Home > 106th Congressional Bills > S. 453 (rfh) To designate the Federal building located at 709 West 9th Street in Juneau, Alaska, as the ``Hurff A. Saunders Federal Building''. [Referred in House] ...S. 453 (rfh) To designate the Federal building located at 709 West 9th Street in Juneau, Alaska, as the ``Hurff A. Saunders Federal Building''. [Referred in House] ...
108th CONGRESS
1st Session
S. 453
To authorize the Health Resources and Services Administration and the
National Cancer Institute to make grants for model programs to provide
to individuals of health disparity populations prevention, early
detection, treatment, and appropriate follow-up care services for
cancer and chronic diseases, and to make grants regarding patient
navigators to assist individuals of health disparity populations in
receiving such services.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
February 26, 2003
Mrs. Hutchison (for herself, Mr. Bingaman, Mr. Cochran, and Mrs.
Feinstein) introduced the following bill; which was read twice and
referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions
_______________________________________________________________________
A BILL
To authorize the Health Resources and Services Administration and the
National Cancer Institute to make grants for model programs to provide
to individuals of health disparity populations prevention, early
detection, treatment, and appropriate follow-up care services for
cancer and chronic diseases, and to make grants regarding patient
navigators to assist individuals of health disparity populations in
receiving such services.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the ``Patient Navigator, Outreach, and
Chronic Disease Prevention Act of 2003''.
SEC. 2. FINDINGS.
Congress makes the following findings:
(1) Despite notable progress in the overall health of the
Nation, there are continuing disparities in the burden of
illness and death experienced by African Americans, Latinos and
Hispanics, Native Americans, Alaska Natives, Asian and Pacific
Islanders and the poor, compared to the United States
population as a whole.
(2) Many racial and ethnic minority groups suffer
disproportionately from cancer. Mortality and morbidity rates
remain the most important measures of the overall progress
against cancer. Decreasing rates of death from cancer reflect
improvements in both prevention and treatment. Among all ethnic
groups in the United States, African American males have the
highest overall rate of mortality from cancer. Some specific
forms of cancer affect other ethnic minority communities at
rates up to several times higher than the national averages
(such as stomach and liver cancers among Asian American
populations, colon and rectal cancer among Alaska natives, and
cervical cancer among Hispanic and Vietnamese-American women).
(3) Regions characterized by high rates of poverty also
have high mortality for some forms of cancer. For example, in
Appalachian Kentucky the incidence of lung cancer among white
males was 127 per 100,000 in 1992, a rate higher than that for
any ethnic minority group in the United States during the same
period.
(4) Major disparities for other chronic diseases exist
among population groups, with a disproportionate burden of
death and disability from cardiovascular disease in racial and
ethnic minority and low-income populations. Compared with rates
for the general population, coronary heart disease mortality
was 40 percent lower for Asian Americans but 40 percent higher
for African-Americans.
(5) Minority populations are disproportionately impacted by
diabetes and other chronic diseases. Hispanics are twice as
likely to have diabetes as non-Hispanic whites; diabetes is the
fourth leading cause of death among Hispanic women and elderly.
African Americans are 1.7 times as likely to have diabetes as
the general population. More than 15% of the combined
populations of Native Americans and Alaska Natives have
diabetes.
(6) Culturally competent approaches to chronic disease care
are needed to encourage increased participation of racial and
ethnic minorities and the medically underserved in chronic
disease prevention, early detection and treatment programs.
SEC. 3. HRSA GRANTS FOR MODEL COMMUNITY CANCER AND CHRONIC DISEASE CARE
AND PREVENTION; HRSA GRANTS FOR PATIENT NAVIGATORS.
Subpart I of part D of title III of the Public Health Service Act
(42 U.S.C. 254b et seq.) is amended by adding at the end the following:
``SEC. 330L. MODEL COMMUNITY CANCER AND CHRONIC DISEASE CARE AND
PREVENTION; PATIENT NAVIGATORS.
``(a) Model Community Cancer and Chronic Disease Care and
Prevention.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary, acting through the
Administrator of the Health Resources and Services
Administration, may make grants to public and nonprofit private
health centers (including health centers under section 330,
Indian Health Service Centers, tribal governments, urban Indian
organizations, clinics serving Asian Americans and Pacific
Islanders and Alaskan Natives, rural health clinics, and
qualified nonprofit entities that enter into partnerships with
public and nonprofit private health centers to provide
navigation services, which demonstrate the ability to perform
all the functions described in this subsection and subsections
(b), and (c)) for the development and operation of model
programs that--
``(A) provide to individuals of health disparity
populations prevention, early detection, treatment, and
appropriate follow-up care services for cancer and
chronic diseases;
``(B) ensure that the health services are provided
to such individuals in a culturally competent manner;
``(C) assign patient navigators, in accordance with
applicable criteria of the Secretary, for managing the
care of individuals of health disparity populations
to--
``(i) accomplish, to the extent possible,
the follow-up and diagnosis of an abnormal
finding and the treatment and appropriate
follow-up care of cancer or other chronic
disease; and
``(ii) facilitate access to appropriate
health care services within the health care
system to ensure optimal patient utilization of
such services, including aid in coordinating
and scheduling appointments and referrals,
community outreach, assistance with transportation arrangements, and
assistance with insurance issuers and other barriers to care;
``(D) require training for patient navigators
employed through model programs under this paragraph to
ensure the ability of such navigators to perform all of
the duties required under this subsection and in
subsection (b), including training to ensure that such
navigators are informed about health insurance systems
and are able to aid patients in resolving access
issues; and
``(E) ensure that consumers have direct access to
patient navigators during regularly scheduled hours of
business operation.
``(2) Outreach services.--A condition for the receipt of a
grant under paragraph (1) is that the applicant involved agree
to provide ongoing outreach activities while receiving the
grant, in a manner that is culturally competent for the health
disparity population served by the program, to inform the
public, and the specific community that the program is serving,
of the services of the model program under the grant. Such
activities shall include facilitating access to appropriate
health care services and patient navigators within the health
care system to ensure optimal patient utilization of these
services.
``(3) Data collection and report.--
``(A) In general.--To provide for effective program
evaluation, a grant recipient under this subsection
shall collect specific patient data with respect to
services provided to each patient served through the
program and shall establish and implement procedures
and protocols, consistent with applicable Federal and
State laws (including sections 160 and 164 of title 45,
Code of Federal Regulations) to ensure the
confidentiality of all information shared by a patient
in the program (or their personal representative) and
their health care providers, group health plans, or
health insurance insurers.
``(B) Use of data.--A grant recipient under this
subsection may, consistent with applicable Federal and
State confidentiality laws, collect, use, or disclose
aggregate information that is not individually
identifiable (as such term is defined for purposes of
sections 160 and 164 of title 45 Code of Federal
Regulations).
``(C) Report.--Using data collected under this
paragraph, a grantee shall prepare and submit to the
Secretary an annual report that summarizes and analyzes
such data and provides information on the need for
navigation services, the types of access difficulties
resolved, the sources of repeated resolutions, and the
flaws in the system of access, including insurance
barriers.
``(4) Application for grant.--A grant may be made under
paragraph (1) only if an application for the grant is submitted
to the Secretary and the application is in such form, is made
in such manner, and contains such agreements, assurances, and
information as the Secretary determines to be necessary to
carry out this section.
``(5) Evaluations.--
``(A) In general.--The Secretary, acting through
the Administrator of the Health Resources and Services
Administration, shall, directly or through grants or
contracts, provide for evaluations to determine which
outreach activities under paragraph (2) were most
effective in informing the public, and the specific
community that the program is serving, of the model
program services and to determine the extent to which
such programs were effective in providing culturally
competent services to the health disparity population
served by the programs.
``(B) Dissemination of findings.--The Secretary
shall as appropriate disseminate to public and private
entities the findings made in evaluations under
subparagraph (A).
``(6) Coordination with other programs.--The Secretary
shall coordinate the program under this subsection with the
program under subsection (b), with the program under section
417D, and to the extent practicable, with programs for
prevention centers that are carried out by the Director of the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
``(b) Program for Patient Navigators.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary, acting through the
Administrator of the Health Resources and Services
Administration, may make grants to public and nonprofit private
health centers (including health centers under section 330,
Indian Health Service Centers, tribal governments, urban Indian
organizations, clinics serving Asian Americans and Pacific
Islanders and Alaskan Natives, rural health clinics, and
qualified nonprofit entities that enter into partnerships with
public and nonprofit private health centers to provide
navigation services, which demonstrate the ability to perform
all the functions described in subsections (a), (b), and (c))
for the development and operation of programs to pay the costs
of such health centers in--
``(A) assigning patient navigators, in accordance
with applicable criteria of the Secretary, for managing
the care of individuals of health disparity populations
for the duration of receiving health services from the
health centers, including aid in coordinating and
scheduling appointments and referrals, community
outreach, assistance with transportation arrangements,
and assistance with insurance issuers and other
barriers to care;
``(B) ensuring that the services provided by the
patient navigators to such individuals include case
management and psychosocial assessment and care or
information and referral to such services;
``(C) ensuring that the patient navigators with
direct knowledge of the communities they serve provide
services to such individuals in a culturally competent
manner;
``(D) developing model practices for patient
navigators, including with respect to--
``(i) coordination of health services,
including psychosocial assessment and care;
``(ii) appropriate follow-up care,
including psychosocial assessment and care;
``(iii) determining coverage under health
insurance and health plans for all services;
``(iv) ensuring the initiation,
continuation, or sustained access to care
prescribed by the patients' health care
providers; and
``(v) aiding patients with health insurance
coverage issues;
``(E) requiring training for patient navigators to
ensure the ability of such navigators to perform all of
the duties required under this subsection and in
subsection (a), including training to ensure that such
navigators are informed about health insurance systems
and are able to aid patients in resolving access
issues; and
``(F) ensuring that consumers have direct access to
patient navigators during regularly scheduled hours of
business operation.
``(2) Outreach services.--A condition for the receipt of a
grant under paragraph (1) is that the applicant involved agree
to provide ongoing outreach activities while receiving the
grant, in a manner that is culturally competent for the health
disparity population served by the program, to inform the
public, and the specific community that the patient navigator
is serving, of the services of the model program under the
grant.
``(3) Data collection and report.--
``(A) In general.--To provide for effective patient
navigator program evaluation, a grant recipient under
this subsection shall collect specific patient data
with respect to navigation services provided to each
patient served through the program and shall establish
and implement procedures and protocols, consistent with
applicable Federal and State laws (including sections
160 and 164 of title 45, Code of Federal Regulations)
to ensure the confidentiality of all information shared
by a patient in the program (or their personal
representative) and their health care providers, group
health plans, or health insurance insurers.
Other Popular 106th Congressional Bills Documents:
|
| GovRecords.org presents information on various agencies of the United States Government. Even though all information is believed to be credible and accurate, no guarantees are made on the complete accuracy of our government records archive. Care should be taken to verify the information presented by responsible parties. Please see our reference page for congressional, presidential, and judicial branch contact information. GovRecords.org values visitor privacy. Please see the privacy page for more information. |

![]() |