Title 42 › Chapter 6A— PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter II— GENERAL POWERS AND DUTIES › Part D— Primary Health Care › Subpart ix— support of graduate medical education programs in children’s hospitals › § 256e
Pays children's hospitals that run approved residency training programs two yearly payments for certain fiscal years: one payment to cover direct training costs and one to cover indirect costs from treating sicker patients and teaching. The Secretary must make rules for these payments. Payments happen in fiscal years 2000–2005, 2007–2011, 2014–2018, and 2019–2023. The direct payment equals a per‑resident amount (computed from earlier Medicare formulas and updated for inflation from October 1997 to the fiscal year midpoint) times the hospital’s average full‑time equivalent (FTE) residents (as measured under section 1395ww(h)(4)). The Secretary sets indirect payments taking into account how sick patients are (case mix) and the ratio of residents to beds, and must make sure the total indirect payments match the money Congress set aside. The law authorizes specific yearly funding amounts. For direct payments those are $90,000,000 for FY2000, $95,000,000 for FY2001, “such sums as may be necessary” for FY2002–2005, $110,000,000 each year for FY2007–2011, $100,000,000 each year for FY2014–2018, and $105,000,000 each year for FY2019–2023. For indirect payments those are $190,000,000 for FY2000 and FY2001, “such sums as may be necessary” for FY2002–2005, $220,000,000 each year for FY2007–2011, $200,000,000 each year for FY2014–2018, and $220,000,000 each year for FY2019–2023. If appropriated funds are too small, payments are cut pro rata. The Secretary pays hospitals in 12 equal monthly interim installments based on the most recent Medicare report, may withhold up to 25% of each interim payment to avoid overpayment, and does a year‑end reconciliation to recoup or pay any balance. Starting in FY2008, a hospital that fails to give required reports or gives incomplete reports can lose 25% of its payment, but it gets a 30‑day chance to fix the problem before the cut. Hospitals must file an annual report with information about the resident programs, numbers recruited and filled, training for underserved populations, changes in training and quality‑and‑safety training, and how many graduates stay to care for children locally. The Secretary must send Congress summary reports by the end of FY2018 and FY2022. The law also lets the Secretary set aside up to 25% of amounts above $245,000,000 (but not more than $7,000,000) to pay certain qualifying freestanding children’s hospitals that otherwise would not get payments. Leftover money may be shared with participating hospitals and the Secretary may create a quality bonus system, developed with stakeholders, to reward hospitals that meet chosen quality standards. Defined terms (one line each): “approved graduate medical residency training program” — a qualifying medical residency program; “children’s hospital” — a hospital with a Medicare agreement that is excluded from the inpatient prospective payment system and mainly serves children; “direct graduate medical education costs” — the direct training costs for residents.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 256e
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60