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HomeHealth and Safety CodeDiv. 105Pt. 4Ch. 2§ 120830 Aids Home Care Pilot

§ 120830 Aids Home Care Pilot

Health and Safety Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 120830 Aids Home Care Pilot

Key Takeaways

  • •This law gives money to groups that help people with AIDS or HIV. The money is for special projects to show how home care or hospice care can save money.
  • •Groups getting the money can keep up to 10% for their own costs, like paying staff or rent. The rest must go to helping people.
  • •The groups must work with the community, avoid doing the same work as others, and use other money sources too.
  • •They must offer services like nursing, mental health help, and financial aid. They also must keep things private and check their work quality.

Example

A group in Los Angeles gets money to help people with AIDS stay at home instead of going to the hospital.

The group uses the money to send nurses to homes, help with chores, and teach families how to care for their sick loved ones. They also make sure no one else is doing the same thing nearby and use other money they can find. They keep 10% for their office costs and send reports to the state to show how they spent the money.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 120830 Aids Home Care Pilot

(a) Pilot projects to demonstrate the cost effectiveness of home health, attendant, or hospice care shall be initiated through a block grant program, as described in this section. (b) The state director shall designate the contractors and the amounts that contractors will receive for the block grant direct service demonstration projects. (c) An amount of not more than 10 percent of the grant may be retained by contractors for administrative overhead. Contractors accepting block grant funds shall compile comparative cost data reports for transmission to the department and the Legislature. Reports shall be made semiannually until the conclusion of the project. (d) Contractors receiving direct service block grants shall: (1) Encourage broad-based community involvement and support for AIDS programs and involve charitable, other nonprofit, and other agencies as well as health care professionals as providers of essential services. (2) Ensure the proposed services are not duplicated in the community and are based on the needs of people with AIDS or AIDS-related conditions, at-risk communities, their families, or others affected by AIDS. (3) Make maximum use of other federal, state, and local funds and programs. (4) Provide services that are culturally and linguistically appropriate to the population served. (e) Counties with existing programs of demonstrated effectiveness in AIDS education or services shall receive equal consideration with other applicants and shall not be penalized when awarding funds pursuant to this chapter with respect to the proposed expansion of their programs. (f) Contractors shall develop a comprehensive service system including, but not limited to, the following essential services, that can be provided either directly by the contractors or indirectly through a referral network arranged by the contractor: (1) Provision for hospice, skilled nursing facility, home health care, and homemaker chore services. (2) Individual consultation and health planning and assessment. (3) Information for people with AIDS or AIDS-related conditions regarding death and dying. (4) Evaluation and referral services for medical care. (5) Referral services for mental health services, as appropriate. (6) Assistance in applying for financial aid or social services that are available and for which clients qualify. The system of essential services developed by a contractor shall offer maximum opportunity for involvement of family, friends, and domestic partners and of nonprofit and charitable organizations in preventing the severe, adverse health and social consequences that result from being diagnosed with AIDS or AIDS-related conditions. (g) The direct service program for provision of essential services shall ensure both of the following: (1) An ongoing quality assurance program. (2) Confidentiality assurances and methods for developing interagency confidentiality agreements. (Amended by Stats. 2006, Ch. 538, Sec. 439. Effective January 1, 2007.)

Last verified: January 23, 2026

Key Terms

considerationeducationcontracthealthnursingnetportlegislature

Related Statutes

  • § 127900 Health Promotion Training Programs
  • § 131230 Violent Death Data Collection
  • § 123510 Community Perinatal Health Care
  • § 125215 Care Provider Regulation Review
  • § 128040 Dental Loan Forgiveness Program

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Health and Safety Code. Section 120830.
View Official Source