Top Legislation - View All
Also tagged in: Academic performance, Access to health care, AIDS (Disease), Alcohol and youth, Alcoholism, Ambulatory care, Birth control, Budgets, Business, Child development, Child health, Children, Church and social problems, Citizenship education, Civil rights, Coinsurance, Communications, Community health services, Condoms, Congressional reporting requirements, Consumer discounts, Consumer education, Consumers, Contraceptives, Criminal justice, Data banks, Discrimination in insurance, Discrimination in medical care, Drug abuse, Drugs, Drugs and youth, Education, Elementary and secondary education, Emergency management, Emergency medicine, Employee health benefits, Evaluation research (Social action programs), Families, Federal aid to child health services, Federal aid to health facilities, Federal aid to research, Finance, Generic drugs, Government information, Government publicity, Grants-in-aid, Health education, Health information systems, Health insurance, Health policy, Hospital care, Hospitals, Human immunodeficiency viruses, Immigration, Insurance companies, Labor, Language and languages, Marriage, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical fees, Medical research, Medical statistics, Medically uninsured, Medicine, Nonprofit organizations, Parent and child, Performance measurement, Politics and government, Pregnant women, Prescription pricing, Preventive medicine, Public service advertising, Rape victims, Rebates, Religion, Research grants, School health programs, School-age child care, Science policy, Service learning, Sex, Sex education, Sexual abstinence, Sexually transmitted diseases, Social services, Sociological research, Standards, State and local government, State laws, Technology, Teenage pregnancy, Victims of crimes, Welfare, Welfare eligibility, Women, Women's health, Women's health services, Youth services
Latest Action: 01/09/2007 - Star Print ordered on the bill. Bill TextA bill to expand access to preventive health care services that help reduce unintended pregnancy, reduce abortions, and improve access to women's health care. 1/4/2007--Introduced. Prevention First Act - Title X Family Planning Services Act of 2007 - Authorizes appropriations for family planning services grants and contracts under the Public Health Service Act (PHSA). Equity in Prescription Insurance and Contraceptive Coverage Act of 2007 - Amends the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) and PHSA to prohibit a group health plan and a health insurance issuer providing group coverage from excluding or restricting benefits in any way for prescription contraceptive drugs, devices, and outpatient services if the plan or coverage provides benefits for other outpatient prescription drugs, devices, or outpatient services. Applies such prohibitions to coverage offered in the individual market. Emergency Contraception Education Act of 2007 - Directs [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Aliens, Appropriations, Budgets, Children, Economic policy, Employee health benefits, Federal aid to child health services, Finance, Government employees, Government information, Government paperwork, Health insurance, Health policy, Immigration, Income, Income tax, Insurance premiums, Intergovernmental fiscal relations, Labor, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical savings accounts, Medically uninsured, Poor children, State and local government, State employees, Tax credits, Tax deductions, Tax exemption, Tax rates, Tax refunds, Tax returns, Taxation, Welfare, Welfare eligibility
Latest Action: 06/27/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S8616-8617) Bill TextA bill to amend titles XIX and XXI of the Social Security Act to ensure that every uninsured child in America has health insurance coverage, and for other purposes. 1/4/2007--Introduced. Kids Come First Act of 2007 - Amends title XIX of the Social Security Act (SSA) to give states the option to receive 100% Federal Medicaid Assistance Percentages (FMAPs) for medical assistance for children in poverty in exchange for expanded coverage of children in working poor families under Medicaid (SSA title XIX) or SCHIP (SSA title XXI (State Children's Health Insurance)). Eliminates the cap on SCHIP funding for states that expand eligibility for children. Gives states the option to: (1) provide wrap-around SCHIP coverage to children who have other health coverage; (2) enroll low-income children of state employees in SCHIP; (3) provide optional coverage of legal immigrant children under Medicaid and SCHIP; and (4) provide for passive renewal of eligibility for children [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Administrative procedure, Aged, Aid to dependent children, Block grants, Budgets, Business, Caregivers, Child nutrition, Children, Chronically ill, Civil rights, Communications, Community health services, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Consumer education, Consumer protection, Consumers, Cooperative societies, Criminal justice, Disabled, Discrimination in insurance, Discrimination in medical care, Drug abuse, Economic policy, Education, Elementary and secondary education, Employee health benefits, Excise tax, Executive departments, Families, Federal aid to child health services, Federal aid to education, Federal aid to health facilities, Finance, Fines (Penalties), Food, Food stamps, Government contractors, Government information, Government paperwork, Government procurement, Government trust funds, Grants-in-aid, Health care fraud, Health education, Health insurance, Health planning, Health policy, Higher education, Homeless, Hospital care, Hospitals, Housing, Immigration, Income tax, Indexing (Economic policy), Indian medical care, Insurance premiums, Job training, Labor, Law, Legislation, Lifestyle, Long-term care, Long-term care insurance, Maternal health services, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical economics, Medical education, Medical fees, Medically uninsured, Medicare, Medicine, Mental health services, Minorities, Nonprofit organizations, Nursing, Nutrition, Obesity, Parents, Part-time employment, Performance measurement, Physical education and training, Physicians, Poor children, Pregnant women, Preventive medicine, Public contracts, Public health personnel, Quality of care, Reinsurance, Retiree health benefits, Rural affairs, Rural health, Scholarships, School health programs, School lunch program, Self-employed, Signs and symbols, Small business, Smoking, Social services, Sports, State and local government, Student loan funds, Subsidies, Tax credits, Tax deductions, Tax exclusion, Tax penalties, Tax refunds, Tax returns, Taxation, Urban affairs, Urban areas, Welfare, Welfare eligibility, Welfare work participation, WIC program, Withholding tax, Women
Latest Action: 01/04/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S149-150) Bill TextA bill to expand access to affordable health care and to strengthen the health care safety net and make health care services more available in rural and underserved areas. 1/4/2007--Introduced. Access to Affordable Health Care Act - Amends the Internal Revenue Code to allow: (1) tax credits to small businesses for qualified employee health insurance expenses; (2) tax credits for qualified health insurance; (3) deductions for long-term care premiums; and (4) tax credits for individuals with long-term care needs. Requires the Secretary of Labor to award grants to states to assist in planning, developing, and operating qualified small employer purchasing groups for health insurance. Directs the Small Business Administration to award grants to states, local governments, and nonprofit organizations to provide health insurance information to small employers. Requires the Secretary of Health and Human Services (the Secretary) to award demonstration grants for [...] show full description
Latest Action: 02/02/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Health. Bill TextTo amend the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 to allow States and localities to provide primary and preventive care to all individuals. 1/4/2007--Introduced. Amends the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 to provide that aliens and non-immigrants shall be eligible for state and local public assistance for primary and preventive care.
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Admission of nonimmigrants, Alien labor, Aliens, Arizona, Armed forces, Arrest, Border patrols, Boundaries, Business, Central America, Civil liberties, Communication satellites, Computers, Congress, Congressional oversight, Congressional reporting requirements, Cost accounting, Counterfeiting, Crimes against women, Criminal aliens, Criminal justice, Criminal justice information, Data banks, Death, Defense policy, Deportation, Detention of persons, Diplomacy, Drone aircraft, Drug abuse, Drug traffic, Drunk driving, Electronic surveillance, Employers' liability, Environmental assessment, Environmental health, Environmental protection, Equipment and supplies, Excavation, Federal law enforcement officers, Federal-local relations, Federal-state relations, Finance, Fingerprints, Firearms, Firearms control, Foreign policy, Fraud, Gangs, Government employees, Government information, Government vehicles, Governmental investigations, Health policy, Human rights, Identification devices, Illegal aliens, Immigrants, Immigration, Imprisonment, Indian lands, Infrastructure, Intelligence activities, International affairs, International cooperation, Labor, Latin America, Law, Licenses, Light, Limitation of actions, Medical care, Medicine, Mexico, Military civic action, Minorities, Minority business enterprises, Money laundering, National Guard, National parks, Natural resources, Noise, Noise pollution, North America, Occupational health and safety, Passports, Police communication systems, Police training, Prison alternatives, Prisoners, Prisons, Public lands, Quality of life, Recruiting of employees, Refugees, Retired military personnel, Right of property, Road construction, Security measures, Small business, Smuggling, State and local government, Technology, Technology assessment, Terrorism, Terrorists, Transportation, Veterans, Violence, Visas, Weapons, Western Hemisphere, Women, Women in business
Latest Action: 01/18/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S754-755) Bill TextA bill to authorize secure borders and comprehensive immigration reform, and for other purposes. 1/18/2007--Introduced. Border Security and Immigration Reform Act of 2007 - Provides for increases in the numbers of federal immigration enforcement-related positions and technological assets for use along the borders, including Department of Defense (DOD) equipment. Provides for: (1) recruitment of former military personnel; (2) border control facilities construction; (3) land border port of entry construction and improvements; (4) border patrol checkpoints; and (5) fencing, barrier, and road construction and improvements in the Yuma and Tucson sectors. Directs the Secretary of Homeland Security (Secretary) to develop: (1) a comprehensive land and maritime border surveillance plan; (2) a National Strategy for Border Security; (3) a plan to combat human smuggling; (4) a southern border study; and (5) a schedule for equippng all land border ports of entry with the [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Aliens, Budgets, Child health, Children, Federal aid to child health services, Health insurance, Health policy, Immigration, Maternal health services, Medicaid, Medical care, Medically uninsured, Medicine, Poor children, Pregnant women, Welfare, Welfare eligibility, Women
Latest Action: 02/02/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Health. Bill TextTo amend title XIX of the Social Security Act to assure coverage for legal immigrant children and pregnant women under the Medicaid Program and the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP). 1/11/2007--Introduced. Legal Immigrant Health Restoration Act of 2007 - Amends titles XIX (Medicaid) and XXI (State Children's Health Insurance) (SCHIP) of the Social Security Act to require a state plan to provide medical assistance to eligible permanent resident pregnant women and children under the Medicaid and SCHIP programs.
Also tagged in: Academic performance, Birth control, Budgets, Child health, Children, Communications, Contraceptives, Counseling, Data banks, Education, Elementary and secondary education, Ethics, Evaluation research (Social action programs), Families, Federal aid to health facilities, Federal aid to research, Government information, Government paperwork, Grants-in-aid, Health counseling, Health education, Health information systems, Health policy, Immigration, Medical care, Medical research, Medical statistics, Medicine, Mental health, Minorities, Minority health, Nonprofit organizations, Parent and child, Public service advertising, School health programs, Science policy, Secondary education, Sex education, Sexual abstinence, Social services, Technology, Teenage pregnancy, Women
Latest Action: 02/02/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Health. Bill TextTo make grants to carry out activities to prevent teen pregnancy in racial or ethnic minority or immigrant communities, and for other purposes. 1/12/2007--Introduced. Communities of Color Teen Pregnancy Prevention Act of 2007 - Requires the Secretary of Health and Human Services to make grants for projects to prevent teen pregnancies in racial, ethnic minority, or immigrant communities with a substantial incidence or prevalence of cases of teen pregnancy as compared to the average number of such cases in communities in the state involved. Allows the Secretary to make grants to: (1) provide necessary social and cultural support services regarding teen pregnancy; (2) provide health and educational services related to the prevention of teen pregnancy; (3) promote better health and educational outcomes among pregnant teens; (4) provide training for individuals who plan to work in school-based support programs regarding the prevention of teen pregnancy; and (5) provide public [...] show full description
Latest Action: 02/02/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Health. Bill TextTo amend section 1011 of the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003 to permit Puerto Rico to qualify for Federal reimbursement of emergency health services furnished to undocumented aliens. 1/22/2007--Introduced. Amends the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003 to permit Puerto Rico to qualify for federal reimbursement of emergency health services furnished to undocumented aliens.
Also tagged in: Aliens, Budgets, Child health, Children, Federal aid to child health services, Health insurance, Health policy, Immigration, Maternal health services, Medicaid, Medical care, Medically uninsured, Medicine, Poor children, Pregnant women, Welfare, Welfare eligibility, Women
Latest Action: 03/05/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S2630) Bill TextA bill to amend title XIX and XXI of the Social Security Act to permit States the option of coverage of legal immigrants under the Medicaid Program and the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) 3/5/2007--Introduced. Legal Immigrant Children's Health Improvement Act of 2007 - Amends titles XIX (Medicaid) and XXI (Children's Health Insurance) (SCHIP) of the Social Security Act to grant states the option of covering certain categories of eligible pregnant women and child resident aliens, including targeted low-income children, under the Medicaid and SCHIP programs.
Also tagged in: Aliens, Birth control, Block grants, Budgets, Child health, Children, Cigarettes, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Consumers, Contraceptives, Dental care, Drug abuse, Drug abuse prevention, Drugs, Employee health benefits, Federal aid to child health services, Government information, Government publicity, Health counseling, Health insurance, Health policy, Identification devices, Immigration, Infants, Intergovernmental fiscal relations, Labor, Low birth weight, Maternal health services, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical statistics, Medically uninsured, Medicine, Pediatrics, Poor children, Pregnancy, Pregnant women, Prescription pricing, Quality of care, Rural affairs, Rural health, Smokeless tobacco, Smoking, State and local government, State laws, Telecommunication, Telemedicine, Welfare, Welfare eligibility, Welfare waivers, Women, Women's health, Women's health services
Latest Action: 03/07/2007 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance. Bill TextA bill to amend titles XIX and XXI of the Social Security Act to provide States with the option to expand or add coverage of pregnant women under the Medicaid and State children's health insurance programs, and for other purposes. 3/7/2007--Introduced. Prevent Prematurity and Improve Child Health Act of 2007 - Amends titles XIX (Medicaid) and XXI (State Children's Health Insurance Program) (SCHIP) of the Social Security Act (SSA) to give states new options to cover: (1) low-income pregnant women; and (2) low-income legal immigrant pregnant women and children under Medicaid and SCHIP. Extends coverage under Medicaid of prescription drugs and counseling services to tobacco cessation medications to help pregnant women enrolled in the program quit using tobacco. Requires coverage of tobacco cessation counseling services for pregnant women, and exempts such services from cost-sharing charges. Gives states the option under Medicaid to: (1) provide family planning [...] show full description
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Latest Legislation - View All
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Aged, Aid to dependent children, Ambulances, Anesthetics, Appropriations, Budgets, Business, Cardiovascular diseases, Cash welfare block grants, Children, Chronically ill, Communication in medicine, Communications, Disabled, Drugs, Electronic data interchange, Emergency management, Emergency medicine, Families, Federal aid to education, Federal aid to health facilities, Hawaii, Health insurance, Health policy, Higher education, Home care services, Hospital rates, Hospitals, Illegal aliens, Imaging systems in medicine, Immigration, Kidney diseases, Lung diseases, Marketing, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical education, Medical fees, Medically uninsured, Medicare, Medicine, Old age assistance, Physicians, Prescription pricing, Quality of care, Rural affairs, Rural health, Sexual abstinence, State and local government, Technology, Telecommunication, Tennessee, Welfare
Latest Action: 06/12/2008 - Read the second time. Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 776. Bill TextA bill to amend titles XVIII and XIX of the Social Security Act to preserve beneficiary access to care by preventing a reduction in the Medicare physician fee schedule, to improve the quality of care by advancing value based purchasing, electronic health records, and electronic prescribing, and to maintain and improve access to care in rural areas, and for other purposes. 6/11/2008--Introduced. Preserving Access to Medicare Act of 2008 - Craig Thomas Rural Hospital and Provider Equity Act of 2008 - Amends title XVIII (Medicare) of the Social Security Act (SSA) to: (1) revise the payment adjustment for low-volume hospitals; (2) extend increased Medicare payments for ground ambulance services; (3) extend the authorization for Medicare rural hospital flexibility program grants; (4) provide for rebasing for sole community hospitals; and (5) extend the rural home health add-on policy through 2009. Revises the formula for payments for physician services to provide an update [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Administrative remedies, Admission of nonimmigrants, Aliens, Children, Civil rights, Communications, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Correctional institutions, Death, Department of Homeland Security, Deportation, Detention of persons, Employee training, Evidence (Law), Executive departments, Executive reorganization, Families, Foreign policy, Governmental investigations, Immigration, International affairs, Job training, Language and languages, Law, Legal services, Medical care, Medicine, Political persecution, Prison alternatives, Prisoners' rights, Public-private partnerships, Quality of care, Refugees, Right of asylum, Standards, Torture, Translating and interpreting, Victims of crimes
Latest Action: 06/11/2008 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. (Secure and Safe Detention and Asylum Act) Bill TextA bill to provide safeguards against faulty asylum procedures, to improve conditions of detention for detainees, and for other purposes. 6/11/2008--Introduced. Secure and Safe Detention and Asylum Act - Sets forth provisions regarding procedures and standards applicable to aliens detained in Department of Homeland Security (DHS) custody and the conditions of such custody, which shall address: (1) fair and humane treatment; (2) solitary confinement limitations; (3) investigation of grievances; (4) access to telephones and legal assistance; (5) detainee transfers; (6) translation capabilities; (7) medical care; (8) vulnerable populations; (9) standards for non-criminal detainees; (10) personnel training; and (11) reporting of detainee deaths.Establishes in DHS: (1) an Office of Detention Oversight; and (2) a detention alternatives program under which detainees may be released under enhanced supervision.Provides for: (1) legal orientation for immigration and asylum [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Administrative remedies, Aliens, Civil liberties, Civil rights, Criminal justice, Death, Detention of persons, Immigration, Law, Medical care, Medical screening, Medicine, Mental health services, Physical examinations, Prisoners' rights
Latest Action: 05/12/2008 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. Bill TextA bill to require the Secretary of Homeland Security to establish procedures for the timely and effective delivery of medical and mental health care to all immigration detainees in custody, and for other purposes. 5/12/2008--Introduced. Detainee Basic Medical Care Act of 2008 - Directs: (1) the Secretary of Homeland Security to establish procedures for the delivery of medical and mental health care to all immigration detainees in Department of Homeland Security (DHS) custody; and (2) that such procedures address all detainee health needs, including primary care, emergency care, chronic care, prenatal care, dental care, eye care, mental health care, medical dietary needs, and other medically necessary specialized care.
Also tagged in: Administrative remedies, Aliens, Civil liberties, Civil rights, Criminal justice, Death, Detention of persons, Immigration, Law, Medical care, Medical screening, Medicine, Mental health services, Physical examinations, Prisoners' rights
Latest Action: 05/01/2008 - Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary. Bill TextTo require the Secretary of Homeland Security to establish procedures for the timely and effective delivery of medical and mental health care to all immigration detainees in custody, and for other purposes. 5/1/2008--Introduced. Detainee Basic Medical Care Act of 2008 - Directs: (1) the Secretary of Homeland Security to establish procedures for the delivery of medical and mental health care to all immigration detainees in Department of Homeland Security (DHS) custody; and (2) that such procedures address all detainee health needs, including primary care, emergency care, chronic care, prenatal care, dental care, eye care, mental health care, medical dietary needs, and other medically necessary specialized care.
Also tagged in: Admission of nonimmigrants, AIDS (Disease), Communicable diseases, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Federal advisory bodies, Governmental investigations, Health policy, Human immunodeficiency viruses, Immigration, Medical care, Medicine
Latest Action: 12/14/2007 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. Bill TextA bill to remove a provision from the Immigration and Nationality Act that prohibits individuals with HIV from being admissible to the United States, and for other purposes. 12/14/2007--Introduced. HIV Nondiscrimination in Travel and Immigration Act of 2007 - Amends the Immigration and Nationality Act to eliminate the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) bar to U.S. admission. Directs the Secretary of Health and Human Services to: (1) convene a panel of public health experts to review immigration policies regarding HIV as a communicable disease of public health significance (and thus a health-related ground for inadmissibility); and (2) make a determination and report to Congress regarding the continued listing of HIV as a health-related ground for inadmissibility.
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Agriculture, Agriculture in foreign trade, Ambulatory care, Animal diseases, Animals, Armed forces, Biological warfare, Birds, Budgets, Business, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Communicable diseases, Communication in medicine, Communications, Compensation (Law), Congress, Congress and foreign policy, Congressional reporting requirements, Criminal justice, Curricula, Data banks, Defense policy, Department of Health and Human Services, Drug industry, Education, Emergency management, Emergency medicine, Epidemics, Epidemiology, Executive departments, Executive reorganization, Farm income, Federal advisory bodies, Federal aid to health facilities, Foreign aid, Foreign policy, Government procurement, Government publicity, Health education, Health information systems, Health planning, Health policy, Health surveys, Higher education, Hospital care, Immunology, Influenza, International affairs, International cooperation, Internet, Law, Medical care, Medical education, Medical laboratories, Medical personnel, Medical research, Medical statistics, Medical supplies, Medically uninsured, Medicine, Minorities, Minority health, Mortality, National Institutes of Health (NIH), Pharmaceutical research, Poultry, Preventive medicine, Public contracts, Public health administration, Public-private partnerships, Research centers, Science policy, Security measures, Social services, Standards, Storage, Technical assistance, Technology, Telecommunication, Terrorism, Trade, Vaccines, Veterinary medicine, Volunteer workers, Wild animal trade, World health
Latest Action: 04/25/2008 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Livestock, Dairy, and Poultry. Bill TextTo amend the Public Health Service Act with respect to preparation for an influenza pandemic, including an avian influenza pandemic, and for other purposes. 12/6/2007--Introduced. Attacking Viral Influenza Across Nations Act of 2008 - Amends the Public Health Service Act to require the Secretary of Health and Human Services to submit to the Director of the World Health Organization (WHO) a proposal related to establishing a Pandemic Fund for countries affected by pandemic influenza. Establishes the Pandemic Influenza Preparedness Policy Coordinating Committee to develop an Interagency Preparedness Plan. Requires the Secretary to strengthen, expand, and coordinate domestic pandemic influenza preparedness activities. Requires states to have an approved state preparedness plan as a condition of receiving funds related to bioterrorism from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) or the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA). [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Aliens, Ambulances, Clinics, Emergency management, Emergency medicine, Health policy, Hospital rates, Hospitals, Illegal aliens, Medical care, Medical fees, Medically uninsured, Medicine, Transportation
Latest Action: 10/31/2007 - Referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce. Bill TextTo authorize Federal payment to emergency ambulance and medical services providers for the cost of uncompensated care of aliens aided by the border patrol or other Federal immigration officials. 10/31/2007--Introduced. Pay for All Your Undocumented Procedures (PAY UP!) Act of 2007 - Directs the Secretary of Homeland Security to pay emergency ambulance and medical service providers for the cost of uncompensated care of aliens aided by a border patrol officer or other federal immigration official.
Also tagged in: Admission of nonimmigrants, AIDS (Disease), Communicable diseases, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Federal advisory bodies, Governmental investigations, Health policy, Human immunodeficiency viruses, Immigration, Medical care, Medicine
Latest Action: 09/10/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Immigration, Citizenship, Refugees, Border Security, and International Law. Bill TextTo remove from the Immigration and Nationality Act a provision rendering individuals having HIV inadmissible to the United States, and for other purposes. 8/2/2007--Introduced. HIV Nondiscrimination in Travel and Immigration Act of 2007 - Amends the Immigration and Nationality Act to eliminate the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) bar to U.S. admission. Directs the Secretary of Health and Human Services to: (1) convene a panel of public health experts to review immigration policies regarding HIV as a communicable disease of public health significance (and thus a health-related ground for inadmissibility); and (2) make a determination and report to Congress regarding the continued listing of HIV as a health-related ground for inadmissibility.
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Accreditation (Medical care), Adult day care, Aged, AIDS (Disease), Alabama, Ambulances, Ambulatory care, American Samoa, Armed forces, Birth control, Budgets, Business, Cancer, Cardiovascular diseases, Child health, Children, Chronically ill, Clinics, Coinsurance, Collection of accounts, Colon cancer, Communication in medicine, Communications, Congressional reporting requirements, Connecticut, Consumer discounts, Consumers, Defense policy, Dental care, Diabetes, Drug therapy, Drugs, Education, Electronic data interchange, Emergency management, Emergency medicine, Employee health benefits, Energy, Estates (Law), Excise tax, Executive departments, Eye diseases, Families, Family services, Federal advisory bodies, Federal aid to child health services, Finance, Food, Foreign corporations, Gasoline, Government contractors, Government information, Government paperwork, Government trust funds, Governmental investigations, Guam, Health information systems, Health insurance, Health maintenance organizations, Health policy, Hepatitis, Higher education, Home care services, Hospital care, Hospital rates, Hospitals, Human immunodeficiency viruses, Illinois, Imaging systems in medicine, Immigration, Indian medical care, Indians, Influenza, Information technology, Inspectors general, Insurance companies, Insurance premiums, Kidney diseases, Labor, Language and languages, Law, Long-term care, Lung diseases, Mammography, Managed care, Marriage counseling, Massachusetts, Maternal health services, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical centers, Medical economics, Medical education, Medical fees, Medical instruments and apparatus, Medical laboratories, Medical records, Medical research, Medical residents, Medical screening, Medical statistics, Medical supplies, Medical tests, Medically uninsured, Medicare, Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, Medicine, Medigap, Mental depression, Mental health services, Metropolitan areas, Michigan, Midwives, Military personnel, Minnesota, Minorities, New Jersey, New York State, Northern Mariana Islands, Nursing homes, Nutrition, Osteoporosis, Oxygen, Pensions, Physical therapy, Physicians, Pneumonia, Politics and government, Poor children, Pregnant women, Prescription pricing, Preventive medicine, Psychotherapy, Public contracts, Puerto Rico, Quality of care, Rebates, Reinsurance, Rural affairs, Rural health, Science policy, Sexual abstinence, Social services, Social work, Speech disorders, Tax exemption, Taxation, Technology, Telecommunication, Telemedicine, Tennessee, Tobacco tax, Trade, Urban affairs, Vaccines, Virgin Islands, Welfare, Wisconsin, Women
Latest Action: 09/04/2007 - Received in the Senate. Read twice. Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 338. Bill TextTo amend titles XVIII, XIX, and XXI of the Social Security Act to extend and improve the children's health insurance program, to improve beneficiary protections under the Medicare, Medicaid, and the CHIP program, and for other purposes. 8/1/2007--Reported to House amended, Part I. (There are 2 other summaries) Children's Health and Medicare Protection (CHAMP) Act of 2007 - Title I: Children's Health Insurance Program - (Sec. 100) States that it is the purpose of this title to provide dependable and stable funding for children's health insurance under titles XXI (Children's Health Insurance Program) (CHIP) (also known as SCHIP) and XIX (Medicaid) of the Social Security Act (SSA) in order to enroll all six million uninsured children who are eligible, but not enrolled, for coverage today. Subtitle A: Funding - (Sec. 101) Prescribes formulae for new base CHIP allotments for states and territories beginning with FY2008. (Sec. [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Academic performance, AIDS (Disease), Birth control, Budgets, Child health, Children, Communications, Contraceptives, Counseling, Data banks, Education, Elementary and secondary education, Ethics, Evaluation research (Social action programs), Families, Federal aid to health facilities, Federal aid to research, Government information, Government paperwork, Grants-in-aid, Health counseling, Health education, Health information systems, Health policy, Human immunodeficiency viruses, Immigration, Medical care, Medical research, Medical statistics, Medicine, Mental health, Minorities, Minority health, Nonprofit organizations, Parent and child, Public service advertising, School health programs, Science policy, Secondary education, Sex education, Sexual abstinence, Sexually transmitted diseases, Social services, Technology, Teenage pregnancy, Women
Latest Action: 07/16/2007 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. Bill TextA bill to make grants to carry out activities to prevent the incidence of unintended pregnancies and sexually transmitted infections among teens in racial or ethnic minority or immigrant communities, and for other purposes. 7/16/2007--Introduced. Communities of Color Teen Pregnancy Prevention Act of 2007 - Requires the Secretary of Health and Human Services to make grants for projects to prevent teen pregnancies in racial, ethnic minority, or immigrant communities with a substantial incidence or prevalence of cases of teen pregnancy compared to the average number in communities in the state.Allows the Secretary to make grants to: (1) carry out activities to prevent unintended pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections among teens; (2) provide necessary social and cultural support services regarding teen pregnancy; (3) provide health and educational services related to the prevention of unintended pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections among teens; (4) promote [...] |