Title 42The Public Health and WelfareRelease 119-73

§300d–91 Military and civilian partnership for trauma readiness grant program

Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 6A— - PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER X— - TRAUMA CARE › Part Part I— - Military and Civilian Partnership for Trauma Readiness Grant Program › § 300d–91

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

HHS, through the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response and after consulting the Secretary of Defense, must award grants so military trauma teams can work full time in civilian trauma centers. Up to 20 Level I “high‑acuity” centers can get grants that last 3 to 5 years and pay up to $1,000,000 per year. Other eligible Level I, II, or III centers can get grants that last 1 to 3 years and pay up to $100,000 per year for each military physician and $50,000 per year for each other military trauma provider. Grant money stays available for spending for 100 days after a grant’s performance period ends. Hospitals getting grants must agree that the Department of Defense can deploy those military providers for military operations, training, mass casualty incidents, or public health emergencies under section 247d. Grants may be used for training, exercises, malpractice insurance, office space, IT, education and supervision, trauma programs, research, and license fees. State licensing rules remain in effect as otherwise required by law. Each grant recipient must send an annual report on cases, integration, trainee impact, research, and other evaluation info. HHS and Defense must report to Congress at least every 2 years on readiness, civilian care, surge capacity, training, and response ability. Defined terms (one line each): eligible high‑acuity trauma center = a Level I center that meets special volume, academic, research, benchmarking, and community preparedness criteria; eligible trauma center = a Level I, II, or III center that meets benchmark and need criteria; major trauma = injury with injury severity score ≥15; military trauma team = a full military trauma team; military trauma care provider = an armed forces member who gives emergency and critical trauma care (doctors, nurses, medics, etc.). Authorized funding: $11,500,000 for each fiscal year 2019 through 2023.

Full Legal Text

Title 42, §300d–91

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

(a)(1)The Secretary, acting through the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response and in consultation with the Secretary of Defense, shall award grants to not more than 20 eligible high-acuity trauma centers to enable military trauma teams to provide, on a full-time basis, trauma care and related acute care at such trauma centers.
(2)In the case of a grant awarded under paragraph (1) to an eligible high-acuity trauma center, such grant—
(A)shall be for a period of at least 3 years and not more than 5 years (and may be renewed at the end of such period); and
(B)shall be in an amount that does not exceed $1,000,000 per year.
(3)Notwithstanding section 1552 of title 31 or any other provision of law, funds available to the Secretary for obligation for a grant under this subsection shall remain available for expenditure for 100 days after the last day of the performance period of such grant.
(b)(1)The Secretary, acting through the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response and in consultation with the Secretary of Defense, shall award grants to eligible trauma centers to enable military trauma care providers to provide trauma care and related acute care at such trauma centers.
(2)In the case of a grant awarded under paragraph (1) to an eligible trauma center, such grant—
(A)shall be for a period of at least 1 year and not more than 3 years (and may be renewed at the end of such period); and
(B)shall be in an amount that does not exceed, in a year—
(i)$100,000 for each military trauma care provider that is a physician at such eligible trauma center; and
(ii)$50,000 for each other military trauma care provider at such eligible trauma center.
(c)(1)As a condition of receipt of a grant under this section, a grant recipient shall agree to allow military trauma care providers providing care pursuant to such grant to—
(A)be deployed by the Secretary of Defense for military operations, for training, or for response to a mass casualty incident; and
(B)be deployed by the Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the Secretary of Health and Human Services, for response to a public health emergency pursuant to section 247d of this title.
(2)Grants awarded under this section to an eligible trauma center may be used to train and incorporate military trauma care providers into such trauma center, including incorporation into operational exercises and training drills related to public health emergencies, expenditures for malpractice insurance, office space, information technology, specialty education and supervision, trauma programs, research, and applicable license fees for such military trauma care providers.
(d)Nothing in this section shall be construed to affect any other provision of law that preempts State licensing requirements for health care professionals, including with respect to military trauma care providers.
(e)(1)Each eligible trauma center or eligible high-acuity trauma center awarded a grant under subsection (a) or (b) for a year shall submit to the Secretary and the Secretary of Defense a report for such year that includes information on—
(A)the number and types of trauma cases managed by military trauma teams or military trauma care providers pursuant to such grant during such year;
(B)the ability to maintain the integration of the military trauma providers or teams of providers as part of the trauma center, including the financial effect of such grant on the trauma center;
(C)the educational effect on resident trainees in centers where military trauma teams are assigned;
(D)any research conducted during such year supported by such grant; and
(E)any other information required by the Secretaries for the purpose of evaluating the effect of such grant.
(2)Not less than once every 2 years, the Secretary, in consultation with the Secretary of Defense, shall submit a report to the congressional committees of jurisdiction that includes information on the effect of placing military trauma care providers in trauma centers awarded grants under this section on—
(A)maintaining military trauma care providers’ readiness and ability to respond to and treat battlefield injuries;
(B)providing health care to civilian trauma patients in urban and rural settings;
(C)the capability of trauma centers and military trauma care providers to increase medical surge capacity, including as a result of a large-scale event;
(D)the ability of grant recipients to maintain the integration of the military trauma providers or teams of providers as part of the trauma center;
(E)efforts to incorporate military trauma care providers into operational exercises and training and drills for public health emergencies; and
(F)the capability of military trauma care providers to participate as part of a medical response during or in advance of a public health emergency, as determined by the Secretary, or a mass casualty incident.
(f)For purposes of this part:
(1)The term “eligible high-acuity trauma center” means a Level I trauma center that satisfies each of the following:
(A)Such trauma center has an agreement with the Secretary of Defense to enable military trauma teams to provide trauma care and related acute care at such trauma center.
(B)At least 20 percent of patients treated at such trauma center in the most recent 3-month period for which data are available are treated for a major trauma at such trauma center.
(C)Such trauma center utilizes a risk-adjusted benchmarking system and metrics to measure performance, quality, and patient outcomes.
(D)Such trauma center is an academic training center—
(i)affiliated with a medical school;
(ii)that maintains residency programs and fellowships in critical trauma specialties and subspecialties, and provides education and supervision of military trauma team members according to those specialties and subspecialties; and
(iii)that undertakes research in the prevention and treatment of traumatic injury.
(E)Such trauma center serves as a medical and public health preparedness and response leader for its community, such as by participating in a partnership for State and regional hospital preparedness established under section 247d–3b or 247d–3c of this title.
(2)The term “eligible trauma center” means a Level I, II, or III trauma center that satisfies each of the following:
(A)Such trauma center has an agreement with the Secretary of Defense to enable military trauma care providers to provide trauma care and related acute care at such trauma center.
(B)Such trauma center utilizes a risk-adjusted benchmarking system and metrics to measure performance, quality, and patient outcomes.
(C)Such trauma center demonstrates a need for integrated military trauma care providers to maintain or improve the trauma clinical capability of such trauma center.
(3)The term “major trauma” means an injury that is greater than or equal to 15 on the injury severity score.
(4)The term “military trauma team” means a complete military trauma team consisting of military trauma care providers.
(5)The term “military trauma care provider” means a member of the Armed Forces who furnishes emergency, critical care, and other trauma acute care services (including a physician, surgeon, physician assistant, nurse, nurse practitioner, respiratory therapist, flight paramedic, combat medic, or enlisted medical technician) or other military trauma care provider as the Secretary determines appropriate.
(g)To carry out this section, there is authorized to be appropriated $11,500,000 for each of fiscal years 2019 through 2023.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

42 U.S.C. § 300d–91

Title 42The Public Health and Welfare

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73