Student Loan Programs Authorized by the 
March 16, 2021 
Public Health Service Act: An Overview 
Elayne J. Heisler 
The Public Health Service Act authorizes several student loan programs that support 
Specialist in Health 
health workforce development. The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), 
Services 
through the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), administers five 
  
active student loan programs: 
Alexandra Hegji 
Analyst in Social Policy 
  Health Professions Student Loans: available to individuals  who are studying 
  
dentistry, optometry, pharmacy, podiatric, or veterinary medicine. 
  Loans for Disadvantaged Students: available to individuals  from 
 
disadvantaged backgrounds who are pursuing degrees in dentistry, optometry, 
pharmacy, al opathic, osteopathic, or veterinary medicine.  
  Primary Care Loans: available to individuals  who are studying al opathic or osteopathic 
medicine. 
  Nursing Student Loans: available to individuals  who are studying for an associate’s, bachelor’s, 
or graduate degree in nursing.  
  Nurse Faculty Loan Program: available to graduate-level nurses who are interested in 
becoming nurse faculty. These loans are partial y cancel ed in exchange for serving as nurse 
faculty. 
The first four of these programs are operated as revolving loan funds, while the Nurse Faculty Loan Program, 
which includes a loan cancel ation benefit, does not. As of July 31, 2019, approximately 81,800 of these loans, 
together totaling approximately $900 mil ion, were outstanding. 
Under these programs, institutions make loans directly to students using a combination of federal and institutional 
funds. Student eligibility  criteria and loan terms and conditions are general y prescribed in statute and regulations. 
Although HRSA  oversees the overal  operation of the programs, institutions are responsible for the day-to-day 
administration of the programs, including loan servicing and collection activities, which are guided by statutory 
and regulatory requirements.  
A sixth program—the Health Education Assistance Loan (HEAL) Program—previously made loans available to 
eligible  graduate students in schools of medicine, osteopathy, dentistry, veterinary medicine, optometry, podiatry, 
public health, pharmacy, and chiropractic medicine, or in programs in health administration and clinical 
psychology. Congress terminated the authority to make new HEAL Program loans after September 30, 1998, but 
many program loans remain outstanding, and the federal government remains responsible for administering the 
program. HHS original y  administered the program, but the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014 (P.L. 113-76), 
transferred administration of the program to the Department of Education. As of November 15, 2017, HEAL 
program loans totaling approximately $187 mil ion, borrowed by 11,390 individuals, were outstanding.  
 
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Contents 
Loan Program Overview .................................................................................................. 1 
Active PHSA Loan Programs ............................................................................................ 2 
School Eligibility for Program Participation................................................................... 3 
Student Eligibility for Receiving Loans......................................................................... 5 
HPSL, LDS, PCL, and NSL Loan Terms and Conditions ................................................. 7 
Interest Rate ........................................................................................................ 8 
Grace Period........................................................................................................ 8 
Repayment .......................................................................................................... 8 
Default ............................................................................................................. 10 
Loan Cancel ation .............................................................................................. 11 
Program Data.......................................................................................................... 11 
NFLP Loan Cancel ation Data .............................................................................. 17 
Health Education Assistance Loan (HEAL) Program .......................................................... 17 
Student Eligibility.................................................................................................... 18 
Loan Terms and Conditions....................................................................................... 18 
Interest Rates ..................................................................................................... 18 
Repayment ........................................................................................................ 19 
Default ............................................................................................................. 20 
Loan Discharge .................................................................................................. 21 
 
Tables 
Table 1. Active PHSA Loan Program Data ........................................................................ 13 
 
Appendixes 
Appendix. Glossary of Terms .......................................................................................... 22 
 
Contacts 
Author Information ....................................................................................................... 22 
 
Congressional Research Service 
Student Loan Programs Authorized by the Public Health Service Act: An Overview  
 
he Public Health  Service Act (PHSA, 42 U.S.C. §§201 et. seq.) authorizes five student 
loan programs administered by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) 
T through the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA): (1) Health 
Professions Student Loans, (2) Loans for Disadvantaged Students, (3) Primary Care Loans, (4) 
Nursing Student Loans, and the (5) Nurse Faculty Loan Program. These programs aim to, among 
other purposes, assist students who are from low-income backgrounds with the costs of attending 
health professional schools, to diversify the health workforce, and to increase the number of 
primary care physicians. As of July 31, 2019, approximately 81,800 HRSA loans, totaling $900 
mil ion,  were outstanding.1 
Today, most federal student loans are made through the Wil iam D. Ford Direct Loan program, 
which is authorized under Title IV of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (HEA; P.L. 89-329, as 
amended) and administered by the Department of Education (ED).2 As of September 30, 2020, 
approximately $1.3 tril ion in Direct Loan program loans, borrowed by or on behalf of 36 mil ion 
individuals, were outstanding.3 Though HRSA’s programs are relatively smal  in the larger 
context of federal student loans, they offer targeted assistance to health professional trainees and 
may provide incentives that differ from other loan programs (e.g., the ability to delay loan 
repayment during required clinical training, such as internship and residency). 
This report describes PHSA student loan programs, including borrower eligibility  requirements, 
loan terms and conditions, and administrative rules. It also briefly describes the Health Education 
Assistance Loan (HEAL)  program, a related student loan program authorized under the PHSA 
that was previously administered by HRSA and is now administered by ED. The report concludes 
with a table  comparing these programs by borrower type, repayment terms, the number of 
participating schools, and the number and financial amount of outstanding loans.  
Loan Program Overview 
PHSA  Titles VII and VIII authorize six student loan programs to help health profession students 
finance the cost of their education. Five of these programs—hereinafter referred to as active 
PHSA student loan programs—currently make loans available to borrowers and are administered 
by HHS’s HRSA. These programs provide loans to target-specific health professions and 
general y require that participants come from low-income or disadvantaged backgrounds.4 The 
active PHSA student loan programs are as follows:  
  Health Professions Student Loans (HPSL): available to individuals who are 
studying dentistry, optometry, pharmacy, podiatric, or veterinary medicine. 
                                              
1 CRS  Communication with U.S.  Department of Health and Human Service, Health Resources  and Serv ices 
Administration staff, June 4, 2020, and July  14, 2020. 
2 For additional information on the Direct Loan program, see CRS  Report R45931, Federal Student Loans Made 
Through the William   D. Ford Federal Direct  Loan Program : Term s and Conditions for Borrowers. In addition, two 
other federal student loan programs are authorized under T itle IV of the HEA: the Federal Family Education Loan 
program and the Perkins Loan program. Loans are no longer being  made un der  these programs, but borrowers remain 
responsible for making payments on outstanding loans made under the programs. T he Direct Loan program makes up 
the majority of ED’s student loan portfolio—approximately 83% in terms of dollars outstanding and recipients. 
3 Department of Education, Federal Student Aid, Federal  Student Aid  Data Center, “Federal Student Aid  Portfolio 
Summary,” FY2020, Q4, https://studentaid.gov/sites/default/files/fsawg/datacenter/library/PortfolioSummary.xls. 
4 For more information about school-based loan programs administered by the Department of Health and Human 
Service  (HHS), see HHS,  Health Resources  and Services  Administr ation (HRSA), “ School-Based  Loans and 
Scholarships,” https://bhw.hrsa.gov/loans-scholarships/school-based-loans. For information about HRSA’s Nurse 
Faculty Loan Program, see HRSA,  “Nurse Faculty Loan Program (NFLP) Administrative Guidelines” 
https://www.hrsa.gov/sites/default/files/hrsa/grants/faqs/NFLP-admin-guidelines-2017.pdf.   
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Student Loan Programs Authorized by the Public Health Service Act: An Overview  
 
  Loans for Disadvantaged Students (LDS): available to individuals  from 
disadvantaged backgrounds (as defined by the program) who are pursuing 
degrees in dentistry, optometry, pharmacy, al opathic, osteopathic, or veterinary 
medicine.  
  Primary Care Loans (PCL): available to individuals  who are studying 
al opathic or osteopathic medicine.  
  Nursing Student Loans (NSL): available to individuals who are studying for an 
associate’s, bachelor’s, or graduate degree in nursing.  
  Nurse Faculty Loan Program (NFLP): available  to individuals  who are post 
baccalaureate nursing students and who are interested in becoming nurse faculty. 
These loans are partial y cancel ed in exchange for serving as nurse faculty. 
As of July 31, 2019, approximately 81,800 of these loans, totaling $900 mil ion,  were 
outstanding.5 
The sixth program—the Health Education Assistance Loan (HEAL) Program—made loans 
available  to eligible  graduate students in schools of medicine, osteopathy, dentistry, veterinary 
medicine, optometry, podiatry, public health, pharmacy, and chiropractic, or in programs in health 
administration and clinical psychology. Although Congress terminated the authority to make new 
HEAL  Program loans after September 30, 1998,6 many HEAL program loans remain outstanding, 
and the federal government remains responsible for administering the program. HHS original y 
administered the HEAL  program, but the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014 (P.L. 113-76), 
transferred administration of the program to ED. As of November 15, 2017, HEAL program loans 
totaling approximately $187 mil ion,  owed by 11,390 individuals, were outstanding.7 
Active PHSA Loan Programs 
As described above, there are five active PHSA  Loan programs (i.e., those that currently make 
loans available  to students): the HPSL, LDS, PCL, and NSL programs, and the NFLP. School and 
student eligibility  requirements for al  five programs share many attributes, so those requirements 
are discussed together below. Loan terms and conditions for four of the programs—HPSL, LDS, 
PCL, and NSL—are also similar. In addition, al  four programs are operated as revolving loan 
funds. Therefore those programs’ structures and loan terms and conditions are discussed 
collectively below. NFLP terms and conditions are discussed separately, because the intent of the 
program is to provide loan cancel ation benefits to borrowers following a borrower’s completion 
of service requirements; thus its loan terms and conditions vary somewhat from the other four 
programs. (The terms and conditions for this program appear in the “Nurse Faculty Loan Program 
(NFLP) Loan Terms and Conditions” text box below.) 
For each of the active PHSA loan programs, the PHSA authorizes the al ocation of federal funds 
(known as a federal capital contribution, or FCC) to eligible institutions to help them capitalize 
funds to make loans to students pursuing health profession education. For initial participation in 
the programs, institutions were required to contribute a matching institutional capital contribution 
(ICC) equal to at least one-ninth of the FCC. With the exception of the NFLP, which holds 
                                              
5 CRS  Communication with U.S.  Department of Health and Human Service, Health Resources  and Services 
Administration staff, June 4, 2020, and July  14, 2020. 
6 42 U.S.C.  §292a(a). 
7 U.S.  Department of Education, “Health Education Assistance Loan (HEAL) Program,” 82  Federal Register 53377, 
November 15, 2017. 
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periodic competitions for grant funds, institutions participating in each of the active PHSA  loan 
programs provide new loans to students that are capitalized with funds repaid by students who 
previously had borrowed loans made using FCC funds received in prior years and matching ICC 
funds. Specifical y, in the HPSL, PCL, and NSL programs, FCCs were last awarded in FY1983 
and some funds were real ocated in 1986 from schools that returned their FCCs to HHS. For the 
LDS program, Congress repealed the authorization of appropriations for program funds effective 
October 1, 2002, but schools with existing loan funds continue to make new loans to students 
with amounts repaid from prior loans.8 
Initial y,  the FCCs had been al ocated using established regulatory criteria general y based on (1) 
the amount requested by the institutions, (2) HRSA’s determination of the reasonableness of this 
request, and (3) available funding. Today, institutions recapitalize their loan funds by depositing 
the principal and interest repaid by borrowers, which enables institutions to make new loans to 
new borrowers. 
Institutions make loans directly to students. Student eligibility criteria and loan terms and 
conditions are general y prescribed in statute and regulations. Although HRSA oversees the 
overal  operation of the programs, institutions (i.e., schools) are responsible for the day-to-day 
administration of the programs, including loan servicing and collection activities, which are 
guided by statutory and regulatory requirements. In addition, institutions must engage in other 
required administrative activities, such as conducting entrance and exit interviews with 
borrowers.9 
Truth in Lending Act Requirements 
Among other requirements,  the Truth in Lending Act (TILA) requires  that certain lenders of private education 
loans disclose  to borrowers  a variety of information related to such loans at various points in the lending 
relationship (e.g.,  contemporaneously with the consummation of a loan). In general, for pu rposes of TILA, a private 
education  loan is a loan not made under Higher Education Act of 1965 (HEA), Title IV; thus, TILA disclosure 
requirements  apply to schools that make  loans under the various active PHSA loan programs  and to HEAL 
program lenders  (discussed below). Among other items,  a lender must disclose 
 
the “amount financed” (i.e.,  the amount borrowed);   
 
the “finance charge,” “annual percentage rate,” and “total of payments” and a brief description of each term; 
 
the number, amounts, and timing of payments scheduled to repay the obligation;  
 
information about penalty charges that may be imposed  for late payment; and 
 
a statement that the borrower  should refer to the promissory  note for information about nonpayment, 
default, the right to accelerate  the maturity of the obligation, and prepayment. 
Sources: 15 U.S.C.  §§1601-1651 and 12 C.F.R. §1026.18. 
School Eligibility for Program Participation 
In general, the school eligibility  criteria for each of the PHSA student loan programs are similar; 
however, criteria that advance program-specific goals differ from program to program. Although 
no new funding is being awarded to establish PHSA loan programs, participating schools must 
stil  meet program criteria.  
                                              
8 P.L. 105-392, §132. 
9 During these interviews, schools must provide borrowers  with information about their rights and responsibilities with 
respect to the loans, such as information on repayment plans, loan deferments, and the consequences of default. See, for 
example, 42 C.F.R. §57.210(b)(1). 
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For al  active the PHSA  loan programs,10 eligible schools are public or private nonprofit 
institutions located in a state.11 Foreign institutions are not eligible  for PHSA student loan 
programs. Eligible schools must offer the relevant degree for the loan program in which they seek 
to participate (e.g., it must be an al opathic or osteopathic medical school to participate in the 
PCL program). Schools must be accredited by the relevant accrediting organizations for the 
discipline for which they are offering a degree in (e.g., al opathic medical schools must be 
accredited by the Liaison Committee on Medical Education).12 
In addition, schools must enter into a written agreement with the HHS Secretary in which the 
institution agrees to a variety of program conditions, including that the institution wil  establish 
and maintain a student loan fund, that the fund wil  be used only to make student loans to eligible 
borrowers or for the administrative costs associated with collections, that the institution wil  
inform borrowers of the loan terms and conditions, and that the institution wil  submit an annual 
operating report that describes the fund’s uses.  
Each active PHSA loan program requires that a participating school’s default rate for the program 
may not exceed 5%. The formula to calculate the default rate is shown in the text bow below.13 
(For additional information, see “Default” section.) 
School Default Rate 
 Defaulted principal amount outstanding 
divided by 
Matured loans 
Notes:  Defaulted  principal  amount  outstanding  means the total amount ever  borrowed from a 
school’s  loan fund that has entered repayment (but excluding any principal amount that has been 
repaid or cancel ed) and that has been in a default (i.e.,  a borrower  has failed to make a payment 
when due or otherwise failed to comply with the terms  for the loans promissory  note) for at least 
120 days. Matured  loans means the total principal amount of loans ever made by a school, 
excluding the total principal amount of loans made by a school to students are who enrol ed in a 
ful -time course of study at the school or who are in their grace period. 
In general, schools that exceed the 5% threshold must reduce their default rate by 50% by the 
close of the following six-month period.14 After the six-month period, schools that stil  exceed the 
5% threshold must reduce the default rate by 50% for each six-month period that it exceeds 5% 
until the rate reaches 5%. General y, schools that fail to meet these standards may not receive new 
program funding. However, in recent years this has not served as much of a sanction because, 
with the exception of the NFLP, PHSA loan programs are not awarding new funding to schools. 
Schools that do not meet the default rate standards are prohibited from making new loans and are 
                                              
10 Specific statutory sections are PHSA Section 799 (42 U.S.C.  §295o -1), which sets criteria for eligible  institutions; 
Section 721 (42 U.S.C. §292q), which lays out provisions for the loan fund agreements and the conditions that schools 
must agree when administering the fund; and Section 835 (42 U.S.C.  §297a), which specifies criteria for the Nursing 
Student Loan program.  
11 T he term state includes  District of Columbia,  the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Commonwealth of the 
Northern Mariana Islands, the Virgin  Islands, Guam,  American Samoa, and the Republic  of Palau, the Republic  of the 
Marshall Islands, and the Federated States of Micronesia. 42 C.F.R.  §§57.202 and 57.302.  
12 For additional information on accreditation, see CRS  Report R43826, An Overview of Accreditation of Higher 
Education in the United States.  
13 HHS,  HRSA,  “Application to Participate in the Health Professions Student Loans (HPSL) Program” 
https://bhw.hrsa.gov/sites/default/files/bureau-health-workforce/funding/hpsl-application.pdf, p. 6. 
14 Schools with a default rate above 5%, but below  10%, must reduce  the default rate to the 5% threshold within six 
months. 
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required to maintain existing funds, and any funds received, in an interest-bearing account. 
Schools that do not meet the default rate standards may be subject to termination from the 
program, which would terminate their ability to make new loans and would require them to return 
FCC funds to the federal government.15 
Schools that administer PCL and LDS funds must meet additional criteria beyond general 
program eligibility.  To be eligible  for PCL program funds, schools must meet one of several 
specified criteria demonstrating that the school has a record of students practicing primary care.16 
Schools that do not comply with these criteria are subject to penalties requiring them to return a 
portion of their PCL fund incomes. Schools participating in the LDS program must meet specified 
criteria demonstrating a record of recruiting and retaining disadvantaged students and minority 
faculty, providing instruction on minority health issues, having arrangements with clinics that 
serve individuals from disadvantaged backgrounds, having linkages with specified minority-
serving institutions, and offering mentoring programs to help individuals from disadvantaged 
backgrounds obtain health professions degrees.17 Schools that fail to meet these criteria may or 
may not face consequences affecting their program participation.  
Student Eligibility for Receiving Loans 
To be eligible  for any of the active PHSA student loan programs, borrowers must be U.S. citizens, 
nationals, or lawful permanent residents. In general, students must be accepted to or enrol ed full-
time in an eligible  institution (e.g., public or nonprofit institution) and in an eligible  health 
profession educational program, as determined by the specific loan program (e.g., a nursing 
student for the NSL program). Only the NSL program loans are available  to students enrolled on 
a half-time basis. PHSA student loan program funds are primarily intended to support students 
pursuing professional degrees. Therefore, PHSA funds are general y available  only to students 
who have already obtained a bachelor’s degree. However, there are some exceptions to this: (1) 
HPSL and LDS program loans may be used to support borrowers pursuing a bachelor’s of 
pharmacy degree and (2) NSL program loans may be used to obtain an associate’s or bachelor’s 
degree in nursing. Al   PHSA loan programs require students to be in good academic standing to 
remain eligible  for student loan funds.  
With the exception of the NFLP, active PHSA student loan programs require that students 
demonstrate having financial need to be eligible  for funds. Financial need is determined by taking 
into account the financial resources available to a student and the student’s cost of attendance—
the costs reasonably necessary for the student to attend the school, including tuition and 
reasonable living  costs.18 When determining the financial resources available to a student, a 
school must use, in combination with other available information about the student’s financial 
status, the expected family contribution (EFC) calculated according to need analysis formulas 
                                              
15 42 C.F.R. §57.216a.  
16 For example, HHS,  HRSA,  “Application to Participate in the Primary Care Loan (PCL) Program,” 
https://bhw.hrsa.gov/sites/default/files/bureau-health-workforce/funding/pcl-application.pdf, p. 4-5.  
17 For example, HHS,  HRSA,  “Application Loans for Disadvantaged Students (LDS)  Program, Academic Year” 
https://bhw.hrsa.gov/sites/default/files/bureau-health-workforce/funding/lds-application.pdf, pp. 10-11.  
18 In general, institutions participating in the programs have discretion in setting their costs of attendance. HRSA has 
indicated that using the HEA T itle IV requirements for developing costs of attendance “is an appropriate approach.” 
See,  for example, HHS,  HRSA,  “ST UDENT  FINANCIAL AID GUIDELINES,  HEALT H PROFESSIONS 
PROGRAMS,  Health Professions Student Loan Program (HPSL) ,” December 2011, https://bhw.hrsa.gov/sites/default/
files/bureau-health-workforce/funding/hpsl-financial-aid-guidelines.pdf,  p. 15. 
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specified under Title IV-F of the HEA.19 In general, schools must collect and assess parents’ 
financial information even if a student is considered independent for financial aid purposes under 
the HEA.20 Students who do not provide parents’ financial information are ineligible  for PHSA 
loan programs. Under the PCL program, however, schools are permitted, but not obligated, to 
require that independent students21 provide parental financial information.22 
With the exception of the NFLP, students are required to register for selective service (if 
applicable) to be eligible  for loans under the PHSA loan programs.23 Although the programs do 
not prohibit schools from making loans to students who have defaulted on other federal student 
loans (e.g., those made under the HEA), HRSA suggests that schools establish such a policy to 
more thoroughly vet students in default before awarding PHSA student loan funds.24 
In general, individuals  may borrow loan amounts for up to the cost of attendance for each year of 
attendance at an eligible  school. There are no aggregate loan limits for loans made through the 
Title VII PHSA programs (PCL, LDS, and HPSL). Loan amounts may be made for up to the cost 
of attendance; however, for the third and fourth years of medical school, under the LDS and PCL 
programs, loan amounts may exceed the cost of attendance. These extra amounts must be used to 
pay down previously borrowed student loans that were used to finance health professional 
education under programs other than the PCL, LDS, and HPSL programs.25 This al owance 
effectively enables students to refinance a portion of their outstanding student loan debt. Loans 
made under the Title VIII nursing programs are subject to annual and aggregate limits. Students 
may not borrow more than $3,300 per year in initial periods of study under the NSL program, 
although students may borrow up to $5,200 per year in the last two years of study. Individuals 
participating in the NSL program may not borrow an aggregate amount that exceeds $17,000.26 
For NFLP, HRSA  sets an annual loan limit of $35,500 per student for any academic year but does 
not specify an aggregate limit.27 Statute specifies that NFLP annual loan amounts may be adjusted 
to reflect the cost of pursuing an advanced nursing education.28 
                                              
19 For additional information on the need analysis formula, see CRS  Report R44503, Federal Student Aid: Need 
Analysis Form ulas and Expected Fam ily Contribution. T he FAFSA Simplification Act (Division FF, T itle VII of the 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 [P.L. 116-59]) amended HEA T itle IV-F by creating a student aid  index to 
replace the expected family contribution. T he act made additional changes to the need analysis formulas specified in 
the HEA. In general, changes made by the FAFSA  Simplification Act will  not go into effect until July 1 , 2023. 
20 Under the HEA, independent students include (but are not limited to) students who are 24 years of age  or older by 
December 31 of the award  year and graduate  and professional students. HEA §480(d) (20 U.S.C.  §1087vv(d)).  
21 For the PCL program, an independent student is a student who is at least 24 years of age and can prove that he or she 
has been independent for a minimum of 3 years. 
22 HHS,  HRSA,  “ST UDENT  FINANCIAL AID GUIDELINES,  HEALT H PROFESSIONS  PROGRAMS,  Primary 
Care Loans,” December 2011, https://bhw.hrsa.gov/sites/default/files/bureau-health-workforce/funding/PCL-student-
financial-aid-guidelines.pdf,  p. 35.  
23 For information on the Selective Service, see CRS  Report R44452, The Selective Service System and Draft 
Registration: Issues for Congress. 
24 See,  for example, HHS, HRSA,  “ST UDENT  FINANCIAL AID GUIDELINES,  HEALT H PROFESSIONS 
PROGRAMS,  Primary Care Loans,” December 2011, https://bhw.hrsa.gov/sites/default/files/bureau-health-workforce/
funding/PCL-student -financial-aid-guidelines.pdf,  p. 37. 
25 It does not appear that there are other restrictions on the type of previously borrowed student loan debt that may be 
paid down  with LDS  and PCL program loans.  
26 42 U.S.C.  §297b. 
27 HHS,  HRSA,  “Nurse Faculty Loan Program (NFLP): HRSA-20-004,” https://grants.hrsa.gov/2010/Web2External/
Interface/Common/EHBDisplayAttachment.aspx?dm_rtc=16&dm_attid=b631c79e-c7a8-4a3b-b28c-4b1587f5126c. 
28 42 U.S.C.  §297n-1(c)(2). 
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HPSL, LDS, PCL, and NSL Loan Terms and Conditions  
As discussed below, the loan terms and conditions for the HPSL, LDS, PCL, and NSL are similar. 
(The NFLP is discussed separately in the text box below because that program’s loan terms and 
conditions vary from the other four programs, given the NFLP’s intent to provide loan 
cancel ation benefits to borrowers in exchange for serving as nurse faculty at an accredited 
nursing school.) Unless otherwise specified, the information in this section applies to each active 
PHSA loan program except the NFLP.  
Nurse Faculty Loan Program (NFLP) Loan Terms and Conditions  
HRSA’s  NFLP provides competitive  discretionary  grant awards to nursing schools to operate a loan fund. Unlike 
the other PHSA school-based loan programs,  which have a revolving  fund where new loans are made from repaid 
loans, the NFLP works  by cancel ing up to 85% of outstanding loans in exchange for borrowers’  four-year service 
as nurse faculty members  at accredited nursing schools.  Because repaid loan amounts may be insufficient to make 
new loan awards from an institution’s loan fund, additional funding is required for  the institutional loan fund to 
remain  operational. The NFLP was created because experts had identified nurse faculty shortages as a key factor 
limiting  the rate at which new nurses  could be recruited to avert a predicted nursing shortage. 
The awarding of grants has not been consistent over the years; grants have been awarded in some  years but not in 
others. Most recently, in FY2020, one-year awards were  made to approximately 81 schools,  some of which were 
to continue existing programs.  To receive  funds (either new or continuing), schools must provide HRSA with 
information on how they intend to use the funds, including their plans to use al  funds within 18 months.  
NFLP loans are available to advanced nursing students (i.e.,  doctoral level,  master’s  level,  or combined bachelor’s 
and master’s  program students) who agree to serve  as nursing faculty. In exchange for a recipient’s  service  as a 
nurse faculty member,  the awarding school cancels up to 85% of the principal and interest  of an NFLP loan over a 
four-year period,  with 20% cancel ed during each of the first, second, and third years of service.  After the 
borrower  completes  a fourth year of service,  the school cancels 25% of the principal of and interest on the NFLP 
loan. Any portion of the loan not cancel ed (i.e.,  the remaining 15%) must be repaid beginning after the four-year 
service  period has ended. In general, NFLP loans have an annual interest rate of 3%, which begins accruing three 
months after a borrower  ceases pursuing a course  of study at a school of nursing. A  9-month grace period begins 
immediately  after a borrower  ceases to pursue a course of study at a nursing school. During this grace period, a 
borrower  is not required to make loan payments, but interest  accrues during the final six months). In addition, a 
borrower  is al owed an additional three-month grace period (beyond the initial nine-month grace period) to 
obtain employment fol owing  graduation. For borrowers  who fail to complete their program of study, do not 
obtain employment as nurse faculty within 12 months of graduation, or do not serve  the ful  four-year period, the 
interest rate on NFLP loans changes from  3% to the prevailing market  rate, which is adjusted annual y. The 
prevailing market  rate is determined  by the Treasury Department after considering private consumer  rates of 
interest and is published quarterly in the Federal Register. For example,  for January-March 2021, the prevailing 
interest rate is 9 5/8%. 
NFLP loans are repayable in equal or graduated instal ments,  in accordance with the agreement made between the 
borrower  and the school.  The repayment period for an NFLP  loan is 10 years.  This term  applies to borrowers 
who have completed their service  commitment  and are repaying their remaining  loan balance. Borrowers  may 
prepay al  or part of the loan. Loans may be deferred  for up to three years while a borrower  is performing active 
duty service  as a member  of the uniformed service  or  serving as a Peace Corps volunteer. Loans may be deferred 
for up to 10 years while  a borrower  is pursuing a graduate nursing degree on at least a half-time basis or is 
otherwise  pursuing advanced professional training in nursing (e.g., a post-doctoral fel owship).  In addition, an 
institution may place a borrower’s  loan in forbearance when “extraordinary circumstances  affect loan repayment.” 
Neither statute, regulations, nor guidance specify consequences of default for individual borrowers,  nor when 
default is considered to have occurred for such purposes.   
As with the other PHSA loan programs,  an NFLP loan may be cancel ed if the borrower  dies or becomes  total y 
and permanently disabled. Final y,  eligible  borrowers  may consolidate their NFLP loans into a Direct Loan program 
Consolidation Loan.  
Sources: HHS, HRSA,  “Nurse Faculty Loan Program  (NFLP): HRSA-20-004,” https://www.hrsa.gov/grants/find-
funding/hrsa-20-004; HHS, HRSA,  “Nurse Faculty Loan Program (NFLP) Administrative  Guidelines,”  September 6, 
2017, https://www.hrsa.gov/sites/default/files/hrsa/grants/faqs/NFLP-admin-guidelines-2017.pdf;  and HHS, “Interest 
Rates on Overdue and Delinquent Debts,” https://www.hhs.gov/about/agencies/asfr/finance/financial-policy-library/
interest-rates/index.html,  accessed March 2, 2021. 
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Interest Rate  
PHSA loans general y  incur an interest rate of 5% if they were borrowed after November 4, 
1988.29 Under the PCL program, borrowers must practice primary care for a minimum of 10 years 
or until the loan is repaid, whichever comes first.30 Failure to meet the primary care service 
requirement results in an increased interest rate, depending on when the loan was borrowed. For 
loans made prior to November 13, 1998, the interest rate increases to 12%.31 For loans made on 
or after November 13, 1998, and before March 23, 2010, the interest rate increases to 18%. For 
loans made after March 23, 2010, the interest rate increases by 2 percentage points (i.e., to 7%).32 
Interest does not begin to accrue on PHSA loans until the expiration of the grace period. 
Grace Period 
The grace period, during which repayment of principal is not required and interest does not 
accrue, is one year for HPSL, LDS, PCL program loans, and nine months for NSL program loans. 
The grace period begins immediately after a borrower first ceases to be enrolled on a full-time 
basis in a health professions program, or ceases to be enrolled on at least a half-time basis for 
NSL.33 The grace period cannot be postponed to follow any deferments (e.g., a deferment for 
clinical training). As such, the grace period encompasses the first year of residency/advanced 
clinical training or the first nine months of advanced clinical training for nurses.  
Repayment  
Borrowers are required to make payments on their loans during a repayment period that begins 
immediately after the grace period or after any permissible deferments. Payments must be made 
no less often than quarterly and may be made in equal or graduated instal ments in accordance 
with a repayment schedule34 made between the borrower and the school. Borrowers who are more 
than 60 days late with a payment must be placed on a monthly repayment schedule.  
Monthly instal ments must be at least $40 per month, and a school may not agree to a payment 
schedule that does not require at least a quarterly payment of principal and accrued interest. In 
                                              
29 Different interest rates apply to PHSA loans made  prior to November 5, 1988, depending on the date of 
disbursement. 
30 Individuals  who received a loan prior to March 23, 2010, must practice primary care until the loan is repaid. T hese 
changes are described  in CRS  Report R41278, Public Health, Workforce, Quality, and Rela ted Provisions in ACA: 
Sum m ary and Tim eline.  
31 Schools were  also required  to recalculate the balance due  on the loan from the date of disbursement  at an interest rate 
of 12% and compounded annually, for which borrowers  would  be responsible for repaying. HHS,  HRSA,  “Student 
Financial Aid Guidelines,  Health Professions Programs, Primary Care Loan Program,” December 2011, 
https://bhw.hrsa.gov/sites/default/files/bureau-health-workforce/funding/PCL-student -financial-aid-guidelines.pdf. 
32 42 U.S.C.  §297s(a)(3). T he Servicemembers Civil  Relief Act caps the maximum interest charged on any debt 
incurred by a member of the armed forces and the commissioned corps of the National Oceanic Atmospheric 
Administration and the Public Health Service prior to entering active duty service at no higher than 6% per year for the 
duration of their active duty service, if their ability to pay is materially affected by active -duty status. T he cap is not 
automatic and must be requested  by the servicemember. For additional information, see CRS  Report R45283, The 
Servicem em bers Civil Relief Act (SCRA): Section -by-Section Sum mary. 
33 HHS,  HRSA,  “Student Financial Aid  Guidelines,  Health Professions Programs,” “Nursing Student Loan Program,” 
June 2017, https://bhw.hrsa.gov/sites/default/files/bureau-health-workforce/funding/nsl-financial-aid-guidelines.pdf,  p. 
24. 
34 A repayment schedule is  the schedule by which  borrowers are required  to make loan payments. It includes a due  date 
for each payment, t he amount credited to principal and interest from each payment, and any minimum payment 
amounts that may be required. 
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general, repayment periods must be not less than 10 years, but not more than 25 years.35 The 
repayment period for the NSL program is 10 years.36 With the exception of the NSL program, 
schools are instructed to determine the appropriate repayment period based on a borrower’s loan 
amounts and projected income. However, schools must attempt to maximize the amount of funds 
available  for revolving student loan funds while attempting to provide borrowers with flexibility 
to repay their loans.37 
A borrower may, at his or her option and without penalty, prepay al  or any part of the principal 
and accrued interest at any time. The prepayment must first be applied to accrued interest and 
penalties, if any, and then to the principal balance.  
Borrowers who are having difficulty making payments may receive a loan deferment or 
forbearance. A deferment is a temporary period during which a borrower’s obligation to make 
regular payments of principal and interest is suspended. During deferment periods, interest does 
not accrue. For each loan type, deferment may be granted in the following circumstances:  
  up to three years for active duty in the uniformed services;38 
  up to three years for service as a Peace Corps volunteer;39 
  while pursuing advanced professional training (e.g., residency or fel owship);40 
  up to two years for a leave of absence from a school to pursue related educational 
activity;41 and 
  up to two years for training fel owships, training programs, and related 
educational activities for graduates of a health professional school. 
For the NSL program, loans may be deferred for up to 10 years during the time in which a 
borrower is enrolled on at least a half-time basis in a collegiate nursing program leading to a 
baccalaureate degree in nursing or a graduate degree in nursing or training to become a nurse 
anesthetist. NSL program loans may be used to pursue associate’s, bachelor’s, and master’s level 
nursing training. As such, this deferment permits individuals who received support for a prior 
degree to receive additional  support to advance in the nursing career ladder, provided that such 
deferments do not exceed 10 years.  
                                              
35 Deferment periods are excluded  from the 25-year limit. 
36 HHS,  HRSA,  “Student Financial Aid  Guidelines,  Health Professions Programs,” “Nursing Student Loan Program,” 
June 2017, https://bhw.hrsa.gov/sites/default/files/bureau-health-workforce/funding/nsl-financial-aid-guidelines.pdf,  p. 
31. 
37 See  HHS,  HRSA,  “Student Financial Aid  Guidelines,  Health Professions Programs, Primary Care Loan Program 
(PCL),” December 2011, https://bhw.hrsa.gov/sites/default/files/bureau-health-workforce/funding/PCL-student-
financial-aid-guidelines.pdf,  p. 72. 
38 Uniformed services includes  active duty service in the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Coast Guard,  National 
Oceanic Atmospheric Administration, and the Public Health Service. See,  for example, 42 C.F.R. § 57.210(a)(2). 
39 Service in Volunteers in Service to America (VIST A)  volunteer does not qualify for deferment. 
40 Clinical training at a foreign institution may qualify a borrower for deferment, although foreign institutions 
themselves are not eligible  to participate in these programs. Foreign clinical training would  qualify  an individual  for a 
deferment if such  training counts for purposes of licensure  or board certification where applicable. Schools are 
permitted to determine if such training is  eligible  for forbearance.  
41 T his educational activity must be through a joint -degree program that is related to the original degree  for which the 
borrower is receiving support. While the educational program may exceed two years, PHSA  loans may only be 
deferred for two years for a related degree.  
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PHSA student loans may be placed in forbearance, during which a borrower’s obligation to make 
payments on a loan’s principal is temporarily suspended but interest continues to accrue.42 During 
forbearance, a borrower must make a minimum payment on the interest that continues to accrue. 
An institution may grant a borrower forbearance when extraordinary circumstances exist.43 
Examples of extraordinary circumstances include unemployment, poor health, or other short-term 
personal problems that temporarily curtail a borrower’s ability to make scheduled payments. 
HRSA guidance urges schools to minimize the use of forbearance to lessen the potential burden 
for borrowers because of a reduced payment schedule.44 Borrowers must request forbearance, and 
institutions have discretion in whether to grant it. HRSA requires that institutions annual y obtain 
documentation that supports a borrower’s request for forbearance. 
In addition, HRSA permits institutions to renegotiate a borrower’s repayment schedule when the 
borrower is able to make regular payments but is unable to pay the amount needed to keep the 
account current. The institution and borrower must agree on a new repayment schedule; however, 
the new schedule does not supersede the requirement to repay the loan within the established 
program time periods (e.g., 25 years for PCL and 10 years for NSL).45 
Final y,  with the exception of PCLs,46 eligible  borrowers may consolidate their PHSA program 
loans into a Direct Loan program Consolidation Loan.47 Consolidation  al ows borrowers to 
refinance their loan by borrowing a new loan and using the proceeds to pay off their existing 
student loan obligations. After consolidation, terms and conditions of Direct Consolidation Loans 
apply; PHSA program loan terms and conditions no longer apply.  
Default 
A borrower is considered to be in default on his or her PHSA loan if he or she fails to make a 
payment when due48 or otherwise fails to comply with the terms of the loan’s promissory note.49 
Institutions must assess borrowers a late fee for payments that are more than 60 days late. For 
                                              
42 See,  for example, HHS, HRSA,  “Student Financial Aid  Guidelines,  Health Professions Programs, Primary Care L oan 
Program (PCL),” December 2011, https://bhw.hrsa.gov/sites/default/files/bureau-health-workforce/funding/PCL-
student-financial-aid-guidelines.pdf,  p. 76.  
43 See,  for example, 42 C.F.R. §57.210. 
44 See,  for example, HHS, HRSA,  “Student Financial Aid  Guidelines,  Health Professions Programs, Primary Care 
Loans,” December 2011, https://bhw.hrsa.gov/sites/default/files/bhw/pcl.pdf https://bhw.hrsa.gov/sites/default/files/
bureau-health-workforce/funding/PCL-student-financial-aid-guidelines.pdf, p. 76. 
45 HRSA  permits HPSL and LDS  loans to be repaid over 25 years, but  guidance  regarding  negotiation refers to a 10 -
year repayment schedule for both programs. As such, it is unclear how  the longer length operates with regard to loan 
terms that have been renegotiated. See HHS,  HRSA,  “Student Financial Aid  Guidelines  Health Professions Program: 
Health Professions Student Loan Program, (HPSL)” December 2011, https://bhw.hrsa.gov/sites/default/files/bureau-
health-workforce/funding/hpsl-financial-aid-guidelines.pdf, p. 38 and, HHS,  HRSA,  “ Student Financial Aid 
Guidelines,  Health Professions Programs, Loans for Disadvantaged  Students Program  (LDS),” December, 2011, 
https://bhw.hrsa.gov/sites/default/files/bureau-health-workforce/funding/lds-financial-aid-guidelines.pdf,  pp. 44.  
46 PCLs are ineligible  for consolidation into a Direct Consolidation Loan because  of the requirements that PCL 
borrowers work for 10 years in primary care. 
47 20 U.S.C.  §1078-3(a)(4). Borrowers must meet additional criteria to consolidate their PHSA loans into a Direct 
Consolidation Loan, including  having at least one loan borrowed  through the Direct Loan program or the Federal 
Family Education Loan program.  
48 T his is unlike the rules applicable to loans made under  the HEA T itle IV Direct Loan program, where a borrower is 
generally considered in default on a loan when he or she fails  to make required  payments or otherwise fails to comply 
with the terms of loans promissory note for 270 days. 34 C.F.R. §685.102(b).   
49 42 C.F.R. §§57.202 and 57.302. A promissory note is a contract between a lender and a borrower that contains the 
terms and conditions of the loan.  
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loans disbursed or promissory notes signed on or after October 22, 1985, the late fee may not 
exceed 6% of the instal ment payment. Schools must notify appropriate consumer reporting 
agencies regarding borrowers whose accounts are at least 120 days overdue.50 
Schools have several options in handling borrower default, including accelerating the loan 
payment, wherein the entire unpaid balance of the loan becomes due in full, and referring 
defaulted loans to a collection agency and instituting legal proceedings against a borrower.51 In 
addition, schools may refer loans to the Secretary for collection assistance, which could include 
the offset of federal employee salaries, if applicable, and subsequent referral to the Attorney 
General for appropriate civil action.52 
With the exception of PCLs, a borrower may consolidate his or her defaulted PHSA loan into a 
Direct Consolidation Loan under ED’s Direct Loan program by using the proceeds of a new 
Direct Consolidation to pay off the defaulted loan. This would effectively cure the default on the 
PHSA loan, as the loan would be considered paid in full. To be eligible  to do so, a borrower must 
make satisfactory repayment arrangements with the loan holder53 or agree to repay the Direct 
Consolidation Loan under one the income-driven repayment plans available under the Direct 
Loan program.54 
Loan Cancellation 
PHSA loans may be cancel ed (sometimes referred to as loan discharge) if the borrower dies or 
becomes permanently and total y disabled.55 Schools are permitted to charge borrowers an 
insurance premium to cover the loss of institutional funds resulting from such cancel ation.56 In 
addition, PHSA loans may be discharged in bankruptcy under limited circumstances.57 
Program Data 
Schools that participate in the active loan programs are required to provide HRSA  with annual 
data on their programs. The most current data available are as of July 1, 2019. Table 1 provides 
data on the five active loan programs. Data are sorted by program; however, it is possible for a 
                                              
50 42 C.F.R. §§57.210(b)(1)(x) and 57.310(b)(1)(x). 
51 Institutions are required to use all  of these practices to some extent; however, they often have discretion in 
determining when and how  to use these practices. 42 C.F.R. §§57.210(b) & 57.310(b). See also  HHS,  HRSA,  “ Student 
Financial Aid Guidelines,  Fiscal Management , Accounting Procedures,” https://bhw.hrsa.gov/sites/default/files/bureau-
health-workforce/funding/fiscal-management -accounting.pdf, pp. 19-26. 
52 42 U.S.C.  §§292r(l) and 297b(j). 
53 Regulations do not define “satisfactory repayment arrangements.” 
54 34 C.F.R. §  685.220(i)(3)(ii) and U.S. Department of Education, “Direct Consolidation Loan Application an d 
Promissory Note: William D. Ford Federal  Direct Loan Program,” OMB No. 1845 -0053. For additional information on 
the income-driven repayment plans, see CRS  Report R45931, Federal Student Loans Made Through  the William  D. 
Ford Federal Direct Loan Program : Term s and Conditions for Borrowers. 
55 A borrower is considered  permanently and totally disabled if he or she is “unable to engage in any substantial gainful 
activity because of a medically determinable impairment, which the Secretary expects to continue for a long time or to 
result in death.” HHS, HRSA;  see, for example, 42 C.F.R. §57.211(a). 
56 T he insurance premium may not exceed 0.6% of the loan amount disbursed.  See,  for example,  HHS,  HRSA, 
“ST UDENT  FINANCIAL AID GUIDELINES,  HEALT H PROFESSIONS  PROGRAMS,  Primary Care Loan  Program 
(PCL),” December 2011, https://bhw.hrsa.gov/sites/default/files/bureau-health-workforce/funding/PCL-student -
financial-aid-guidelines.pdf,  p. 61. 
57 Section 523(a)(8) of the Bankruptcy Code (11 U.S.C. §  523(a)(5)), provides that student loans are presumptively not 
dischargeable  in bankruptcy absent an undue hardship. For additional information, see CRS  Report R45113, 
Bankruptcy and Student Loans, Bankruptcy and Student Loans. 
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Student Loan Programs Authorized by the Public Health Service Act: An Overview  
 
borrower to receive loans for more than one PHSA program. Available  data do not track 
individual  borrowers for confidentiality reasons. As such, it is not possible to determine unique 
borrower counts in each of the programs.  
 
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 link to page 18  
Table 1. Active PHSA Loan Program Data  
(Data as of July 2019) 
Statutory  Citation 
Number  of 
Total Outstanding 
Average 
and Program 
Repayment 
Schools 
Number  of 
Loan Balance 
Outstanding  Loan 
Website 
Borrower Type 
Terms  
Participating 
Outstanding  Loans 
($ in thousands) 
Balance 
Health  Professions Student  Loans 
42 U.S.C.  §§292q-r 
Low-income  student   
Repayment schedule of 
112 
30,050 
$387,888 
$12,908 
(https://bhw.hrsa.gov/ enrol ed  in accredited 
not less than 10 years, but 
sites/default/files/
schools of dentistry, 
not more  than 25 years 
bureau-health-
optometry, 
 
5% interest  rate 
workforce/funding/
pharmacy, podiatric, 
hpsl-financial-aid-
or veterinary 
 
Deferment  for 
guidelines.pdf)  
medicine   
postgraduate training 
needed for licensure  (e.g., 
residency) 
 
Renegotiation and 
forbearance permitted  
 
Eligible for consolidation 
into Direct  Loan program 
Primary Care Loans 
42 U.S.C.  §292s 
Low-income  students   
Repayment schedule of 
98 
2,119 
$149,540 
$70,571 
(https://bhw.hrsa.gov/ enrol ed  in accredited 
not less than 10 years and 
sites/default/files/
schools of 
not more  than 25 years 
bureau-health-
osteopathic or 
workforce/funding/
al opathic medicine   
 
Deferment  for 
postgraduate training 
PCL-student-
needed for licensure  (e.g., 
financial-aid-
residency) 
guidelines.pdf)  
 
Must complete a 
residency in primary care 
and practice for 10 years 
(for borrowers  after 
March 23, 2010) or until 
the loan is repaida  
 
Interest rate of 5%, but 
increases  for borrowers 
CRS-13 
 link to page 18  
Statutory  Citation 
Number  of 
Total Outstanding 
Average 
and Program 
Repayment 
Schools 
Number  of 
Loan Balance 
Outstanding  Loan 
Website 
Borrower Type 
Terms  
Participating 
Outstanding  Loans 
($ in thousands) 
Balance 
who fail to meet the 
primary  care service 
requirement.  For 
borrowers  after March 
23, 2010, rate increases 
2% above prior  rate 
 
Renegotiation and 
forbearance are 
permitted 
 
Ineligible  for consolidation 
into Direct  Loan program  
Loans for Disadvantaged  Students 
42 U.S.C.  §292t 
Students from 
 
Repayment schedule of 
105 
7,058 
$151,889 
$21,520 
(https://bhw.hrsa.gov/ disadvantaged 
not less than 10 years and 
sites/default/files/
backgrounds enrol ed 
not more  than 25 years 
bureau-health-
in accredited schools  
workforce/funding/
of dentistry, 
 
5% interest  rate 
lds-financial-aid-
pharmacy, al opathic,   
Deferment  for 
guidelines.pdf)  
osteopathic, or 
postgraduate training 
veterinary medicineb   
needed for licensure  (e.g., 
residency)  
 
Renegotiation and 
forbearance permitted 
 
Eligible for consolidation 
into Direct  Loan program 
Nursing  Student  Loans 
42 U.S.C.  §§297a-i 
Low-income 
 
Repayment schedule of 10 
243 
40,295 
$143,301 
$3,556 
(https://bhw.hrsa.gov/ borrowers  enrol ed 
years 
sites/default/files/
in nursing schools in    Interest rate of 5% 
bureau-health-
preparation for an 
workforce/funding/
associate’s, 
 
Deferment  while pursuing 
nsl-financial-aid-
bachelor’s,  or 
for advanced nursing 
guidelines.pdf)  
training  
CRS-14 
 link to page 18  
Statutory  Citation 
Number  of 
Total Outstanding 
Average 
and Program 
Repayment 
Schools 
Number  of 
Loan Balance 
Outstanding  Loan 
Website 
Borrower Type 
Terms  
Participating 
Outstanding  Loans 
($ in thousands) 
Balance 
graduate degree  in 
 
Renegotiation and 
nursing 
forbearance permitted  
 
Eligible for consolidation 
into Direct  Loan program 
Nurse Faculty Loans 
42 U.S.C.  §297n-1 
Students who are 
 
Repayment schedule of 10 
80 
2,277c 
$75,000 
$32,938 
(https://www.hrsa.gov graduate-level nurses 
years 
/grants/find-funding/
interested in 
hrsa-20-004) 
becoming nurse 
 
3% interest  rate 
faculty 
 
Up to 85% of a 
borrower’s  loan balance 
may be cancel ed over 
four years for borrowers 
who are nurse faculty. 
Individuals are responsible 
for paying the balance, 
plus interest,  of their loan 
at the end of four years 
 
Deferment  while pursuing 
 
Advanced professional 
training in nursing  
 
Forbearance permitted  
 
Eligible for consolidation 
into Direct  Loan program 
Source: CRS Analysis  of Titles VII and VIII of the Public Health Service  Act and 42 C.F.R.  Part 57, Subparts C and D. Data obtained from  the Health Resources and 
Services  Administration  (HRSA) on June 4, 2020, July 14, 2020, and October 23, 2020.  
a.  Primary  health care is defined as family medicine,  general  internal medicine,  general  pediatrics, preventive medicine,  or osteopathic general pra ctice. 
b.  Students from disadvantaged  backgrounds  refers  to individuals who are from backgrounds that have inhibited the individuals from  obtaining the knowledge,  skil s,  and 
abilities  required to graduate from a school, or who are from a low-income  family as defined by the program.   
c.  The Nurse Faculty Loan Program (NFLP) issued 2,277 loans, but made loans to 2,303 borrowers.  The number of borrowers  is higher than the number of loans 
because some  of these borrowers  received  loans prior  to 2018 but did not receive  loans for the 2018 -2019 academic year. Such borrowers  may have not received 
CRS-15 
 
loans for various reasons,  for example,  because they were in the dissertation phase of their training or had taken a leave of absence. HRSA requires  that institutions 
track each borrower  who received  an NFLP loan until the borrower  has graduated or has otherwise  left the program (i.e.,  attrition).  
CRS-16 
Student Loan Programs Authorized by the Public Health Service Act: An Overview  
 
NFLP Loan Cancellation Data 
In addition, data are available  on the amount of cancel ation benefits received under the NFLP. As 
previously described, up to 85% of a borrower’s outstanding NFLP balance may be cancel ed in 
exchange for serving for four years as a nurse faculty member at accredited nursing schools. For 
academic year 2018-2019, the most recent year for which data are available, the average amount 
of cancel ation benefits received was $25,571 dollars, representing a total of approximately $42 
mil ion  in cancel ation benefits for 1,652 borrowers.58 
Health Education Assistance Loan (HEAL) Program 
PHSA Title VII Part A-I authorizes the HEAL  program, which made loans available to qualifying 
health professions students from FY1978 through FY1998. Congress terminated the authority to 
make new HEAL  Program loans after September 30, 1998,59 however, many program loans 
remain outstanding, and the federal government is responsible for administering the program. 
HHS original y  administered the program, but the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014 (P.L. 
113-76), transferred administration of the program to the Department of Education (ED). As of 
November 15, 2017, HEAL program loans totaling approximately $187 mil ion, borrowed by 
11,390 individuals, were outstanding.60 
The HEAL  program is considerably different than the other student loan programs authorized 
under PHSA.61 Unlike  the PHSA loan programs discussed above, under the HEAL program, 
private sector and state-based lenders originated loans to qualifying health professions students; 
these loans were funded with nonfederal capital. The federal government guarantees lenders 
against loss due to borrower default, death, permanent disability, and bankruptcy. Private and 
state-based lenders retain ownership of the loans and perform loan servicing functions, such as 
bil ing  borrowers, collecting loan payments, and initiating collection work on defaulted loans. If a 
loan defaults, a HEAL  program lender may file an insurance claim with ED. Upon payment of the 
claim by ED, the lender transfers the loan to ED, and ownership and responsibility for loan 
administration changes from lenders to ED (via its contracted loan servicers and privacy 
collection agencies).62 
HEAL  program loan terms and conditions general y are prescribed in statute and general y remain 
the same upon transfer to ED. 63 
                                              
58 An academic  year is July  1-June 30. 
59 42 U.S.C.  §292a(a). T he ability to refinance or consolidate existing HEAL program loans within the HEAL program 
expired September 30, 2004. HEAL program loan borrowers  currently may consolidate their loans into a Direct 
Consolidation Loan. 20 U.S.C.  §§1078-3(d)(1)(C)(ii) and 1087e(a)(1). 
60 U.S.  Department of Education, “Health Education Assistance Loan (HEAL) Program,” 82  Federal Register 53377, 
November 15, 2017. 
61 42 U.S.C.  §292 et seq. 
62 42 U.S.C.  §292f(b) 
63 Loan terms and conditions may vary slightly in specific instances once transferred to ED. For example, HEAL 
program loans owned  by ED are eligible  for the temporary suspension of interest and monthly payments provided to 
borrowers of ED-held loans in response to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, but borrowers of 
HEAL program loans not held by ED are ineligible  for such  benefits. U.S.  Department of Education Office of Federal 
Student Aid,  “Coronavirus and Forbearance Info for Students, Borrowers,  and Parents,” https://studentaid.gov/
announcements-events/coronavirus, accessed October 26, 2020. 
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Student Loan Programs Authorized by the Public Health Service Act: An Overview  
 
Student Eligibility 
HEAL  program loans were available to eligible  graduate students64 enrolled in schools of 
medicine, osteopathy, dentistry, veterinary medicine, optometry, podiatry, public health, 
pharmacy,65 and chiropractic, or in programs in health administration and clinical psychology.66 In 
addition, eligible  nonstudents (e.g., doctors serving as residents or interns) were able to borrow 
new HEAL  program loans to pay interest charges that accrued on earlier HEAL program loans.67 
Final y, regardless of whether a borrower was a student or nonstudent, regulations specified that 
lenders were to make HEAL  program loans only to applicants whom the lender had determined to 
be creditworthy.68 
Loan Terms and Conditions 
Interest Rates 
At the lender’s option, HEAL  program loans were made with fixed or variable interest rates, but 
the selected option remains effective for the life of the loan. Lenders set borrowers’ loan interest 
rates within certain parameters. For instance, borrower rates may not exceed the applicable 
maximum borrower interest rate calculated by the Secretary of Education (the Secretary).69 For 
loans with fixed interest rates, the applicable maximum interest rate over the life of the loan is 
calculated using statutorily specified rate setting formulae, which are used to determine 
applicable fixed rates for the calendar quarter in which the loan was made. For loans with 
variable interest rates, the applicable maximum interest rate is determined using the same 
statutorily specified rate setting formulae, but changes each calendar quarter.70 The formulae used 
by the Secretary to calculate the maximum interest rate vary depending on when the loan was 
made, but for al  loans made on or after October 22, 1985, the maximum interest rate is pegged to 
the 91-day U.S. Treasury Bil  auctioned for the preceding quarter, plus three percentage points, 
and rounded to the next higher one-eighth of one percent.71 For example, for the quarter ending 
December 31, 2020, the maximum variable interest rate for loans made on or after October 22, 
                                              
64 Additional eligibility criteria included,  for example, that an individual  be a U.S.  citizen, national, or lawful 
permanent resident of the United States and be enrolled as a full-time student. 
65 Individuals  pursuing  bachelor’s degrees  in pharmacy were also eligible  for HEAL program loans.  
66 34 C.F.R. §681.5. 
67 34 C.F.R. §681.6. 
68 An applicant was  considered creditworthy if he or she had “a repayment history that ha[d] been satisfactory on any 
loans on which payments ha[d] become due.”  An applicant was not considered creditworthy if he or she was  in  default 
on any loan or delinquent  on any federal debt, until the defaulted  or delinquent account was  made current or until 
satisfactory arrangements were made between the lender of the delinquent or defaulted  loan and the HEAL program 
applicant. 34 C.F.R. §681.33(c). 
69 Although the Servicemembers Civil  Relief Act caps the maximum interest charged on any debt  incurred by a 
servicemember prior to entering active duty service at no higher than 6% per year for the duration of their active duty 
service, the cap does  not appear to apply to HEAL program loans. Specifically, 42 U.S.C.  §292d(d)  states, “ No 
provision of any law  of the United States …  or of any State that limits rate or amount of interest payable on loans shall 
apply” to a HEAL program loan. 
70 42 U.S.C.  §292d(a) and (b);  34 C.F.R. §681.13 
71 See,  for example, 34 C.F.R. §681.13(a)(1). 
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1985, is 3.125%.72 Interest accrues on the loan from the date it is disbursed until it is paid in full 
(i.e., no interest subsidy is provided).73 
Repayment  
Borrowers are required to repay their HEAL  program loans during a repayment period, which 
typical y  begins after a nine-month grace period.74 In general, lenders determine the length of the 
loan repayment period; however, the repayment period may not be less than 10 years and not 
greater than 25 years. A borrower must repay his or her loan in full within 33 years from the date 
the loan is made.75 Typical y, payments must be made on a monthly basis and may be made in 
equal or graduated instal ments, with graduated instal ment payments increasing in amount over 
the repayment period.76 Lenders are required to offer an income-contingent repayment schedule 
that, during the first five years of repayment, is based on a borrower’s income.77 In general, total 
annual payments must equal at least the amount of interest that accrues during the year.78 A 
borrower may prepay al  or part of the loan at any time, without penalty.79 
Eligible  borrowers may consolidate their HEAL  program loans into a Direct Loan program 
Consolidation Loan. If a borrower does so, the borrower repays the resulting Direct Consolidation 
Loan under the terms and conditions of the Direct Loan program. 
HEAL  program borrowers who are having difficulty making payments may receive a loan 
deferment or forbearance. Unlike the other loan programs authorized under the PHSA, interest on 
HEAL  program loans continues to accrue during periods of deferment. Deferment may be granted 
to a borrower in the following circumstances:80 
  while pursuing a full-time course of study at an institution of higher education as 
defined in Section 102(a) of the Higher Education Act; 
                                              
72 Department of Education, Office of Federal Student  Aid, “HEAL Interest Rates,” https://ifap.ed.gov/heal-interest-
rates. 
73 34 C.F.R. §681.13(b). 
74 34 C.F.R. §681.11(a)(1). Generally, the grace period commences when  a borrower ceases  to be enrolled full -time at a 
HEAL program school. However, if a borrower meets specified  conditions (e.g., enters an internship, residenc y, or 
fellowship training program), the start of the repayment period may be further postponed.  
75 34 C.F.R. §681.11(b). For loans made prior to October 22, 1985, deferment periods are not included in any of the 
repayment period thresholds. For loans made o n or after October 22, 1985, periods of deferment are included  in the 33 -
year limitation, but are excluded  from the 10- and 25-year limitations. For loans made on or after October 13, 1992, 
periods of forbearance are excluded  from the 25 -year limitation. 42 U.S.C. §292d(e) and U.S.  Department of 
Education, Office of Federal  Student Aid, “Health Education Assistance Loan (HEAL) Program,” https://ifap.ed.gov/
sites/default/files/attachments/2019-07/AboutHEALProgram.pdf [hereinafter FSA, HEAL], p. 2. 
76 34 C.F.R. §  681.11(e). In addition, a lender or loan holder and a borrower may enter into a supplemental repayment 
agreem ent under which a lender or holder “ agrees to consider that the borrower has met the terms of the regular 
repayment schedule as  long as  the borrower makes payments in accordance with the supplemental schedule.”  A 
supplemental repayment schedule may be  based  on other than an equal or graduate  pay ments, for example, the 
borrower’s income. 34 C.F.R. §681.11(f). 
77 FSA,  HEAL, p. 1. 
78 34 C.F.R. §681.11(d). Borrowers and lenders may agree, in writing, that payments for any year or repayment period 
equal  a lesser amount. 
79 34 C.F.R. §681.11(c). 
80 42 U.S.C.  §292d(a)(2)C). 
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  up to four years while participating in an accredited internship or residency 
program;81 
  up to two years while participating in a qualified  fel owship training program or 
educational activity at an eligible  institution;82 
  up to three years for full-time active duty in the U.S. Armed Forces; 
  up to three years while serving in the Peace Corps, the National Health Service 
Corps, or on a full-time basis in Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA); 
  up to three years for a borrower who has completed a qualifying internship or 
residency training program and who is practicing primary care;83 
  up to one year for borrowers who are graduates of schools of chiropractic; and 
  up to three years while providing health care services to Indians through any 
health program or facility wholly or partial y  funded by the Indian Health Service 
for the benefit of Indians. 
Under the HEAL  program, forbearance is a temporary extension of time for making a payment or 
a temporary period during which a borrower may make payments in reduced amounts. 
Forbearance may be granted in six-month increments up to a maximum of two years. Periods of 
forbearance may be extended beyond the two-year limit with approval from the Secretary. 
Forbearance is granted if a lender determines that the borrower is temporarily unable to make 
scheduled payments on his or her loan but continues to make payments on the loan in an amount 
commensurate with his or her ability to repay the loan.84 
If a borrower fails to pay al  of a required payment (or fails to provide written notification of 
eligibility  for deferment) to a HEAL program loan holder within 30 days after the payment’s due 
date, the holder is required to charge a late fee equal to 5% of the unpaid portion of the payment 
due. The loan holder may also charge the borrower for reasonable costs incurred by the holder in 
attempting to collect any past-due payments.85 Loan holders must notify appropriate consumer 
reporting agencies regarding borrowers whose accounts are at least 60 days overdue.86 
Default 
General y, a borrower is considered to be in default of a HEAL  program loan if he or she fails to 
make payment when due or fails to otherwise comply with terms of the loan’s promissory note 
for 120 days, in the case of loans paid in monthly instal ments.87 Consequences of borrower 
default include those typical of other federal student loan programs, such as referral of defaulted 
                                              
81 For borrowers  who received their first HEAL program loan on or after October 22, 1985, this four -year period 
includes  any postponement of the repayment period following the initial grace period.  
82 34 C.F.R. §681.12(b)(2) references eligible  institutions as defined in HEA §435(b). Section 435(b) was  repealed by 
the Higher Education Amendments of 1992 (P.L. 102-325). 
83 Generally residencies  in primary care are three years; however, an individual  may do a combined residency in two 
primary care specialties (e.g., internal medicine and  pediatrics) that may exceed three years. Generally, residencies  in 
non-primary care specialties are longer than three y ears.  
84 34 C.F.R. §681.37. 
85 34 C.F.R. §681.15(a) and (b). 
86 34 C.F.R. §681.35(c)(2). 
87 34 C.F.R. §681.40(c)(1). A borrower is considered  in default if loan payments are made less  frequently than monthly 
and the borrower has failed  to make such payments for 180 days.  
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loans to a collection agency and litigation,88 along with consequences unique to the program, 
including89  
  reduction of federal reimbursement or payments for health services provided 
under federal law (e.g., health services provided under the Medicare program), 
up to the remaining balance of the loans; 
  publication of the borrower’s name and the fact that he or she has defaulted in the 
Federal Register;90 and 
  notification of the borrower’s default to relevant federal agencies and to schools, 
school associations, professional and specialty associations, state licensing 
boards, hospitals with which the borrower may be associated, and other relevant 
organizations.91 
A borrower may consolidate his or her defaulted HEAL  program loan into a Direct Consolidation 
Loan under ED’s Direct Loan program by using the proceeds of a new Direct Consolidation to 
pay off the defaulted loan. This would effectively cure the default on the HEAL  program loan, as 
it would be considered paid in full. To be eligible  to do so, he or she must make satisfactory 
repayment arrangements with the loan holder92 or agree to repay the Direct Consolidation Loan 
under one the income-driven repayment plans available  under the Direct Loan program.93 
Loan Discharge 
HEAL  program loans may be discharged94 (sometimes referred to as loan cancel ation) if the 
borrower dies or becomes permanently and total y disabled.95 HEAL  program loans may be 
discharged in bankruptcy if specified criteria are met, including a determination by the 
Bankruptcy Court that not discharging the loan would be unconscionable.96 
                                              
88 FSA,  HEAL, pp. 2-3. 
89 42 U.S.C.  §§292f (f), (h) and 292h(c).  
90 See,  for example, Department of Education, “List of Borrowers Who Have Defaulted on T heir Health Education 
Assistance Loans,” 85 Federal Register 60140, September 24, 2020. 
91 Some state laws  require  that an individual’s professional licensure  be revoked or suspended  if they default on 
outstanding loans, including  HEAL program loans. See,  for example, Jessica  Silver -Greenberg,  Stacy Cowley,  and 
Nataile Kitroeff, “When Unpaid St udent Loan Bills  Mean You  Can No Longer Work,” The New  York Times, 
November 18, 2017. 
92 Regulations do not define “satisfactory repayment arrangements.” 
93 34 C.F.R. §  685.220(i)(3)(ii) and U.S. Department of Education, “Direct Consolidation Loan Applicatio n and 
Promissory Note: William D. Ford Federal  Direct Loan Program,” OMB No. 1845 -0053. Federal Student Loans Made 
Through the William   D. Ford Federal Direct  Loan Program : Term s and Conditions for Borrowers. 
94 Borrower of HEAL program loans may be  eligible  for various other federal loan forgiveness and loan repayment 
programs authorized outside of PHSA  T itle VII Part A-I. For additional information, see CRS  Report R43571, Federal 
Student Loan Forgiveness and Loan Repaym ent Program s. 
95 42 U.S.C.  §292m. T he Secretary of Education discharges  HEAL program loans due  to a borrower’s total and 
permanent disability in accordance with the same procedures used  for Direct Loan program loans. 34 C.F.R. 
§681.39(b). 
96 42 U.S.C.  §292f(g). T his standard differs from the more generally applicable standard that student loans are 
presumptively not dischargeable in bankruptcy absent an undue  hardship. For additional information on the 
dischargeability  of student loan debt  in bankruptcy, see CRS  Report R45113, Bankruptcy and Student Loans. 
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Appendix.  Glossary of Terms 
Acceleration 
Demand for immediate  repayment of the entire outstanding (unpaid) balance of a loan. 
Consolidation 
The process through which a borrower  refinances his or her existing student loan by 
borrowing a new loan and using the proceeds to pay off existing student loan 
obligations.  
Default 
The failure of a borrower  to make  an instal ment  payment on a loan when due, or to 
comply with any other terms  of the promissory  note for the loan.  
Deferment 
A temporary period during which a borrower’s  obligation to make regular  payments of 
principal and interest is suspended, if the borrower  meets applicable eligibility  criteria. 
Forbearance 
Active PHSA Loan Programs:  A period during which a borrower’s  obligation to make 
payments on a loan’s principal (balance) is temporarily  suspended. 
HEAL Program:  A period during which a borrower  may extend the time  for making 
payments or temporarily  make  smal er  payments. 
Grace period 
A temporary period after a borrower  ceases  to meet specified enrol ment  status (ful -
time or part-time), during which the borrower  is not required to make payments on his 
or her loan and during which interest does not accrue. 
Prepayment   
A loan payment made before it is due under the terms  of the loan. 
Promissory note 
A contract between a lender  and a borrower  that contains the terms and conditions of 
the loan. 
Repayment  period 
The time during which a borrower  is obligated to make  payments on a loan according 
to the terms  and conditions of the loan. 
Repayment 
The schedule on which borrowers  are required  to make loan payments. Repayment 
schedule 
schedules include a due date for each payment, the amount credited to principal and 
interest from  each payment, and any minimum  payment amounts that may be required. 
Renegotiation 
A process through which a loan’s repayment schedule is adjusted. It is used when a 
borrower  is able to make  payments on a regular basis but is unable to pay the amount 
required to keep his or her account current according to the existing repayment 
schedule. 
Sources: These definitions are based on Titles  VII and VIII of the Public Health Service  Act; 34 C.F.R.  Part 681; 
42 C.F.R.  57; Subparts C and D, Health Resources  and Services  Administration  (HRSA) Student Financial Aid 
Guidelines  for Health Professions  Student Loans, Loans for Disadvantaged Students, Primary  Care Loans, and 
Nursing Student Loans, available at Health and Human Services  (HHS), HRSA, “School-Based Loans and 
Scholarships,” https://bhw.hrsa.gov/loans-scholarships/school-based-loans;  HHS, HRSA Nurse Faculty Loan 
Program,  “Nurse Faculty Loan Program  (NFLP) Administrative  Guidelines,”  https://www.hrsa.gov/sites/default/
files/hrsa/grants/faqs/NFLP-admin-guidelines-2017.pdf; and HHS, HRSA, “Student Financial Aid Guidelines,  Fiscal 
Management, Accounting Procedures,” https://bhw.hrsa.gov/sites/default/files/bureau-health-workforce/funding/
fiscal-management-accounting.pdf. 
 
 
Author Information 
 
Elayne J. Heisler 
  Alexandra Hegji 
Specialist in Health Services 
Analyst in Social Policy 
    
    
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This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan 
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under the direction of Congress. Information in a CRS Report should n ot be relied upon for purposes other 
than public understanding of information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in 
connection with CRS’s institutional role. CRS Reports, as a work of the United States Government, are not 
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