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(3) management and technological improvements (including new or improved methods for biomedical communication and medical and financial recordkeeping and billing systems) to increase the productivity, effectiveness, efficiency, and financial stability of primary health and dental health service providers; (4) methods of providing health promotion, disease prevention, and health education programs, including school health programs;

(5) methods of identifying, coordinating, and integrating existing primary health and dental health service programs with mental health and social service programs to maximize use of available resources, avoid duplication of effort, and ensure a coordinated, comprehensive care system;

(6) specific services or mixtures of services appropriate for a given area, including ambulatory care, home health care, environmental health services (described in section 330(a)(4)), community outreach activities, transportation services, and other supplemental health services (as defined in section 330(b)(2));

(7) the effect of availability of primary health and home health services in terms of reduction of emergency room visits, hospitalizations, and institutionalization in long-term care facilities;

(8) the use of mobile health screening clinics to provide preventive health care services to meet the needs of medical underserved populations; and

(9) such other projects as the Secretary determines to be necessary to further the purposes of this section.

(c)(1) The Secretary may not make a grant or enter into a contract under this section for a project if the project can be carried out under the authority of any other provision (other than section 301, 304, or 305) of this Act.

(2) The Secretary shall, to the extent feasible, coordinate demonstration and research projects carried out under this section with any demonstration and research projects carried out under the Social Security Act for the reimbursement of services which are the subject of projects under this section.

(d)(1) No grant may be made under this section unless an application therefor is submitted to, and approved by, the Secretary. Such an application shall be submitted in such form and manner and shall contain such information as the Secretary shall prescribe.

(2) The amount of any grant or contract under this section shall be determined by the Secretary.

(3) The Secretary may make payments under this section in advance or by way of reimbursement, and at such intervals and on such conditions as the Secretary may find necessary.

(e) The Secretary shall submit an annual report to Congress not later than March 1 of each year (beginning with 1979) describing

(1) the projects conducted under this section during the fiscal year ending in the previous year and why they could not be assisted under the authority of other provisions of this Act;

(2) the amount of funds expended in such fiscal year for each project area set forth in subsection (b) and, if more than 20 per centum of the amount appropriated for this section was expended on any single such project area, the reasons for such concentration of expenditures; and

(3) any recommendations resulting from the conduct of such projects.

In the first such report, the Secretary shall include the number of demonstration projects which were funded under section 1110 of the Social Security Act during the fiscal year ending September 30, 1978, which were related to health services in rural medical underserved areas, and which could have been assisted under this section during the fiscal year ending September 30, 1979, but for subsection (c)(1) of this section.

(f) As used in this section, the term "medical underserved population" has the meaning given such term in section 330(b)(3).

(g)(1) There are authorized to be appropriated for the purposes of funding grants and contracts under this section in areas that are not urbanized areas (as defined by the Census Bureau) $18,000,000 for the fiscal year ending September 30, 1979, $20,000,000 for the fiscal year ending September 30, 1980, and $22,000,000 for the fiscal year ending September 30, 1981.

(2) There are authorized to be appropriated for the purposes of funding grants and contracts under this section in urbanized areas (as defined by the Census Bureau) $4,000,000 for the fiscal year ending September 30, 1979, $4,500,000 for the fiscal year ending September 30, 1980, and $5,000,000 for the fiscal year ending September 30, 1981.

(3) The authority of the Secretary to enter into contracts under this section shall be effective for any fiscal year only to such extent or in such amounts as are provided in advance in appropriation Acts.

(4) The Secretary may continue to support, out of funds appropriated under this section, those demonstration projects which were funded under section 1110 of the Social Security Act during fiscal year ending September 30, 1978, and which are related to health services in rural medical underserved areas, but only if such projects can not be carried out under the authority of any other provision (other than section 301, 304, or 305) of this Act.

TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE DEMONSTRATION GRANTS AND CONTRACTS

SEC. 340A. [256a] (a)(1) The Secretary may make grants to, and enter into contracts with, public and private entities to assist such entities in meeting their costs of providing technical assistance to entities engaged in the planning, development, or operation (or in any combination of such activities) of migrant health centers under section 329, community health centers under section 330, or any other centers for the delivery of primary health care. The technical assistance with respect to which a grant may be made under this paragraph includes

(A) assistance in the selection of sites for such centers,

(B) assistance in the selection of governing boards for such centers,

(C) assistance in the management of the service programs of such centers,

(D) assistance in the recruitment, selection, and retention of personnel (including members of the National Health Service Corps) for such centers,

(E) assistance in financial management of such centers, and

(F) assistance in the procurement of facilities, equipment, and supplies for such centers.

(2) In making grants and contracts under paragraph (1), the Secretary shall make such grants to, and enter into such contracts with

(A) entities which will provide technical assistance on a statewide basis for the planning, development, and operation of centers to provide primary health care in urban and rural

areas,

(B) entities which will provide technical assistance solely for the planning, development, and operation of centers to provide primary health care in large, densely populated areas,

(C) entities which will provide technical assistance solely for the planning, development, and operation of centers to provide primary health care in rural areas,

(D) entities which will provide technical assistance for the planning, development, and operation of centers to provide primary health care on a regional basis in large States, and

(E) entities which will provide technical assistance within several contiguous States for the planning, development, and operation of centers to provide primary health care.

Grants and contracts under paragraph (1) (other than those described in subparagraph (E) of this paragraph) to private entities may only be made to such entities to provide technical assistance in the States in which they are primarily engaged in business.

(b)(1) No grant may be made under subsection (a) unless an application therefor has been submitted to and approved by the Secretary. Such an application shall be submitted in such form and manner and shall contain such information as the Secretary may require by regulation.

(2) The amount of any grant or contract under subsection (a) shall be determined by the Secretary, except that no grant or contract to any entity in any fiscal year may exceed $500,000.

(c) The Secretary shall establish a Primary Health Care Advisory Committee (hereinafter in this subsection referred to as the "Committee") to make recommendations respecting

(1) the capabilities of applicants for grants and contracts under subsection (a) to effectively carry out the projects for which the grants and contracts would be made;

(2) the renewal of grants and contracts under such subsection; and

(3) the evaluation to be made under section 106(b) of the Migrant and Community Health Centers Amendments of 1978. The Committee shall consist of five members appointed by the Secretary, in accordance with section 222, from individuals who are not officers or employees of the Federal Government and who because of their expertise in providing technical assistance to primary health care centers are particularly qualified to serve on the Committee.

(d)(1) For the purpose of carrying out this section there are authorized to be appropriated $3,000,000 for the fiscal year ending September 30, 1979, $3,000,000 for the fiscal year ending September 30, 1980, and $3,000,000 for the fiscal year ending September 30, 1981.

(2) The authority of the Secretary to enter into contracts under subsection (a) shall be effective for any fiscal year only to such extent or in such amounts as are provided in advance in appropriation Acts.

PART E-NARCOTIC ADDICTS AND OTHER DRUG ABUSERS

CARE AND TREATMENT

SEC. 341. [257] (a) The Surgeon General is authorized to provide for the confinement, care, protection, treatment, and discipline of persons addicted to the use of habit-forming narcotic drugs who are civilly committed to treatment or convicted of offenses against the United States and sentenced to treatment under the Narcotic Addict Rehabilitation Act of 1966, addicts who are committed to the custody of the Attorney General pursuant to the provisions of the Federal Youth Corrections Act (chapter 402 of title 18 of the United States Code), addicts and other persons with drug abuse and drug dependence problems who voluntarily submit themselves for treatment, and addicts convicted of offenses against the United States and who are not sentenced to treatment under the Narcotic Addict Rehabilitation Act of 1966, including persons convicted by general courts-martial and consular courts. Such care and treatment shall be provided at hospitals of the Service especially equipped for the accommodation of such patients or elsewhere where authorized under other provisions of law, and shall be designed to rehabilitate such persons, to restore them to health, and, where necessary, to train them to be self-supporting and self-reliant; but nothing in this section or in this part shall be construed to limit the authority of the Surgeon General under other provisions of law to provide for the conditional release of patients and for aftercare under supervision. In carrying out this subsection, the Secretary shall establish in each hospital and other appropriate medical facility of the Service a treatment and rehabilitation program for drug addicts and other persons with drug abuse and drug dependence problems who are in the area served by such hospital or other facility; except that the requirement of this sentence shall not apply in the case of any such hospital or other facility with respect to which the Secretary determines that there is not sufficient need for such a program in such hospital or other facility.

(b) Upon the admittance to, and departure from, a hospital of the Service of a person who voluntarily submitted himself for treatment pursuant to the provisions of this section, and who at the time of his admittance to such hospital was a resident of the District of Columbia, the Surgeon General shall furnish to the Commissioners of the District of Columbia or their designated agent, the name, address, and such other pertinent information as may be useful in the rehabilitation to society of such person.

(c) The Secretary may enter into agreements with the Administrator of Veterans' Affairs, the Secretary of Defense, and the head of any other department or agency of the Government under which agreements hospitals and other appropriate medical facilities of the Service may be used in treatment and rehabilitation programs provided by such department or agency for drug addicts and other per

sons with drug abuse and other drug dependence problems who are in areas served by such hospitals or other facilities.

EMPLOYMENT OF ADDICTS OR OTHER PERSONS WITH DRUG ABUSE AND DRUG DEPENDENCE PROBLEMS

SEC. 342. [258] Narcotic addicts or other persons with drug abuse and drug dependence problems in hospitals of the Service designated for their care shall be employed in such manner and under such conditions as the Surgeon General may direct. In such hospitals the Surgeon General may, in his discretion, establish industries, plants, factories, or shops for the production and manufacture of articles, commodities, and supplies for the United States Government. The Secretary of the Treasury may require any Government department, establishment, or other institution, for whom appropriations are made directly or indirectly by the Congress of the United States, to purchase at current market prices, as determined by him or his authorized representative, such of the articles, commodities, or supplies so produced or manufactured as meet their specifications; and the Surgeon General shall provide for payment to the inmates or their dependents of such pecuniary earnings as he may deem proper. The Secretary shall establish a working-capital fund for such industries, plants, factories, and shops out of any funds appropriated for Public Health Service hospitals at which addicts or other persons with drug abuse and drug dependence problems are treated and cared for; and such fund shall be available for the purchase, repair, or replacement of machinery or equipment, for the purchase of raw materials and supplies, for the purchase of uniforms and other distinctive wearing apparel of employees in the performance of their official duties, and for the employment of necessary civilian officers and employees. The Surgeon General may provide for the disposal of products of the industrial activities conducted pursuant to this section, and the proceeds of any sales thereof shall be covered into the Treasury of the United States to the credit of the working-capital fund.

CONVICTS

SEC. 343. [259] (a) The authority vested with the power to designate the place of confinement of a prisoner shall transfer to hospitals of the Service especially equipped for the accommodation of addicts or other persons with drug abuse and drug dependence problems, if accommodations are available, all addicts or other persons with drug abuse and drug dependence problems who have been or are hereafter sentenced to confinement, or who are now or shall hereafter be confined, in any penal, correctional, disciplinary, or reformatory institution of the United States, including those addicts or other persons with drug abuse and drug dependence problems convicted of offenses against the United States who are confined in State and Territorial prisons, penitentiaries, and reformatories, except that no addict or other person with a drug abuse or other drug dependence problem shall be transferred to a hospital of the Service who, in the opinion of the officer authorized to direct the transfer, is not a proper subject for confinement in such an institution either because of the nature of the crime he has commit

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