Title 42 › Chapter 6A— PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter II— GENERAL POWERS AND DUTIES › Part P— Additional Programs › § 280g
Awards grants to public or nonprofit groups (including states or consortia) to help children with asthma who live where asthma is common and medical care is hard to get. The grants pay for care, on-site teaching for kids, parents, and health teams, medicines for kids who lacked them, and other services like smoking-cessation, home fixes, and support that reduce asthma triggers. Grants can fund community asthma programs that follow national guidelines, fully stocked mobile clinics, and proven asthma education with materials. Applicants must send a plan and may get extra points if they serve places with high asthma rates or hospital/ER use, shown by federal, state, or local data, Medicaid/CHIP claims (title XIX or XXI), or other data the Secretary accepts after consulting the CDC. Grantees must coordinate with state child-health programs and with things like child welfare, Head Start, WIC, local schools, or public housing. They must report on children’s health outcomes, changes in health care use, and collect and share asthma data per CDC rules. States can get extra preference if they require public schools to let students self-carry and use prescribed asthma or anaphylaxis medicine during school, school activities, and trips to or from school, if the child and doctor meet certain written and skill requirements, parents give needed paperwork, and the authorization is renewed each school year. Extra preference also goes to States whose attorney general certifies they have reviewed civil liability protection for school staff who may give epinephrine, and that every public school either keeps trained staff and epinephrine on site or has a nurse/designated staff plus a full allergies-and-asthma school program (identifying students, individual action plans, staff training, trigger reduction, and coordination with families and providers). Nothing here creates a new legal claim or changes liability. Definitions (one line each): Eligible entity — public or nonprofit group or a consortium; Elementary/secondary school — as defined in 20 U.S.C. 7801; Health care practitioner — person allowed to prescribe drugs under 21 U.S.C. 353(b); Medication — drugs including inhaled bronchodilators and auto-injectable epinephrine; Self-administration — a student’s use of prescribed asthma/allergy medicine on their own; Trained personnel — school staff who volunteer, are trained to give epinephrine, and have documented training. Money is authorized as needed for fiscal years 2001 through 2005.
Full Legal Text
The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 280g
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60