Top Legislation - View All
Also tagged in: Affordable housing, Ambulatory care, Budgets, Building construction, Child welfare, Children, Civil liberties, Community organization, Continuum of care, Criminal justice, Day care, Disabled, Drug abuse treatment, Emergency housing, Evaluation research (Social action programs), Families, Family services, Family violence, Federal aid to housing, Federal-local relations, Federal-state relations, Food, Food relief, Government information, Government paperwork, Health counseling, Health policy, Homeless, Housing, Housing for the disabled, Housing subsidies, Job hunting, Job training, Juvenile delinquency, Labor, Law, Legal aid, Local laws, Low-income housing, Medical care, Medicine, Mental health services, Nonprofit organizations, Nutrition, Performance measurement, Public housing, Rape victims, Relocation, Rental housing, Residential rehabilitation, Right of privacy, Shelters for the homeless, Social services, Stalking, State and local government, State laws, Status offenders, Urban affairs, Victims of crimes, Vocational education, Vocational guidance, Welfare, Women's shelters, Youth services, Zoning and zoning law
Latest Action: 10/02/2008 - Reported (Amended) by the Committee on Financial Services. H. Rept. 110-906. Bill TextTo amend the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act to consolidate the housing assistance programs for homeless persons under title IV of such Act, and for other purposes. 2/6/2007--Introduced. Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing Act of 2007 - Amends the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act to consolidate housing assistance programs for homeless persons. Requires the establishment of a community homeless assistance planning board for a geographic area to lead a collaborative planning process to design, execute, and evaluate programs, policies, and practices to prevent and end homelessness. Authorizes the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to designate an entity to be a community board if it has engaged in local homeless housing and services planning and has applied for federal funding for homeless assistance prior to enactment of this Act. Instructs the Secretary to make available technical assistance to governmental [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Ambulatory care, Budgets, Children, Clinical trials, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Continuum of care, Education, Epidemiology, Families, Family services, Federal aid to health facilities, Federal aid to research, Health education, Health policy, Higher education, Home care services, Hospital care, Maternal and infant welfare, Maternal health services, Medical care, Medical education, Medical fees, Medical research, Medical screening, Medical tests, Medicine, Mental depression, Mental health services, Mental illness, Mothers, Pharmaceutical research, Pregnancy, Quality of care, Research grants, Science policy, Social services, Women
Latest Action: 03/05/2008 - Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. Date of scheduled consideration. SD-430. 9:30 a.m. Bill TextTo provide for research on, and services for individuals with, postpartum depression and psychosis. 10/15/2007--Passed House amended. (There is 1 other summary) Melanie Blocker-Stokes Postpartum Depression Research and Care Act - Title I: Research on Postpartum Depression and Psychosis - (Sec. 101) Encourages the Secretary of Health and Human Services, acting through the Director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Director of the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), to continue aggressive work on postpartum depression and other postpartum psychosis. Encourages the Director of NIMH to continue research to expand the understanding of the causes of, and find a cure for, postpartum conditions, including: (1) basic research concerning the etiology and causes of the conditions; (2) epidemiological studies to address the frequency and natural history of the conditions and differences among racial and ethnic groups; (3) the development [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Health policy, Managed care, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical fees, Medicine, Midwives, Nurse practitioners, Physicians' assistants, Welfare, Women
Latest Action: 01/04/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S78) Bill TextA bill to amend title XIX of the Social Security Act to improve access to advanced practice nurses and physician assistants under the Medicaid Program. 1/4/2007--Introduced. Medicaid Advanced Practice Nurses and Physician Assistants Access Act of 2007 - Amends title XIX (Medicaid) of the Social Security Act to eliminate the state option to include nurse practitioners, certified nurse-midwives, and physician assistants as primary care case managers. Specifies as primary care case managers any nurse practitioner, certified nurse-midwife, or physician assistant that provides primary care case management services under a primary care case management contract.Revises the coverage of certain nurse practitioner services under the Medicaid fee-for-service program to remove the specification of certified pediatric nurse practitioner and certified family nurse practitioner in order to extend such coverage to services furnished by a nurse practitioner or clinical nurse specialist.[...] show full description
Also tagged in: Aged, Armed forces, Budgets, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Chemotherapy, Defense policy, Department of Health and Human Services, Drug abuse, Education, Executive departments, Executive reorganization, Federal advisory bodies, Federal aid to research, Federal officials, Government employees, Graduate education, Health policy, Health surveys, Higher education, Imaging systems in medicine, Lung cancer, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical education, Medical research, Medical screening, Medical statistics, Medical technology, Medical tests, Medicare, Medicine, Military medicine, Mortality, Pharmaceutical research, Quality of care, Research centers, Research grants, Science policy, Smoking, Surgery, Technology, Tobacco, Veterans, Veterans' medical care, Vital statistics, Welfare
Latest Action: 08/02/2007 - Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions discharged by Unanimous Consent. (consideration: CR S10842) Bill TextA resolution expressing the sense of the Senate that the President should declare lung cancer a public health priority and should implement a comprehensive interagency program to reduce the lung cancer mortality rate by at least 50 percent by 2015. 8/2/2007--Passed Senate without amendment. (There is 1 other summary) (This measure has not been amended since it was introduced. The summary of that version is repeated here.) Urges the President to: (1) declare lung cancer a public health priority and immediately lead a coordinated effort to reduce the mortality rate of lung cancer by 50% by 2015; (2) direct the Secretary of Health and Human Services to increase funding for lung cancer research; (3) direct the Secretary of Defense to develop a lung cancer screening and disease management program among members of the Armed Forces and veterans and diagnostic programs for the early detection of lung cancer; (4) appoint the Lung Cancer Scientific [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Administrative procedure, Aged, Cardiovascular diseases, Case mix (Medical care), Communicable diseases, Congressional reporting requirements, Department of Health and Human Services, Digestive diseases, Executive departments, Finance, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Governmental investigations, Health policy, Hospital administration, Hospital care, Hospital rates, Hospitals, Kidney diseases, Labor, Law, Long-term care, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical records, Medicare, Medicine, Metabolism, Nervous system diseases, Performance measurement, Physicians, Quality of care, Respiratory diseases, Rural affairs, Rural health, Skin diseases, Urban affairs, Wages, Welfare
Latest Action: 01/18/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S765) Bill TextA bill to amend title XVIII of the Social Security Act to ensure and foster continued patient quality of care by establishing facility and patient criteria for long-term care hospitals and related improvements under the Medicare program. 1/18/2007--Introduced. Medicare Long-Term Care Hospital Improvement Act of 2007 - Amends title XVIII (Medicare) of the Social Security Act to prescribe requirements for a long-term care hospital (LTCH) and patient criteria for prospective payment to an LTCH.Directs the Secretary of Health and Human Services to: (1) determine a list of medical conditions associated with a high severity of illness of patients who are appropriate for treatment in long-term care hospitals, as indicated by the presence of clinical comorbidities in accordance with a methodology specified by the Secretary; and (2) study and report to Congress on appropriate quality measures for Medicare beneficiaries receiving care in LTCHs. Directs the Secretary to [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Academic performance, Budgets, Child health, Child welfare, Children, Community health services, Continuing education, Criminal justice, Criminal statistics, Custody of children, Data banks, Dropouts, Education, Educational accountability, Educational statistics, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Executive departments, Families, Family courts, Family services, Federal advisory bodies, Federal aid to child health services, Foster home care, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Government statistics, Group homes, Health insurance, Health planning, Health policy, Home care services, Housing, Intergovernmental fiscal relations, Job training, Juvenile delinquency, Law, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical screening, Medical tests, Medically uninsured, Medicine, Mental health services, Patient satisfaction, Performance measurement, Poor children, Preventive medicine, Secondary education, State and local government, State finance, State laws, Technology, Welfare, Welfare waivers, Youth services
Latest Action: 01/24/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S1067-1069) Bill TextA bill to amend the Public Health Service Act to establish a State family support grant program to end the practice of parents giving legal custody of their seriously emotionally disturbed children to State agencies for the purpose of obtaining mental health services for those children. 1/24/2007--Introduced. Keeping Families Together Act - Amends the Public Health Service Act to allow the Secretary of Health and Human Services, acting through the Administrator of the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, to award competitive matching grants to states to establish systems of care to treat and provide services to all children who are in the custody of the state or at-risk of entering into the custody of the state for the purpose of receiving mental health services. Requires states to use grant funds for certain activities, including to: (1) expand public health insurance programs to cover community-based mental health and family support services [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Aged, Armed forces, Budgets, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Chemotherapy, Defense policy, Department of Health and Human Services, Drug abuse, Education, Executive departments, Executive reorganization, Federal advisory bodies, Federal aid to research, Federal officials, Government employees, Graduate education, Health policy, Health surveys, Higher education, Imaging systems in medicine, Lung cancer, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical education, Medical research, Medical screening, Medical statistics, Medical technology, Medical tests, Medicare, Medicine, Military medicine, Mortality, Pharmaceutical research, Quality of care, Research centers, Research grants, Science policy, Smoking, Surgery, Technology, Tobacco, Veterans, Veterans' medical care, Vital statistics, Welfare
Latest Action: 11/13/2007 - Mrs. Capps moved to suspend the rules and agree to the resolution, as amended. Bill TextExpressing the sense of the House of Representatives with respect to lung cancer as a public health priority and the recommendations of the Lung Cancer Progress Review Group of the National Cancer Institute. 11/13/2007--Passed House amended. (There is 1 other summary) Recognizes: (1) lung cancer as a public health priority; (2) the importance of reducing the lung cancer mortality rate by at least half by 2015; (3) the benefit of graduate medical education programs in thoracic medicine and cardiothoracic surgery; and (4) the importance of the recommendations of the Lung Cancer Progress Review Group of the National Cancer Institute. Encourages increased investment for lung cancer research and other lung cancer-related programs. Expresses support for efforts to develop a broad-based lung cancer screening and disease management program among members of the Armed Forces and veterans.
Also tagged in: Administrative procedure, Aged, Cardiovascular diseases, Case mix (Medical care), Communicable diseases, Congressional reporting requirements, Department of Health and Human Services, Digestive diseases, Executive departments, Finance, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Governmental investigations, Health insurance, Health policy, Hospital administration, Hospital care, Hospital rates, Hospitals, Kidney diseases, Labor, Law, Long-term care, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical records, Medicare, Medicine, Metabolism, Nervous system diseases, Performance measurement, Physicians, Quality of care, Respiratory diseases, Skin diseases, Wages, Welfare
Latest Action: 01/24/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Health. Bill TextTo amend title XVIII of the Social Security Act to ensure and foster continued patient quality of care by establishing facility and patient criteria for long-term care hospitals and related improvements under the Medicare Program. 1/18/2007--Introduced. Medicare Long-Term Care Hospital Improvement Act of 2007 - Amends title XVIII (Medicare) of the Social Security Act to prescribe requirements for a long-term care hospital (LTCH) and patient criteria for prospective payment to an LTCH. Directs the Secretary of Health and Human Services to: (1) determine the LTCH diagnosis related groups (LTCH-DRGs) associated with a high severity of illness for specified medical conditions; and (2) study and report to Congress on appropriate quality measures for Medicare patients receiving care in LTCHs.Directs the Secretary to choose three quality measures from the study for LTCHs to report.Amends the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Benefits Improvement and Protection Act [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Affordable housing, Budgets, Community health services, Congregate housing, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Continuum of care, Counseling, Crime prevention, Criminal justice, Dental care, Disabled, Drug abuse, Drug abuse treatment, Education, Employment, Evaluation research (Social action programs), Families, Family services, Federal aid to housing, Finance, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Grants-in-aid, Health education, Health policy, Homeless, Housing, Job training, Labor, Management information systems, Medical care, Medicine, Mental health services, Mental illness, Nonprofit organizations, Parent and child, Performance measurement, Personal budgets, Social services, Standards, Welfare
Latest Action: 02/14/2007 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. (text of measure as introduced: CR S5633-5634) Bill TextA bill to amend the Public Health Service Act to establish a grant program to provide supportive services in permanent supportive housing for chronically homeless individuals, and for other purposes. 2/14/2007--Introduced. Services for Ending Long-Term Homelessness Act - Amends the Public Health Service Act to require the Secretary of Health and Human Services, acting through the Administrator of Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, to design national strategies for providing services in supportive housing that will assist in ending chronic homelessness and to implement programs that address chronic homelessness. Requires the Secretary to make matching grants to eligible entities to provide services that promote recovery and self-sufficiency and that address barriers to housing stability to chronically homeless individuals in, or who are scheduled to become residents of, permanent supportive housing and to other individuals and families who have [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Academic performance, Budgets, Child health, Child welfare, Children, Community health services, Continuing education, Criminal justice, Criminal statistics, Custody of children, Data banks, Dropouts, Education, Educational accountability, Educational statistics, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Executive departments, Families, Family courts, Family services, Federal advisory bodies, Federal aid to child health services, Foster home care, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Government statistics, Group homes, Health insurance, Health planning, Health policy, Home care services, Housing, Intergovernmental fiscal relations, Job training, Juvenile delinquency, Law, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical screening, Medical tests, Medically uninsured, Medicine, Mental health services, Patient satisfaction, Performance measurement, Poor children, Preventive medicine, Secondary education, State and local government, State finance, State laws, Technology, Welfare, Welfare waivers, Youth services
Latest Action: 02/02/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Health. Bill TextTo amend the Public Health Service Act to establish a State family support grant program to end the practice of parents giving legal custody of their seriously emotionally disturbed children to State agencies for the purpose of obtaining mental health services for those children. 1/24/2007--Introduced. Keeping Families Together Act of 2007 - Amends the Public Health Service Act to allow the Secretary of Health and Human Services, acting through the Administrator of the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, to award competitive matching grants to states to establish systems of care to provide mental health treatment and services to all children who are in the custody of the state or at-risk of entering into the custody of the state for the purpose of receiving mental health services. Requires states to use grant funds for certain activities, including to: (1) expand public health insurance programs to cover community-based mental health and family [...] show full description
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Latest Legislation - View All
Also tagged in: Adoption, Budgets, Caregivers, Child health, Child welfare, Children, Counseling, Criminal justice, Disabled, Drug abuse, Drug abuse treatment, Education, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Families, Family services, Family violence, Foster home care, Government information, Government publicity, Grandparents, Grants-in-aid, Guardian and ward, Health policy, Income tax, Indian children, Indians, Investment of public funds, Job training, Judicial officers, Law, Licenses, Medical care, Medicine, Mental health services, Minorities, Ombudsman, Parent and child, Politics and government, Preschool education, Secondary education, Siblings, Social services, Tax credits, Tax deductions, Taxation, Welfare
Latest Action: 09/26/2008 - Presented to President. Bill TextTo amend parts B and E of title IV of the Social Security Act to connect and support relative caregivers, improve outcomes for children in foster care, provide for tribal foster care and adoption access, improve incentives for adoption, and for other purposes. 9/15/2008--Introduced. Fostering Connections to Success and Increasing Adoptions Act of 2008 - Amends Part E (Federal Payments for Foster Care and Adoption Assistance) of title IV of the Social Security Act (SSA) to give state plans the option of providing for the state to enter into agreements to provide kinship guardianship assistance payments to grandparents and other relatives who have assumed legal guardianship of children for whom they have: (1) cared as foster parents; and (2) committed to care on a permanent basis. Amends SSA title IV part B (Child and Family Services) to authorize the Secretary of Health and Human Services to make matching grants to state, local, or tribal child welfare agencies and [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Budgets, Child abuse, Child health, Child nutrition, Child sexual abuse, Child welfare, Children, Criminal justice, Day care, Education, Educational accountability, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Families, Federal aid to education, Fees, Food, Health policy, Homeless, Housing, Medical care, Medicine, Parent-school relationships, Performance measurement, Preschool education, School health programs, School-age child care, Secondary education, Single-parent families, Social services, Welfare, Working poor
Latest Action: 07/15/2008 - Referred to the House Committee on Education and Labor. Bill TextTo authorize grants to local educational agencies to develop and implement coordinated services programs. 7/15/2008--Introduced. Coordinate to Educate Act - Authorizes the Secretary of Education to award: (1) grants of up to three years to local educational agencies (LEAs) to collaborate with health and social service agencies to develop school-linked coordinated service programs for children and families on or near school sites; and (2) grants of up to two years to LEAs to implement such programs pursuant to interagency service delivery plans that have been approved by the Secretary. Requires program services to be available to all children and families in the service area and, where appropriate, paid for on a sliding scale. Directs the Secretary, in awarding grants, to give special consideration to areas with high proportions of educationally at-risk students and areas that have a large number of single parent or two-parent, working families.
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Accreditation (Medical care), Administrative remedies, Adoption, Afghanistan, Aged, Aid to dependent children, Ambulances, Ambulatory care, Anesthetics, Annuities, Appropriations, Armed forces, Armed forces reserves, Barbiturates, Brain, Budgets, Business, California, Capitation (Medical care), Cardiovascular diseases, Case mix (Medical care), Cash welfare block grants, Children, Chronically ill, Civil rights, Clinical trials, Clinics, Coinsurance, Collection of accounts, Communication in medicine, Communications, Community health services, Competitive bidding, Conflict of interests, Congregate housing, Congress, Congressional investigations, Congressional reporting requirements, Criminal justice, Defense policy, Department of Health and Human Services, Diabetes, Discrimination in medical care, District of Columbia, Drugs, Education, Electronic data interchange, Electronic government information, Estates (Law), Executive departments, Families, Federal aid to health facilities, Federal-state relations, Finance, Foster home care, Genetics, Gifts, Government information, Government procurement, Government trust funds, Governmental investigations, Group medical practice, Head injuries, Health education, Health information systems, Health insurance, Health maintenance organizations, Health policy, Hearing, Higher education, Hospital rates, Hospitals, Housing, Imaging systems in medicine, Indian medical care, Inspectors general, Insurance premiums, Iraq, Iraq compilation, Judicial review, Kidney diseases, Language and languages, Law, Life insurance, Living wills, Long-term care, Lung diseases, Managed care, Marketing, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical economics, Medical education, Medical ethics, Medical fees, Medical laboratories, Medical personnel, Medical records, Medical savings accounts, Medical statistics, Medical supplies, Medical tests, Medically uninsured, Medicare, Medicine, Medigap, Mental depression, Mental health services, Middle East and North Africa, Military occupation, Military operations, Minorities, Minority health, Nuclear medicine, Nursing homes, Obesity, Oxygen, Pensions, Performance measurement, Pharmacies, Physical examinations, Physicians, Politics and government, Post-traumatic stress disorder, Prescription pricing, Preventive medicine, Psychiatry, Psychotherapy, Psychotropic drugs, Public contracts, Quality of care, Rural affairs, Rural health, Sexual abstinence, South Asia, Speech disorders, Standards, State and local government, Subsidies, Technology, Telecommunication, Telemedicine, Terminal care, Terrorism, Translating and interpreting, Transportation, Veterans, Veterans' medical care, Welfare, Welfare eligibility, Women, Women's health
Latest Action: 07/15/2008 - Vetoed by President. Bill TextTo amend titles XVIII and XIX of the Social Security Act to extend expiring provisions under the Medicare Program, to improve beneficiary access to preventive and mental health services, to enhance low-income benefit programs, and to maintain access to care in rural areas, including pharmacy access, and for other purposes. 7/15/2008--Public Law. (There are 3 other summaries) (This measure has not been amended since it was passed by the House on June 24, 2008. The summary of that version is repeated here.) Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act of 2008 - Title I: Medicare - Subtitle A: Beneficiary Improvements - Part 1: Prevention, Mental Health, and Marketing - (Sec. 101) Amends title XVIII (Medicare) of the Social Security Act (SSA), as amended by the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Extension Act of 2007, to cover additional preventive services. Includes body mass index and end-of-life planning among initial [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Budgets, Cancer, Child health, Children, Clinics, Comprehensive health care, Education, Federal aid to education, Federal aid to health facilities, Federal aid to research, Health information systems, Health policy, Health surveys, Higher education, Medical care, Medical education, Medical research, Medical statistics, Medicine, Mental health services, Minority health, Preventive medicine, Quality of care, Quality of life, Research grants, Science policy
Latest Action: 04/17/2008 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S3146-3147) Bill TextA bill to improve and enhance research and programs on cancer survivorship, and for other purposes. 4/17/2008--Introduced. Pediatric, Adolescent, and Young Adult Cancer Survivorship Research and Quality of Life Act of 2008 - Amends the Public Health Service Act to direct the Secretary of Health and Human Services, acting through the Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), to expand and intensify CDC's cancer control programs. Requires the Secretary to: (1) provide guidance to states, in collaboration with the Director of the National Cancer Institute (NCI), on interventions that may be incorporated into state cancer control programs to improve the long-term health status of childhood cancer survivors; (2) encourage states to incorporate strategies for improving their care into their comprehensive cancer plans; (3) collaborate with the NCI Director to improve or develop systems for tracking cancer survivors; and (4) enhance control programs to include [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Administrative procedure, Administrative remedies, Ambulatory care, American Samoa, Appropriations, Budgets, Children, Clinics, Department of Health and Human Services, Education, Executive departments, Federal aid to child health services, Federal aid to education, Finance, Food, Food stamps, Foreclosure, Grants-in-aid, Guam, Health insurance, Health policy, Higher education, Hospital care, Housing, Intergovernmental fiscal relations, Labor, Law, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical education, Medically uninsured, Medicine, Northern Mariana Islands, Poor children, Puerto Rico, State and local government, State taxation, Taxation, Unemployment, Virgin Islands, Welfare
Latest Action: 04/03/2008 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S2445-2446) Bill TextA bill to preserve access to Medicaid and the State Children's Health Insurance Program during an economic downturn, and for other purposes. 4/3/2008--Introduced. Economic Recovery in Health Care Act of 2008 - Prohibits the Secretary of Health and Human Services from finalizing, implementing, enforcing, or otherwise taking any action to give effect prior to April 1, 2009, to the following administrative actions: (1) the proposed and final rule (with certain exceptions) entitled "Medicaid Program; Health-Care Related Taxes," published, respectively, on March 23, 2007, and on February 22, 2008; (2) the proposed rule entitled "Medicaid Program; Graduate Medical Education," published on May 23, 2007; (3) the State Health Official Letter 07-001, dated August 17, 2007, issued by the Director of the Center for Medicaid and State Operations in the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services regarding certain requirements under the State Children's Health Insurance [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Administrative procedure, Aged, Budgets, Cancer, Communication in medicine, Communications, Comprehensive health care, Congressional reporting requirements, Continuing education, Department of Health and Human Services, Education, Educational accountability, Executive departments, Federal aid to education, Federal aid to health facilities, Federal aid to research, Graduate education, Health planning, Health policy, Higher education, Home care services, Law, Medical care, Medical education, Medical fees, Medical research, Medicare, Medicine, Nurses, Nursing education, Physicians, Psychologists, Research grants, Science policy, Standards, Terminal care
Latest Action: 03/31/2008 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S2234) Bill TextA bill to amend title XVIII of the Social Security Act to provide for coverage of comprehensive cancer care planning under the Medicare program and to improve the care furnished to individuals diagnosed with cancer by establishing a Medicare hospice care demonstration program and grants programs for cancer palliative care and symptom management programs, provider education, and related research. 3/31/2008--Introduced. Comprehensive Cancer Care Improvement Act of 2008 - Amends title XVIII (Medicare) of the Social Security Act to provide for coverage of comprehensive cancer care planning services to provide individuals diagnosed with cancer a plan that details all aspects of the care to be provided. Requires the Secretary of Health and Human Services to establish standards for such services.Directs the Secretary to conduct a two-year demonstration project under which Medicare payments will be made for comprehensive cancer care symptom management services furnished by [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Administrative procedure, Congress, Congressional veto, Department of Health and Human Services, Executive departments, Health policy, Law, Medicaid, Medical care, Medicine, Welfare
Latest Action: 03/13/2008 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance. (text of measure as introduced: CR 3/14/2008 S2163) Bill TextA joint resolution providing for congressional disapproval under chapter 8 of title 5, United States Code, of the rule submitted by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services within the Department of Health and Human Services relating to optional State plan case management services under the Medicaid program. 3/13/2008--Introduced. Disapproves the rule submitted by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services within the Department of Health and Human Services relating to optional state plan case management services under the Medicaid program. Declares that such rule shall have no force or effect.
Also tagged in: Administrative procedure, Ambulatory care, Budgets, Children, Department of Health and Human Services, Education, Executive departments, Federal aid to child health services, Federal-state relations, Finance, Health insurance, Health policy, Higher education, Intergovernmental fiscal relations, Law, Managed care, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical education, Medically uninsured, Medicine, Poor children, State and local government, Taxation, Transportation, Welfare
Latest Action: 04/28/2008 - Read the second time. Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 719. Bill TextTo extend certain moratoria and impose additional moratoria on certain Medicaid regulations through April 1, 2009, and for other purposes. 4/23/2008--Passed House amended. (There are 2 other summaries) (This measure has not been amended since it was reported to the House on April 22, 2008. The summary of that version is repeated here.) Protecting the Medicaid Safety Net Act of 2008 - (Sec. 2) Amends the U.S. Troop Readiness, Veterans' Care, Katrina Recovery, and Iraq Accountability Appropriations Appropriations Act, 2007 to extend until April 1, 2009, the moratorium on implementation of a proposed rule ("Medicaid Program; Cost Limit for Providers Operated by Units of Government and Provisions To Ensure the Integrity of Federal-State Financial Partnership") relating to the federal-state financial partnerships under titles XIX (Medicaid) and XXI (State Children's Health Insurance Program) (SCHIP) of the Social Security Act (SSA).[...] show full description
Also tagged in: Administrative procedure, Congress, Congressional veto, Department of Health and Human Services, Executive departments, Health policy, Law, Medicaid, Medical care, Medicine, Welfare
Latest Action: 03/13/2008 - Referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce. Bill TextProviding for congressional disapproval under chapter 8 of title 5, United States Code, of the rule submitted by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services within the Department of Health and Human Services relating to optional State plan case management services under the Medicaid Program. 3/13/2008--Introduced. Disapproves the rule submitted by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services within the Department of Health and Human Services relating to optional state plan case management services under the Medicaid program. Declares that such rule shall have no force or effect.
Also tagged in: Aged, Budgets, Cancer, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Federal aid to research, Health education, Health policy, Medical care, Medical research, Medicare, Medicine, Nurses, Nursing, Research grants, Science policy
Latest Action: 03/13/2008 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Health. Bill TextTo amend title XVIII of the Social Security Act to provide comprehensive cancer patient treatment education under the Medicare Program and to provide for research to improve cancer symptom management. 3/11/2008--Introduced. Assuring and Improving Cancer Treatment Education and Cancer Symptom Management Act of 2008 - Amends title XVIII (Medicare) of the Social Security Act, as amended by the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Extension Act of 2007, to provide for Medicare coverage of comprehensive cancer patient treatment education services. Amends the Public Health Service Act to direct the Director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to expand, intensify, and coordinate programs for the conduct and support of research with respect to: (1) improving the treatment and management of symptoms and side effects associated with cancer and cancer treatment; and (2) evaluating the role of nursing interventions in the amelioration of such symptoms and side effects. Requires [...] show full description
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