HR-5444-119
Referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.
Sponsored by Deborah Ross (D-NC)
What it does
This bill would make medical laboratory professionals eligible for the National Health Service Corps (NHSC), a federal program that offers scholarships and student loan repayment to health care workers who agree to serve in areas with provider shortages. It would also authorize the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to award grants and contracts to hospitals, schools, and nonprofits to create and run accredited education programs that train and credential medical laboratory professionals.
Who benefits
Medical laboratory science students and professionals who would gain access to NHSC scholarships and loan repayment awards. Residents of Health Professional Shortage Areas (HPSAs) who would gain better access to laboratory diagnostic services. Hospitals, universities, and nonprofit organizations that could receive federal grants to build or expand lab training programs. Patients broadly, who depend on laboratory test results for diagnosis and treatment decisions. Rural and underserved communities that disproportionately lack laboratory staffing.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who would bear the cost of new scholarship, loan repayment, and grant spending. Other health professions competing for NHSC funding, which could face greater demand on a finite pool of resources. Private laboratory training programs that do not receive grants but compete with grant-funded programs for students and faculty. Existing NHSC-eligible providers in shortage areas who may face increased competition for the same awards.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the U.S. faces a documented shortage of medical laboratory professionals — the American Society for Clinical Pathology has reported vacancy rates exceeding 25% in some laboratory disciplines — and that diagnostic errors or delays caused by understaffing directly harm patient outcomes. They contend that expanding NHSC eligibility is a targeted, proven mechanism: the NHSC has successfully recruited over 20,000 clinicians to underserved areas, and applying the same model to lab professionals addresses a gap in the existing workforce pipeline.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that expanding NHSC eligibility and creating a new grant program adds federal spending without clear evidence that financial incentives alone will resolve structural barriers — such as low wages, limited career advancement, and difficult working conditions — that drive laboratory workforce attrition. They contend that the bill duplicates existing workforce development authorities under the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) and that new grant programs risk funding administrative overhead rather than producing measurable increases in credentialed laboratory professionals in shortage areas.