Title 25 › Chapter 18— INDIAN HEALTH CARE › Subchapter II— HEALTH SERVICES › § 1621m
The Secretary must set up an epidemiology center in each Service area to do public health work for Indian and urban Indian communities. New centers created after March 23, 2010 can be run with grants, but the grant money cannot be split. Centers follow the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act rules, but their funding still cannot be divided. Each center helps tribes and urban Indian groups by collecting and tracking health data, checking health programs and systems, and helping set top health priorities based on the data. Centers recommend where services are needed, suggest ways to improve care, give technical help on local health needs and disease rates, and do disease monitoring and prevention work. The CDC Director must help the centers with technical support. The Secretary may give grants to tribes, tribal groups, Indian organizations, and eligible intertribal consortia (those formed to improve Indian health and representing local tribes or urban Indian communities). Grant applicants must show they have the needed skills, work with other health providers to avoid duplicate services, and have local cooperation. Grants can be used for the center’s functions, for consulting with community leaders, and for sharing ideas with the Service to improve Indian health. Grantee-run centers count as public health authorities under HIPAA, get access to protected health data from the Secretary, and may use that data for research and preventing or controlling disease as allowed under HIPAA rules.
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Indians — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
25 U.S.C. § 1621m
Title 25 — Indians
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60