Title 42 › Chapter 6A— PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter V— HEALTH PROFESSIONS EDUCATION › Part D— Interdisciplinary, Community-Based Linkages › § 294c
The federal health official must give grants, contracts, or cooperative agreements to approved health schools and programs so they can start or run Geriatrics Workforce Enhancement Programs. These programs must train health workers in caring for older adults, including traineeships and fellowships. They should focus on involving patients and families, linking geriatrics with primary care and other specialties, and working with community partners. Work can include clinical training that mixes geriatrics and primary care, team-based training for many kinds of health workers, community programs for older adults and caregivers, and education about Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias. Awards last up to 5 years. Applicants must apply when and how the Secretary requires. Preference is given to programs that coordinate with other programs, help rural or medically underserved older adults or Tribal communities, or that integrate geriatrics into primary care, other specialties, and common care settings. Extra help may be given for training home health workers, family caregivers, and direct care workers. Each awardee must report yearly on activities and numbers. The Secretary must report to Congress no later than 4 years after March 27, 2020, and every 5 years after that, summarize results and post the reports online. There is also a program for geriatric academic career awards to help develop junior faculty as academic geriatricians or geriatrics health professionals. Eligible entities are certain accredited health schools or programs. Eligible individuals are junior, nontenured faculty who meet training or board requirements in fields like internal medicine, family practice, psychiatry, or dentistry and geriatrics training. Applicants must promise a service requirement and that 75 percent of the award-supported time is spent on teaching and building interdisciplinary geriatrics education. Awards are at least $75,000 for fiscal year 2021 (adjusted for inflation), last up to 5 years, and require awardees to spend at least 75 percent of their obligations on clinical geriatrics training. One other rule in this subchapter does not apply to these awards. Congress authorized $40,737,000 for each of fiscal years 2021 through 2025 for this work.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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42 U.S.C. § 294c
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60