Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 6A— - PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER XV— - HEALTH INFORMATION AND HEALTH PROMOTION › § 300u–14
The Secretary of Health and Human Services must give 5-year pilot grants, through the CDC, to State or local health departments and Indian tribes to run public health programs for people ages 55 to 64. To get a grant, an entity must apply, describe its plan to improve health for that age group, and show it can work with health agencies, providers, community groups, and insurers. Grants must pay for community health actions (like improving nutrition, physical activity, reducing tobacco and substance use, and mental health support), regular screenings for risks of heart disease, cancer, stroke, and diabetes, and keeping records to set a baseline. If screenings find risks, grantees must check whether the person has insurance, refer insured people to in-network providers, and help uninsured people find public coverage or community care. Grants must also pay for contracts with community health centers, rural clinics, and mental health or substance use providers to help with follow-up care. Grantees must measure changes in chronic disease risk factors among participants. The Secretary will do an annual evaluation that looks at changes in uncontrolled chronic disease risk among new or near-future Medicare enrollees (including those aged 63 and 64) in funded areas compared with national and past data. The Secretary must also review community prevention and wellness programs (including Administration on Aging programs that are evidence-based) to see what helps Medicare beneficiaries, especially those 65 and older, lower disease and disability risks and manage chronic conditions. The review must cover at least physical activity, nutrition and obesity, falls, chronic disease self-management, and mental health. CMS, with the Assistant Secretary for Aging, must evaluate whether these programs improve health, help people manage conditions, and reduce Medicare use and costs. A report with recommendations and findings was required by September 30, 2013. For this work, $50,000,000 must be transferred from the Medicare trust funds to the CMS Program Management Account and kept available until spent. Medicare beneficiary here means someone with Part A who is enrolled in Part B.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 300u–14
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73