HR3885-119

Introduced

To amend the Public Health Service Act to provide community-based training opportunities for medical students in rural areas and medically underserved communities, and for other purposes.

119th Congress Introduced Jun 10, 2025

Legislative Progress

Introduced
Introduced Committee Passed
Jun 10, 2025

Mrs. Miller of West Virginia (for herself, Mr. Veasey, Mr. …

Summary

What This Bill Does

The Community TEAMS Act of 2025 creates a new federal grant program to train medical students in rural areas and medically underserved communities. The goal is to address physician shortages in these areas by giving medical students hands-on clinical experience in the communities that need doctors most, making them more likely to practice there long-term.

Who Benefits and How

Medical schools (both osteopathic and allopathic) gain access to federal grants lasting 1-5 years to establish or expand training partnerships with rural and underserved healthcare facilities. Rural health clinics, Federally qualified health centers, and healthcare facilities in underserved areas benefit from hosting medical students, building relationships with future physicians, and potentially improving their recruitment pipelines. Rural and medically underserved communities ultimately benefit from increased access to healthcare as more physicians choose to practice in their areas.

Who Bears the Burden and How

Federal taxpayers fund the grant program through the Health Resources and Services Administration. Grant applicants must prepare detailed applications including project descriptions, quality improvement plans, sustainability strategies, and evaluation methods, creating administrative burden for participating medical schools and healthcare facilities. There is no direct financial burden on private entities, as participation is voluntary.

Key Provisions

  • Creates grants for consortia that include at least one medical school and at least one rural/underserved healthcare facility
  • Grants support medical student clinical rotations in outpatient and other healthcare settings
  • Grant periods range from 1 to 5 years at the Director's discretion
  • Applicants must demonstrate how their projects will increase healthcare access and ensure quality improvement
  • Applicants must include sustainability plans for continuing programs after federal funding ends
Model: claude-opus-4
Generated: Dec 27, 2025 21:25

Evidence Chain:

This summary is derived from the structured analysis below. See "Detailed Analysis" for per-title beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.

Primary Purpose

The bill aims to enhance medical education by providing grants for community-based training opportunities in rural areas and medically underserved communities, ultimately facilitating long-term physician practice in these regions.

Policy Domains

Healthcare

Bill Structure & Actor Mappings

Who is "The Secretary" in each section?

Domains
Healthcare
Actor Mappings
"the_director"
→ Director of the Health Service Agency (implied)
"the_secretary"
→ Secretary of Health and Human Services (implied)

Key Definitions

Terms defined in this bill

2 terms
"Grants for community-based training" §H0AD688A4612E47449927458292240717

The bill amends Section 330A of the Public Health Service Act to provide grants for expanding community-based medical student training in rural and underserved areas, promoting long-term physician practice.

"Short Title" §H20AF9CF6128B4EAA810A6DC2FB1FCDF9

The Community Training, Education, and Access for Medical Students Act of 2025 or the Community TEAMS Act of 2025.

We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.

Learn more about our methodology