S 1628
106th Congress
Senate
Health
Ambulatory care
Clinics
Community health services
Congress
Congressional reporting requirements
Economics and Public Finance
Education
Federal aid to medical education
Geriatrics
Government trust funds
Higher education
Hospital rates
Medicaid
Medical residents
Medicare
Nursing homes
Physicians
Psychiatrists
Psychiatry
Medicare Physician Workforce Improvement Act of 1999
Introduced: September 23, 1999
See on congress.gov
Everywhere this bill has been
3 steps
Introduced
In committee
Reported out
Passed House
Passed Senate
To President
Became law
Sep 23, 1999
Read twice and referred to the Committee on HELP.
Sep 23, 1999
Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S11365-11366)
Sep 23, 1999
Introduced in Senate
Plain-English summary
Medicare Physician Workforce Improvement Act of 1999 - Amends title XVIII (Medicare) of the Social Security Act to revise the rules for determining the number of full-time equivalent residents in an approved medical residency training program for purposes of determining payments for direct graduate medical education (GME) costs to provide that a resident enrolled in a fellowship in geriatric medicine or geriatric psychiatry within an approved medical residency training program be counted twice for the period such resident is enrolled in such fellowship (thereby doubling GME payments made to teaching hospitals for geriatric fellows). Caps the double payment to be provided for an approved medical residency training program to a maximum of 400 fellows per year.
Directs the Secretary of Health and Human Services to establish and conduct a limited number of demonstration projects to increase the number of certified geriatricians who are appropriately trained to provide items and services to beneficiaries under the Medicare program in a range of patient settings. Directs the Secretary to make annual reports to the Congress on such projects.
What's happening now
Read twice and referred to the Committee on HELP.
Committees of jurisdiction
1
Cosponsors
1