Title 42 › Chapter 7— SOCIAL SECURITY › Subchapter XXI— STATE CHILDREN’S HEALTH INSURANCE PROGRAM › § 1397mm
The Secretary of Health must give grants from money set aside for fiscal years 2009 through 2029 to help find and sign up kids who are eligible for child health programs under this law and Medicaid. Ten percent of the money must pay for a national enrollment campaign. For fiscal years 2024 through 2029, another ten percent must be used for evaluating grants and giving technical help. The Secretary will favor applicants who focus on places with many eligible but unenrolled children, including rural areas, and who show strong evidence they can reach people. Ten percent of the funds are set aside for Indian Health Service providers and urban Indian organizations to reach Indian children. Applicants must show they are trusted in their communities, can overcome enrollment barriers (like lack of awareness, stigma, or language issues), set clear performance measures, and agree to let the Secretary collect and share enrollment data and to assess results. The Secretary must publish the data and send Congress an annual report. States that get grants must keep spending on outreach at least at the same level as the year before the grant, and grantees do not have to provide matching funds. Eligible entities include: States with an approved child health plan; local governments; tribes, tribal groups, urban Indian organizations, and Indian Health Service providers; federal health safety net groups (like community health centers, certain hospitals, WIC, Head Start, school lunch programs, and schools); nonprofit or community organizations (including those using community health workers, doulas, or parent mentors); faith-based groups (when allowed); and elementary or secondary schools. A community health worker helps with outreach, education, referrals, and connecting people to care. A parent mentor is a trained parent who helps families apply for and keep health coverage and find community services. The law provides specific amounts: $140,000,000 for FY2009–2015; $40,000,000 for FY2016–2017; $120,000,000 for FY2018–2023; $48,000,000 for FY2024–2027; and $40,000,000 for FY2028–2029. The national campaign can include work with Education and Agriculture, public health messaging, hotlines, special materials for Native Americans and people with limited English, and toolkits and help for States.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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42 U.S.C. § 1397mm
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60