or greatly expand such work. Priority is given to projects that are collaborative, use new teaching models (for example, team-based care and patient-centered medical homes), show success in producing and keeping primary care providers, recruit trainees from underrepresented or rural backgrounds, train care for vulnerable groups, partner with community clinics, and teach skills like interprofessional care, communication, evidence-based practice, chronic disease management, health IT, cultural competency, and health literacy. The law authorizes $48,924,000 for each of fiscal years 2021 through 2025 to carry out most of these activities. Fifteen percent of that yearly amount must go to the physician assistant programs described above. Separately, $750,000 was authorized for each of fiscal years 2010 through 2014 for the school-integration grants.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 293k
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73