To address the workforce crisis, the law eases current criteria for schools and students to qualify for federally supported student loans, shortens payback periods, and decreases the noncompliance provision to make the primary care student loan program more attractive to medical students. It establishes a loan repayment program for pediatric subspecialists, including providers of mental and behavioral health services to children and adolescents, who are or will be working in a health professional shortage area or medically underserved area or with a medically underserved population. In addition, the law increases and extends authorization of appropriations for the National Health Service Corps scholarship and loan repayment program for fiscal years 2010–2015. Also included are mental and behavioral health education and training grants to schools for the development, expansion, or enhancement of training programs in social work, graduate psychology, professional training in child and adolescent mental health, and preservice or in-service training to paraprofessionals in child and adolescent mental health.