Mo. Code Regs. tit. 19 § 10-3.010

Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 23, December 2, 2024
Section 19 CSR 10-3.010 - Loan Program for Medical Students

PURPOSE: This rule establishes guidelines for implementing the medical student loan program authorized by section 191.505, RSMo 1986.

(1) The Missouri Department of Health may appoint a committee(s) to interview applicants and to make recommendations concerning the administration of the program.
(2) To qualify for a student loan, the applicant must have no conflicting service obligation that would prevent the state from benefiting from his/her professional services after graduation. To qualify as a student from a rural area, the applicant should have lived most of his/her life in a rural area; in particular cases, the Missouri Department of Health may determine that a student who is a resident of a rural area at the time of application qualifies even though s/he has not lived most of his/her life in a rural area. When there are more applicants than available loans, financial need may be considered in selecting loan recipients.
(3) Using data provided by the statistical section of the Missouri Department of Health, each year the Missouri Department of Health will designate areas of defined need. A community or section of an urban area will be designated as an area of defined need if the area has a population to primary-care-physician ratio of at least three thousand five hundred to one (3500:1); or if the area has a population to primary-care-physician ratio of less than three thousand five hundred to one (3500:1); but greater than two thousand five hundred to one (2500:1) and has an unusually high need for primary health care services or is underserved by specialized hospital care. An area of defined need must be a community or city of six thousand (6,000) or more population-plus the surrounding area up to a radius of approximately fifteen (15) miles-that serves generally as the central community of that area for a variety of services; or an urban or metropolitan neighbor-hood-generally located within the central city(ies) of a Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area-that has limited interaction with contiguous areas, a minimum population of approximately twenty thousand (20,000) and consisting of census tracts whenever possible. Any other area with unusual circumstances- such as impending retirement or failing health of physicians in the area or refusal of physicians to accept certain types of patients such as persons eligible for Medicaid or Medicare-can be evaluated on a case-by-case basis for designation as an area of defined need.
(A) For the purpose of area determination, primary-care physicians are those fully licensed and currently registered by the State Board of Registration for the Healing Arts who report general or family practice, internal medicine, pediatrics or obstetrics and gynecology as their primary specialities. Primary-care physicians in part-time practice due to partial retirement, disability or nonpatient care activities will be counted on a fulltime equivalent basis according to the number of hours reported in patient care a week compared to forty (40) hours. Physicians engaged solely in administration, research and teaching and those in training as interns and residents will not be included in counting an area's primary-care physicians.
(B) An area will be considered to have an unusually high need for primary-care medical services if more than twenty percent (20%) of the population is fifty-five (55) years of age or over, or if more than twenty percent (20%) of the population or households is below the poverty level.
(C) An area will be considered under-served by specialized hospital care if the largest hospital in the area is approximately thirty (30) miles or more from a comparable or larger facility; or if the central community in the area is approximately fifteen (15) miles or more from a hospital having more than four thousand (4,000) discharges a year or more than four hundred (400) deliveries annually.
(4) Loan applications should be sent to the Missouri Department of Health, Division of Injury Prevention, Head Injury Rehabilitation and Local Health Services, P.O. Box 570, Jefferson City, MO 65102. Except for the first academic year that the program is in effect, completed applications must be received prior to April 1 for loans to be made for the next academic year. Except for the first academic year that the program is in effect, applicants must be notified by letter on or before July 1, indicating that a loan will or will not be made available if funds are appropriated for the particular fiscal year.
(5) The form for the loan contract will be approved by the office of the attorney general. Loan recipients must sign new contracts for each year's loan they receive.
(6) Each loan recipient must notify the Department of Health of any change in his/her address or educational enrollment eligibility status. The full amount of the principal and accumulated interest on the loan will be due immediately for repayment when the loan recipient loses educational enrollment eligibility status. A loan recipient loses educational enrollment eligibility status when s/he is no longer a medical student in good standing, quits school or takes a leave of absence which has not been approved by the Department of Health or fails to notify the department of changes in his/her address.
(7) If the loan recipient does not qualify for deferral of payment of the loan and interest as set forth in section 191.505, RSMo (1986), the entire loan and interest must be repaid within one (1) year. Loan recipients who do not qualify for this deferral include, but are not limited to:
(A) Recipients who are in an internship or residency program for any specialty other than primary care;
(B) Recipients who are in an internship or residency training status extending beyond the limit of three (3) years; and
(C) Recipients who enter a practice in an area not defined as rural or as an area of defined need as designated by the Department of Health.
(8) Repayment of Loans.
(A) Interest will accrue from the date the check is issued.
(B) Once a loan recipient has started a practice in a rural area or in an area of defined need, the loan and interest will continue to be forgiven even if the defined need designation of the area is withdrawn.
(C) The Department of Health may grant an extension, not to exceed forty-eight (48) consecutive months, for repayment of a loan if the director of the Department of Health decides that circumstances explained in a written request from the loan recipient warrant an extension.
(D) Forgiveness and cash repayment periods are limited to forty-eight (48) consecutive months. Forgiveness and cash repayment periods are calculated beginning the first day of the calendar year following completion of internship or residency training. Forgiveness of the loan and the accrued interest may be authorized for monthly periods of less than one (1) year. No repayment period shall extend beyond the forty-eight (48)-month time period.
(E) A portion of the loan and accrued interest may be forgiven for primary care physician services provided on a full-time basis in an area of defined need or a rural area. Forgiveness shall be calculated in increments of no less than one (1) month. The physician shall provide services qualifying for forgiveness for a minimum of fifteen (15) days during a calendar month for forgiveness credit to apply. Partial year forgiveness periods may be authorized by the director of the Department of Health.
(F) When, during the forty-eight (48)-month repayment period, a physician in non-compliant cash repayment status desires to return to a forgiveness status, s/he shall submit to the director of the Department of Health a written request stating the conditions that caused the original breach of contract, reasons for desiring to return to a forgiveness status and a detailed primary care practice plan. The director may request any additional information needed to evaluate the situation. Failure to provide complete information shall nullify the reconsideration. The director may reinstate a physician's forgiveness status for the time remaining in the repayment period. The recipient shall continue to make cash restitution for the interval of noncompliance. Failure to comply with the cash repayment schedule shall result in the loss of the reinstated forgiveness status. The cash repayment shall be completed by the end of the forty-eight (48)-month repayment period and failure to comply shall result in legal action against the physician or his/her estate.
(G) Interest accrued during the deferral period by a loan recipient who is pursuing an internship or residency in primary care shall be forgiven on the same basis as the original loan and interest.

19 CSR 10-3.010

AUTHORITY: section 191.505, RSMo Supp. 1989.* This rule was previously filed as 13 CSR 50-170.010 and 19 CSR 50-1.010. Original rule filed May 14, 1979, effective Aug. 11, 1979. Amended: Filed Nov. 14, 1988, effective Jan. 27, 1989. Amended: Filed Nov. 2, 1990, effective April 29, 1991. Changed to 19 CSR 10-3.010 July 30, 1998.

The forms mentioned in this rule follow 19 CSR 10-6.010

*Original authority: 191.505, RSMo 1978, amended 1988.