Indian Health Service: Contracting for Health Services Under the Indian Self-determination Act : Report to the Chairman, Select Committee on Indian Affairs, United States SenateU.S. General Accounting Office, 1986 - 55 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 12
Page 3
... amount of funds for the contract . Also , IHS has no procedures for developing a contract for facility construction under Public Law 93-638 . Among the reasons given by IHS for delays were the lack of sufficient personnel to review ...
... amount of funds for the contract . Also , IHS has no procedures for developing a contract for facility construction under Public Law 93-638 . Among the reasons given by IHS for delays were the lack of sufficient personnel to review ...
Page 9
... amounts IHS would normally allocate for the service in question . The services to be performed would be similar to those cur- rently being performed by IHS . The Indian contractor provides the ser- vice by using his own people or hiring ...
... amounts IHS would normally allocate for the service in question . The services to be performed would be similar to those cur- rently being performed by IHS . The Indian contractor provides the ser- vice by using his own people or hiring ...
Page 10
... amounts under $ 25,000 are considered small purchases by the Federal Acquisition Reg- ulation ) and the total Public Law 93-638 activity at the IHS field office location . The IHS field offices we selected for our study are shown in ...
... amounts under $ 25,000 are considered small purchases by the Federal Acquisition Reg- ulation ) and the total Public Law 93-638 activity at the IHS field office location . The IHS field offices we selected for our study are shown in ...
Page 14
... amount of funds for the contract . IHS contracting officials indicated the reasons ranged from lack of suffi- cient personnel to review contracts to not having specific procedures to follow in the review process . But , according to ...
... amount of funds for the contract . IHS contracting officials indicated the reasons ranged from lack of suffi- cient personnel to review contracts to not having specific procedures to follow in the review process . But , according to ...
Page 16
... amount of funds available from IHS was insufficient for the services to be contracted , while still others had difficulty fol- lowing the review process . The following examples relate to the first four contracts indicated above . They ...
... amount of funds available from IHS was insufficient for the services to be contracted , while still others had difficulty fol- lowing the review process . The following examples relate to the first four contracts indicated above . They ...
Common terms and phrases
12 contractors 12 Indian contractors According to IHS Administering Public Law Alaska Natives approval by IHS available for contracting changes CHECK cials contract proposal contract review contracting for health contracting officers contracting process contracting under Public contractors and IHS contractors we visited determine equipment acquisition expressed concern extent extent extent GAO Survey Questionnaire GO TO QUESTION Government Health and Human health care services Human Services IHS and HRSA IHS area office IHS field offices IHS in developing IHS is responsible IHS officials IHS provided Indian Health Service Indian tribes indicated inpatient ISDAs less than adequate Moderate extent needed Non-Indian Sources Obtaining and Administering October outpatient participation percent thought Problems in Obtaining procedures provide health provided by IHS purchasing equipment reasons received request requirements responding tribes review process scope-of-work section Self-Determination Under Public technical assistance tract tribal contractors tribal official tribal organizations tribes and organizations tribes and tribal Yes GO
Popular passages
Page 8 - Indian self-determination policy which will permit an orderly transition from Federal domination of programs for and services to Indians to effective and meaningful participation by the Indian people in the planning, conduct, and administration of those programs and services.
Page 8 - Administration; the Alcohol, Drug Abuse and Mental Health Administration; the Centers for Disease Control; the Food and Drug Administration; the National Institutes of Health; and the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry.
Page 8 - I am pleased to appear before you today to describe the AIDS programs of the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA). Within the Public Health Service (PHS), HRSA has responsibility for Federal AIDS programs relating to patient care and health services delivery, as well as health care professional training. In 1987, the Intragovernmental Task Force on AIDS Health Care Delivery was established. I served as vice chairman of this Task Force. The central...