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WASHINGTON — Indian Health Service (IHS) announced $24 million in funding for 12 tribes and tribal organizations to invest in the construction, expansion and modernization of their small ambulatory health care facilities.

The funding, issued through the IHS Small Ambulatory Program, supports the recipients by “expanding access to culturally appropriate, quality health care in an environment that promotes patient safety,” IHS Director Roselyn Tso said in a statement. “Small ambulatory health care facilities are a critical part of the Indian health system because they meet the diverse health care needs of American Indians and Alaska Natives.”

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Up to 95% of tribally operated health care facilities provide ambulatory services, which provide care on an outpatient basis. The ambulatory care health facilities operated by tribes and tribal organizations also provide increased access to culturally appropriate, quality health care, according to IHS.

The following tribes and tribal organizations received funding:

Grant Recipient

Location

Amount

Type of Project

Pascua Yaqui Tribe of Arizona

Tucson, AZ

$1,900,000 

Expansion

Southern Indian Health Council

Alpine, CA

$2,000,000 

Replacement Clinic

Toiyabe Tribe

Coleville, CA

$2,000,000 

Replacement Clinic

Karuk Tribe

Happy Camp, CA

$2,000,000 

Replacement Clinic

Hoopa Valley Tribe

Humboldt, CA

$2,000,000 

Expansion and Modernization

Tule River Indian Health

Porterville, CA

$2,000,000 

Replacement Clinic

Sonoma County Indian Health

Santa Rosa, CA

$2,000,000 

Replacement Clinic

Omaha Tribe of Nebraska

Macy, NE

$2,000,000 

Expansion

Citizen Potawatomi Nation

Choctaw, OK

$2,000,000 

New Clinic

Citizen Potawatomi Nation

Dale, OK

$2,000,000 

New Clinic

Absentee-Shawnee Tribe of Indians of Oklahoma

Shawnee, OK

$2,000,000 

Replacement Clinic

The Klamath Tribes

Klamath Falls, OR

$732,920 

Replacement Clinic

Makah Indian Tribe

Neah Bay, WA

$1,900,000 

Replacement Clinic

 

Since the program began in 2001, more than 61 projects have been funded, totaling more than $123 million. 

The IHS, an agency in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, provides a comprehensive health service delivery system for approximately 2.7 million American Indians and Alaska Natives who belong to 574 federally recognized tribes in 37 states.

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