HR-3747-119
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 628.
Sponsored by Troy Balderson (R-OH)
What it does
This bill would reauthorize the existing Project ECHO Grant Program under the Public Health Service Act and create a new grant category specifically for Alzheimer's disease and related dementia care. It would direct the Secretary of Health and Human Services to award grants to public or nonprofit entities to develop and expand technology-enabled collaborative training models for primary care providers — particularly those serving rural, frontier, medically underserved, and Native American communities. The bill would authorize $10 million per year for the general Project ECHO program through 2032 and $1 million per year for the new dementia-specific grants from 2027 through 2032, and would require grantees to report outcomes to the Advisory Council on Alzheimer's Research, Care, and Services.
Who benefits
Primary care providers in rural, frontier, and medically underserved areas who would gain access to specialized dementia training. Patients with Alzheimer's disease or related dementias — particularly those in underserved communities — who may receive earlier and more accurate diagnoses. Native American communities and urban Indian organizations that would be explicitly eligible for grants. Nonprofit and public health entities that could receive grant funding. Caregivers of dementia patients who may benefit from improved provider competency. The broader healthcare workforce, through improved provider retention incentives built into the program's goals.
Who is hurt
For-profit healthcare entities, which are ineligible for the new dementia-specific grants (limited to public or nonprofit organizations). Providers and patients in areas not designated as rural, frontier, health professional shortage, or medically underserved areas, who would not be prioritized. Taxpayers who bear the cost of the authorized appropriations. Competing grant applicants in other health priority areas who may face resource trade-offs within HHS discretionary budgets.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that an estimated 6.9 million Americans live with Alzheimer's disease, yet primary care providers — often the first point of contact — frequently lack specialized training to diagnose and manage dementia, particularly in rural and underserved areas where specialists are scarce. They contend that the Project ECHO model has a documented track record of improving provider competency through technology-enabled peer learning at low cost, and that targeting the program toward dementia care addresses a measurable gap: studies show significant delays in diagnosis in non-urban settings. The bipartisan 48-0 committee vote, they argue, reflects broad recognition of this unmet need.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that at $1 million per year, the dementia-specific grant funding is too modest to produce meaningful, scalable improvements in care access across the country, and that the bill may create the appearance of action without the resources to match the scale of the problem. They contend that the supplement-not-supplant requirement, while well-intentioned, may be difficult to enforce and could allow states or institutions to redirect existing dementia care funding, undermining the bill's additive intent. Critics may also argue that the federal government should prioritize direct care workforce expansion or reimbursement changes over training grants with uncertain long-term impact on patient outcomes.