[Federal Register Volume 66, Number 173 (Thursday, September 6, 2001)]
[Notices]
[Pages 46645-46647]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 01-22354]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
Pediatric Research Loan Repayment Program
AGENCY: National Institutes of Health, HHS.
ACTION: Notice.
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SUMMARY: Pending approval by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
under the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, the
National Institutes of Health (NIH) announces the availability of
educational loan repayment under the NIH Pediatric Research Loan
Repayment Program (the Program). The Program, which is authorized by
section 487F \1\ of the Public Health Service (PHS) Act (42 U.S.C. 288-
6), as added by the Children's Health Act of 2000 (Pub. L. 106-310),
provides for the repayment of the educational loan debt of qualified
health professionals who agree to conduct pediatric research. The
Program provides for the repayment of up to $35,000 of the principal
and interest of the educational loans of such health professionals for
each year of obligated service. The purpose of the Program is the
recruitment and retention of highly qualified health professionals as
pediatric researchers. Through this notice, the NIH invites qualified
health professionals who contractually agree to engage in pediatric
research for at least two years, to apply for participation in the NIH
Pediatric Research Loan Repayment Program.
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\1\ So in law. There are two sections 487F. Section 1002(b) of
Public Law 106-310 (114 Stat. 1129) inserted section 487F above.
Subsequently, section 205 of Public Law 106-505 (114 Stat. 2329),
which relates to a loan repayment program regarding clinical
researchers, inserted a section 487F after section 487E.
DATES: Interested persons may request information about the Program
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beginning on September 6, 2001.
ADDRESSES: Information regarding the requirements and application
procedures for the Program may be obtained by calling or writing: Marc
S. Horowitz, J.D., Office of Loan Repayment and Scholarship, National
Institutes of Health, 2 Center Drive, Room 2E30, Bethesda, MD 20892-
0230 or call non-toll-free number (301) 402-5666 or e-mail your
request, including your address, to [email protected]>.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Children's Health Act of 2000 (Pub. L.
106-310) was enacted on October 17, 2000 adding section 487F of the
Public Health Service (PHS) Act (42 U.S.C. 288-6). Section 487F
authorizes the Secretary, acting through the Director of the NIH, to
carry out a program of entering into contracts with appropriately
qualified health professionals. Under such contracts, qualified health
professionals agree to conduct pediatric research for at least two
years in consideration of the Federal Government agreeing to repay, for
each year of service, not more than $35,000 of the principal and
interest of the educational loans of such health professionals. This
program is known as
[[Page 46646]]
the NIH Pediatric Research Loan Repayment Program (PR-LRP).
Eligibility Criteria
Specific eligibility criteria with regard to participation in the
Pediatric Research LRP include the following:
(1) Participants must be United States citizens, nationals, or
permanent residents;
(2) Participants must have a M.D., Ph.D., Pharm.D., D.O., D.D.S.,
D.M.D., D.P.M., D.V.M., D.C., N.D., or equivalent degree;
(3) Participants must be affiliated with the NIH in one of the
following ways:
(a) A recipient of postdoctoral National Research Service Award
support on an individual postdoctoral fellowship (F32) or an
institutional research training grant (T32). NRSA recipients will only
be eligible for loan repayment during the first and third year of NRSA
support. The second year of postdoctoral NRSA involves repayment of a
service obligation incurred during the first year of NRSA support which
eliminates the possibility of concurrent participation in the loan
repayment program.
(b) A recipient of support under an individual or institutional
research career development award including the following mechanisms:
(1) K01, the Mentored Research Scientist Development Award,
(2) K07, the Academic Clinical Scientist Development Award,
(3) K08, the Mentored Clinical Scientist Development Award,
(4) K12, Mentored Clinical Scientist Development Program Award,
(5) K22, the Career Transition Award with an extramural phase,
(6) K23, the Mentored Patient-Oriented Research Career Development
Award, or
(7) K25, the Mentored Quantitative Research Career Development
Award.
(c) a first-time recipient of NIH grant support as the principal
investigator of an
(1) R01, a research project grant consisting of one research
project,
(2) R03, a small research grant,
(3) R21, an exploratory/developmental grant,
(4) U01, a cooperative agreement consisting of one research
project.
(d) a first-time director of subprojects on multicomponent center
grants (P series grants, program project grants (P01)), or
multicomponent cooperative agreements (U series).
(4) Participants must have total qualifying educational debt in
excess of 20 percent of their annual income or compensation, as
applicable, at their expected date of program eligibility. The expected
date of program eligibility is the date by which the following
conditions will be met: (a) Award date of a qualifying grant, and (b)
the Secretary executes a PR-LRP contract. Contracts are not effective
retroactive to the award date of the grant;
(5) Participants must engage in qualified pediatric research. The
term pediatric research, according to Pub. L. 106-310 (Title X, section
1001), refers to ``research that is directly related to diseases,
disorders, and other conditions in children;'' and
(6) Individuals with existing service obligations to Federal,
State, or other entities will not be considered for the Program unless
and until the existing service obligation is discharged or deferred for
the length of Program participation. Further, any individual who has a
Federal judgment lien against his/her property arising from a Federal
debt is barred from receiving Federal funds, until the judgment is paid
in full or satisfied.
(7) Applicants will not be excluded from consideration under the
Program on the basis of age, race, culture, religion, gender, sexual
orientation, disability, or other non-merit factors.
NIH will evaluate the applicant and awardee pools after the first
year of operation to assess and measure the extent of recruitment and
retention of qualified health professionals to pediatric research. At
that time, NIH will expand the pool of individuals eligible to apply
for loan repayment.
Selection Process
Individuals submit their PR-LRP applications to the Director,
Office of Loan Repayment and Scholarship (OLRS), who forwards those
satisfying the basic eligibility criteria to the relevant NIH
Institutes and Centers (IC) for review. The IC Loan Repayment Committee
(IC-LRC) reviews and ranks applications based upon the following:
(1) A personal statement, which includes a discussion of career
goals and research and academic objectives;
(2) A research statement, which provides a description of the
proposed research project including the specific responsibilities and
role of the applicant in conducting the research;
(3) A research training plan, if applicable, which includes a
detailed description of the mentoring plan, including a discussion of
the research methods and scientific techniques to be taught;
(4) A description of the current research being conducted in the
lab;
(5) Recommendation forms submitted by three individuals.
Information provided addresses the applicant's potential for success in
research and/or academic medicine, potential for success in basic or
clinical research, and their main strengths and weaknesses; and
(6) A supporting statement from the sponsoring institution.
Funds for repayment will only be awarded to IC-LRC-approved
applications, subject to the receipt of an appropriation and/or
allocation of funds from the U.S. Congress, the NIH or IC. The
Director, Office of Loan Repayment and Scholarship (OLRS), provides
current deadlines, sources for assistance, and additional details
regarding application procedures in an Applicant Information Bulletin
that is maintained on the Loan Repayment Program's Internet homepage at
http://lrp.info.nih.gov>.
Program Administration and Details
Under the Pediatric Research LRP, the NIH will repay a portion of
the extant qualified educational loan debt incurred by health
professionals to pay for their undergraduate, graduate, and/or health
professional school educational expenses. Upon application, individuals
must have total qualified educational debt that exceeds 20% of their
anticipated annual compensation (``debt threshold'') on the date of
program eligibility.
An amount equal to 50 percent of the debt threshold will not be
considered for repayment (``participant obligation''). For example, an
applicant has a loan debt of $100,000 and a university compensation of
$40,000. Since the loan debt exceeds the ``debt threshold'' (20% of
university compensation = $8,000), the applicant has sufficient debt
for loan repayment consideration. The ``participant obligation'' is
one-half the debt threshold, in this case $4,000. Thus, repayment of
$4,000 is the applicant's responsibility. The remaining amount
(``repayable debt'') will be considered for repayment.
The repayable debt of qualified health professionals will be
satisfied at the rate of one-quarter per year, subject to a statutory
limit of $35,000 per year, for each year of obligated service.
Obligated service requires selected individuals to engage in at least 2
years of qualified pediatric research as an investigator on an NIH
grant or as the recipient of an NIH award. Following conclusion of the
initial two-year contract, participants may apply for renewal contracts
if they have remaining repayable debt and continue to engage in
qualified pediatric research. These continuation contracts may be
approved on a year-to-year basis, subject to a finding by NIH that the
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applicant's pediatric research accomplishments are acceptable and
qualified pediatric research continues. Funding of contracts is
contingent upon an appropriation and/or allocation of funds from the
U.S. Congress and/or the NIH or ICs.
In return for the repayment of their educational loans,
participants must agree to (1) engage in qualified pediatric research
as an investigator on an NIH grant or as a recipient of an NIH award
for a minimum period of 2 years; (2) make payments to lenders on their
own behalf for periods of Leave Without Pay (LWOP); (3) pay monetary
damages as required for breach of contract; and (4) satisfy other terms
and conditions of the PR-LRP contract and application procedures.
Applicants must submit a signed contract, prepared by the NIH, agreeing
to engage in qualified pediatric research at the time they submit an
application. Substantial monetary penalties will be imposed for breach
of contract.
The NIH will repay lenders for the principal, interest, and related
expenses (such as the required insurance premiums on the unpaid
balances of some loans) of qualified Government (Federal, State, local)
and commercial educational loans obtained by participants for the
following:
(1) Undergraduate, graduate, and health professional school tuition
expenses;
(2) Other reasonable educational expenses required by the school(s)
attended, including fees, books, supplies, educational equipment and
materials, and laboratory expenses; and
(3) Reasonable living expenses, including the cost of room and
board, transportation and commuting costs, and other living expenses as
determined by the Secretary.
Repayments will be authorized for direct payment to lenders,
following receipt of (1) the research supervisor's verification of
completion of the prior period of research, and (2) lender verification
of the crediting of prior loan repayments, including the resulting
account balances and current account status. The NIH will repay loans
in the following order, unless the Secretary determines that
significant savings would result from a different order of priority:
(1) Loans guaranteed by the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services:
Health Education Assistance Loan (HEAL);
Health Professions Student Loan (HPSL);
Loans for Disadvantaged Students (LDS);
Primary Care Loan (PCL); and
Nursing Student Loan Program (NSL);
(2) Loans guaranteed by the U.S. Department of Education:
Direct Subsidized Stafford Loan;
Direct Unsubsidized Stafford Loan;
Direct Consolidation Loan;
Perkins Loan;
FFEL Subsidized Stafford Loan;
FFEL Unsubsidized Stafford Loan; and
FFEL Consolidation Loan;
(3) Loans made or guaranteed by a State, the District of Columbia,
the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or a territory or possession of the
United States;
(4) Loans made by Academic Institutions; and
(5) Private (``Alternative'') Educational Loans:
MEDLOANS; and
Private (non-guaranteed) Consolidation Loan.
Within each category, loans are repaid in order of interest rate
(highest first).
The following loans are NOT repayable under the PR-LRP:
(1) Loans not obtained from a government entity, academic
institution, or a commercial or other chartered lending institution
such as loans from friends, relatives, or other individuals;
(2) Loans for which contemporaneous documentation is not available;
(3) Loans that have been consolidated with loans of other
individuals, such as a spouse.
(4) Loans or portions of loans obtained for educational or living
expenses which exceed a reasonable level, as determined by the standard
school budget for the year in which the loan was made, and are not
determined by the LRP to be reasonable based on additional
contemporaneous documentation provided by the applicant;
(5) Loans, financial debts, or service obligations incurred under
the following programs, or other programs which incur a service
obligation which converts to a loan on failure to satisfy the service
obligation:
Physicians Shortage Area Scholarship Program (Federal or
State);
National Research Service Award Program;
Public Health and National Health Service Corps
Scholarship Program;
Armed Forces (Army, Navy, or Air Force) Health Professions
Scholarship Program; and
Indian Health Service Scholarship Program;
(6) Delinquent loans, loans in default, loans not current in their
payment schedule, loans already repaid or those for which promissory
notes have been signed after the program effective date are not
eligible for repayment; and
(7) PLUS Loans.
During lapses in loan repayments, due either to LRP administrative
complications or a break in service, LRP participants are wholly
responsible for making payments or other arrangements that maintain
loans current, such that increases in either principal or interest do
not occur. Penalties assessed participants as a result of LRP
administrative complications to maintain a current payment status may
be considered for reimbursement.
Additional Program Information
This program is not subject to the provisions of Executive Order
12372, Intergovernmental Review of Federal Programs.
This program is subject to OMB clearance under the requirements of
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995. A Request for OMB Review and
Approval of information collection associated with the program is being
prepared by the NIH and will be sent to OMB for review and approval
prior to implementation of the Pediatric Research LRP.
Dated: August 20, 2001.
The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance number for the
Pediatric Research LRP is 93.285.
Yvonne T. Maddox,
Acting Deputy Director, National Institutes of Health.
[FR Doc. 01-22354 Filed 9-5-01; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140-01-P