93.884: Primary Care Training and Enhancement
Alternate Name: Primary Care Training and Enhancement; PCTE
Overview
Program Number
93.884
Status
Active
Last Modified
Sept. 1, 2022
Date Posted
Sept. 1, 2022
Objective
The overarching purpose of the PCTE Program (T0B) is to strengthen the primary care workforce by supporting enhanced training for future primary care. Activities include: (1) plan, develop, and operate a program that provides training experiences in new competencies, such as providing training relevant to providing care through patient-centered medical homes, developing tools and curricula relevant to patient-centered medical homes, and providing continuing education to primary care providers relevant to patient-centered medical homes; (2) plan, develop and operate a program for the training of physicians who plan to teach in family medicine, general internal medicine, or general pediatrics; (3) plan, develop, and operate a program for the training of physicians or physician assistants teaching in community-based settings; (4) provide need-based financial assistance in the form of traineeships and fellowships to students, residents, practicing physicians or other medical personnel, who are participants in any such program, who plan to work in, teach, or conduct research in family medicine, general internal medicine, general pediatrics, or physician assistant education; and (5) plan, develop and operate joint degree programs to provide interdisciplinary and interprofessional graduate training in public health and other health professions to provide training in environmental health, infectious disease, disease prevention and health promotion, epidemiological studies and injury control. In FY 2017 and FY 2018, PCTE grantees were provided the opportunity to request supplemental funding for training related to Medication Assisted Treatment (MAT).
The PCTE program also funded the following:
1. The Training Primary Care Champions (TPCC) Program (T13), to strengthen primary care and the workforce by establishing fellowship programs to train community-based practicing primary care physician and/or physician assistant champions to lead health care transformation and enhance teaching in community-based settings. Awardees must develop academic-community partnerships to train and support primary care physician and or physician assistant champions to lead health care transformation in community-based settings and enhance teaching in community based settings. Applicants are encouraged to partner with National Health Service Corps-approved sites.
2. The Integrating Behavioral Health and Primary Care (IBHPC) program (T0B), which funds innovative training programs that integrate behavioral health care into primary care, particularly in rural and underserved settings with a special emphasis on the treatment of opioid use disorder.
3. The Physician Assistant (PA) Program (D57), which increases the number of primary care physician assistants, particularly in rural and underserved settings, and improve primary care training in order to strengthen access to and delivery of primary care services nationally.
4. The PCTE Academic Units (AU) for Primary Care Training and Enhancement Program(UH1), which provided the opportunity to request supplemental funding to continue to support collaborative activities that are intended to enable joint research, development of a common community of practice that will assist with dissemination and application of the research into education and practice, and develop plans for sustaining the scope of work of all six centers after federal funding. The PCTE-AU program will close in FY2021.
5. The PCTE Residency Training in Primary Care (RTPC) Program (D58) supports the development of rural and/or underserved residency tracks within existing accredited residency programs for family medicine, general internal medicine, general pediatrics and combined internal medicine and pediatrics (med-peds) programs.
6. PCTE-Community Prevention and Maternal Health (PCTE-CPMH) program (T34). The purpose of the PCTE-CPMH program, funded in FY2021, is to train primary care physicians in maternal health care clinical services or population health in order to improve maternal health outcomes. The program will increase the number of primary care physicians trained in public health and general preventive medicine with maternal health care expertise and the number of primary care physicians trained in enhanced obstetrical care practicing in rural and/or underserved areas.
Type of Assistance
B - Project Grants
Applicant Eligibility
Eligible entities include accredited public or nonprofit private hospitals, schools of allopathic or osteopathic medicine, academically affiliated physician assistant training programs, or a public or nonprofit private entity that the Secretary has determined is capable of carrying out such grants. Federally Recognized Indian Tribal Government and Native American Organizations may apply if they are otherwise eligible.
Beneficiary Eligibility
Beneficiaries include physician and physician assistant training programs that train medical students, physician assistant students, medical residents, practicing physician and physician assistants, and physician and physician assistant faculty.
Related Programs
Additional Information
Federal Award Analysis
Primary Care Training and Enhancement grant spending
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Grant Awards
Primary Care Training and Enhancement direct grants
Grant Opportunities