Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 6A— - PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER XXIV— - HIV HEALTH CARE SERVICES PROGRAM › Part Part B— - Care Grant Program › Subpart subpart i— - general grant provisions › § 300ff–27
To get a federal grant for HIV care, a State must send an application that follows the Secretary’s rules and includes detailed information about the State’s HIV services from the prior year, who gets them, and how much they cost. The application must show how many people in the State have HIV/AIDS and what their needs are, especially people who know they have HIV but are not getting care and groups who face worse access. The State must name one lead agency to run the grant, do the needs study, write plans and applications, collect audits every two years, and coordinate other duties. The State must include a clear plan for using the money: what services will be paid for, how funds will be prioritized (based on need, other available programs like Medicaid/CHIP, underserved and rural areas, and administrative speed), how to find and help people who know their status but are out of care, how to coordinate with prevention and substance-abuse programs, how services will be linked to other local health sites, what outcomes will be measured, and how the State will work with community members and stakeholders. The State must also promise public planning, outreach to low-income people, peer review of service quality, cooperation with Federal reviews, keeping its own HIV spending at least at last year’s level, not using grant funds to pay for things covered by other payors, and efforts to find undiagnosed people, give them treatment, and remove legal barriers to routine testing. The State must follow rules on patient charges: no charges for people at or below 100% of the poverty line; a published charge schedule for people above 100%; and yearly caps on total charges of 5% of income for those >100%–200% of poverty, 7% for >200%–300%, and 10% for >300%. Grantees may set lower or nominal charges and may consider medical expenses. Clinics that never bill or accept third-party payments can be waived. For States with more than 1% of U.S. AIDS cases (counted over the two years before the grant year), the State must provide non-Federal matching funds: 16 2/3% the first year, 20% the second, 25% the third, and 33 1/3% in the fourth and later years. Non-Federal matches can be cash or fair-valued in-kind contributions but not Federal money. If a State provides less than the required match, Federal funding is reduced to the same ratio. Puerto Rico is treated as having less than 1% for this rule.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 300ff–27
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73