Title 42The Public Health and WelfareRelease 119-73

§299b–36 Program to facilitate shared decisionmaking

Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 6A— - PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER VII— - AGENCY FOR HEALTHCARE RESEARCH AND QUALITY › Part Part D— - Health Care Quality Improvement › Subpart subpart 2— - health care quality improvement programs › § 299b–36

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

Set up programs so patients, caregivers, and doctors make medical choices together using clear tools called patient decision aids. Patient decision aid: a tool that helps people learn about options and say what matters to them. Preference‑sensitive care: care where the best choice depends on the patient’s values and goals. The Secretary must hire the specific federal contractor already working on a related project to create consensus standards and a certification process for these aids. That contract must start as soon as possible after March 23, 2010, run for 18 months, and may be renewed after rebidding. The contractor will gather experts, review evidence, write standards, and check whether decision aids meet those standards, giving priority to preference‑sensitive care. The Department must also run a grants and contracts program to make, test, and teach the use of patient decision aids. Grants will fund development and updates, testing for balance and accuracy, and provider training (including in school programs). Aids must help patients and caregivers join decisions, show current evidence about risks, benefits, outcomes, and costs in age‑appropriate and culturally adaptable ways, explain when evidence is lacking, and cover decisions for all ages including children. The Director must make funded aids public and avoid repeating other agencies’ work. The Secretary will also fund Shared Decisionmaking Resource Centers to advise providers and spread best practices, and give grants to providers to try and study shared decisionmaking. Preference in provider grants goes to those trained by the Centers. Grant money cannot buy or use decision aids that are not certified. The Secretary may issue guidance, and funds are authorized as needed for fiscal year 2010 and each year after.

Full Legal Text

Title 42, §299b–36

The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)The purpose of this section is to facilitate collaborative processes between patients, caregivers or authorized representatives, and clinicians that engages 11 So in original. Probably should be “engage”. the patient, caregiver or authorized representative in decisionmaking, provides 22 So in original. Probably should be “provide”. patients, caregivers or authorized representatives with information about trade-offs among treatment options, and facilitates 33 So in original. Probably should be “facilitate”. the incorporation of patient preferences and values into the medical plan.
(b)In this section:
(1)The term “patient decision aid” means an educational tool that helps patients, caregivers or authorized representatives understand and communicate their beliefs and preferences related to their treatment options, and to decide with their health care provider what treatments are best for them based on their treatment options, scientific evidence, circumstances, beliefs, and preferences.
(2)The term “preference sensitive care” means medical care for which the clinical evidence does not clearly support one treatment option such that the appropriate course of treatment depends on the values of the patient or the preferences of the patient, caregivers or authorized representatives regarding the benefits, harms and scientific evidence for each treatment option, the 44 So in original. Probably should be “option. The”. use of such care should depend on the informed patient choice among clinically appropriate treatment options.
(c)(1)(A)For purposes of supporting consensus-based standards for patient decision aids for preference sensitive care and a certification process for patient decision aids for use in the Federal health programs and by other interested parties, the Secretary shall have in effect a contract with the entity with a contract under section 1395aaa of this title. Such contract shall provide that the entity perform the duties described in paragraph (2).
(B)As soon as practicable after March 23, 2010, the Secretary shall enter into the first contract under subparagraph (A).
(C)A contract under subparagraph (A) shall be for a period of 18 months (except such contract may be renewed after a subsequent bidding process).
(2)The following duties are described in this paragraph:
(A)The entity shall synthesize evidence and convene a broad range of experts and key stakeholders to develop and identify consensus-based standards to evaluate patient decision aids for preference sensitive care.
(B)The entity shall review patient decision aids and develop a certification process whether 55 So in original. patient decision aids meet the standards developed and identified under subparagraph (A). The entity shall give priority to the review and certification of patient decision aids for preference sensitive care.
(d)(1)The Secretary, acting through the Director, and in coordination with heads of other relevant agencies, such as the Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Director of the National Institutes of Health, shall establish a program to award grants or contracts—
(A)to develop, update, and produce patient decision aids for preference sensitive care to assist health care providers in educating patients, caregivers, and authorized representatives concerning the relative safety, relative effectiveness (including possible health outcomes and impact on functional status), and relative cost of treatment or, where appropriate, palliative care options;
(B)to test such materials to ensure such materials are balanced and evidence based in aiding health care providers and patients, caregivers, and authorized representatives to make informed decisions about patient care and can be easily incorporated into a broad array of practice settings; and
(C)to educate providers on the use of such materials, including through academic curricula.
(2)Patient decision aids developed and produced pursuant to a grant or contract under paragraph (1)—
(A)shall be designed to engage patients, caregivers, and authorized representatives in informed decisionmaking with health care providers;
(B)shall present up-to-date clinical evidence about the risks and benefits of treatment options in a form and manner that is age-appropriate and can be adapted for patients, caregivers, and authorized representatives from a variety of cultural and educational backgrounds to reflect the varying needs of consumers and diverse levels of health literacy;
(C)shall, where appropriate, explain why there is a lack of evidence to support one treatment option over another; and
(D)shall address health care decisions across the age span, including those affecting vulnerable populations including children.
(3)The Director shall ensure that patient decision aids produced with grants or contracts under this section are available to the public.
(4)The Director shall ensure that the activities under this section of the Agency and other agencies, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Institutes of Health, are free of unnecessary duplication of effort.
(e)(1)The Secretary shall establish a program to provide for the phased-in development, implementation, and evaluation of shared decisionmaking using patient decision aids to meet the objective of improving the understanding of patients of their medical treatment options.
(2)(A)The Secretary shall provide grants for the establishment and support of Shared Decisionmaking Resource Centers (referred to in this subsection as “Centers”) to provide technical assistance to providers and to develop and disseminate best practices and other information to support and accelerate adoption, implementation, and effective use of patient decision aids and shared decisionmaking by providers.
(B)The objective of a Center is to enhance and promote the adoption of patient decision aids and shared decisionmaking through—
(i)providing assistance to eligible providers with the implementation and effective use of, and training on, patient decision aids; and
(ii)the dissemination of best practices and research on the implementation and effective use of patient decision aids.
(3)(A)The Secretary shall provide grants to health care providers for the development and implementation of shared decisionmaking techniques and to assess the use of such techniques.
(B)In order to facilitate the use of best practices, the Secretary shall provide a preference in making grants under this subsection to health care providers who participate in training by Shared Decisionmaking Resource Centers or comparable training.
(C)Funds under this paragraph shall not be used to purchase or implement use of patient decision aids other than those certified under the process identified in subsection (c).
(4)The Secretary may issue guidance to eligible grantees under this subsection on the use of patient decision aids.
(f)For purposes of carrying out this section there are authorized to be appropriated such sums as may be necessary for fiscal year 2010 and each subsequent fiscal year.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Editorial Notes

Prior Provisions

A prior section 936 of act July 1, 1944, was renumbered section 946 and is classified to section 299c–5 of this title.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

42 U.S.C. § 299b–36

Title 42The Public Health and Welfare

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73