
The Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium (ANTHC) is a non-profit health organization based in Anchorage, Alaska which provides health services to 158,000 Alaska Natives and American Indians in Alaska. Established in 1997, ANTHC is a consortium of the tribal regional health organizations. The Board of Directors for ANTHC equally represent all tribal regions of Alaska and each region has parity. The foundation of tribal region unity and equality provides for the best health care service access for all Alaska Native people.
ANTHC is co-manager, with the Southcentral Foundation, of the Alaska Native Medical Center (ANMC), a 150-bed facility in Anchorage with a staff including more than 250 physicians and 700 nurses. ANMC is a level II trauma center, the highest level that can be achieved in Alaska. It has received Magnet Status for nursing excellence, a designation achieved by only about 7 percent of all hospitals nationwide. It is the only tribal operated hospital with Magnet Status in the United States. ANMC opened in its current facility in May 1997. ANMC has a hybrid operating room. ANTHC pays market rate compensation to all employees to retain and attract the best qualified Alaska Native professionals and top quality providers and engineers.
In 1998, ANTHC launched the Alaska Federal Health Care Access Network (AFHCAN) to provide primary and specialty telehealth services to Alaska Native communities.
In 2003, ANTHC developed the Alaska Dental Health Aide Program to train dental therapists who could provide culturally appropriate education and routine dental services under the supervision of a dentist to high-risk residents of rural villages. These therapists now provide dedicated access to oral health care for more than 35,000 individuals, most of whom lived in communities that typically did not have a dedicated provider.
This is the first partnership of a Ronald McDonald House with a tribal organization. In 2014, a new day surgery opened followed by new Infusion Center and Internal Medicine Clinics in 2016. In January 2017, ANTHC opened a new 202 bed patient housing facility which includes Ronald McDonald House on the 6th floor.
ANTHC is part of the Alaska Tribal Health System and is one of 22 co-signers of the Alaska Tribal Health Compact, a self-governance agreement with the Indian Health Service.

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Membership
- Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium
- Aleutian/Pribilof Islands Association
- Arctic Slope Native Association
- Bristol Bay Area Health Corporation
- Chugachmiut, Inc.
- Copper River Native Association
- Council of Athabascan Tribal Governments
- Eastern Aleutian Tribes, Inc.
- Native Village of Eklutna
- Ketchikan Indian Corporation
- Kodiak Area Native Association
- Maniilaq Association
- Metlakatla Indian Community
- Mt. Sanford Tribal Consortium
- Norton Sound Health Corporation
- Seldovia Village Tribe
- Southcentral Foundation
- South East Alaska Regional Health Consortium
- Tanana Chiefs Conference
- Yakutat Tlingit Tribe
- Yukon-Kuskokwim Health Corporation
- Akiachak Native Community
- Chickaloon Village Traditional Council
- Chitina Traditional Council
- Cook Inlet Tribal Council, Inc.
- Native Village of Diomede
- Fairbanks Native Association
- Hoonah Indian Association
- Native Village of Karluk
- Kenaitze Indian Tribe, IRA
- Knik Tribal Council
- Ninilchik Traditional Council
- Native Village of Quinhagak
- St. George Traditional Council
- Tanana IRA Native Council
- Native Village of Tyonek
- Ukpeagvik Inupiat Corporation
- Valdez Native Tribe
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Legislation
The Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium Land Transfer Act (H.R. 623; 113th Congress) is a bill that would transfer some land in Alaska from the federal government to the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium to be used to build a patient housing facility so that the organization can treat people who travel there from distant rural areas. The bill passed the United States House of Representatives on October 29, 2013.
Source of the article : Wikipedia
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