Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius has announced more than $32 million in funding aimed at boosting access to healthcare service in rural areas.
The funds reach across seven programs administered by the Office of Rural Health Policy in HHS’ Health Resources and Services Administration.
“The grants will strengthen partnerships among rural health providers,” said HRSA Administrator Mary Wakefield PhD, RN. “Funds will be used to recruit and retain rural healthcare professionals and modernize the healthcare infrastructure in rural areas.”
“The ultimate goal is to build healthier rural populations and communities,” said Sebelius.
Funding for the seven programs includes:
- More than $22 million for the Medicare Rural Hospital Flexibility Program, which supports improvements in healthcare quality in communities served by Critical Access Hospitals, efforts to improve the hospitals’ financial and operating performance and the development of collaborative regional and local delivery systems.
- More than $3 million for the Rural Health Workforce Development Program, a new one-time pilot program that supports the development of rural health networks that seek to improve the recruitment and retention of emerging health professionals (primary and allied healthcare students and residents) in rural communities.
- More than $2 million for the Telehealth Network Grant Program, which helps communities build capacity to develop sustainable telehealth programs and networks.
- More than $1 million for the Telehealth Resources Center Grant Program, which provides technical assistance to help healthcare organizations, networks and providers implement cost-effective telehealth programs serving rural and medically underserved areas and populations.
- Close to $1 million for the Flex Rural Veterans Health Access Program, a new program that will help eligible entities coordinate innovative approaches, collaborative networks and virtual linkages to provide rural veterans and other rural residents access to mental health and other healthcare services.
- $770,000 for the Frontier Community Health Integration Demonstration Program, whose purpose is to develop and test new models for the delivery of healthcare services in frontier areas by improving access to care and the integration of care delivery to Medicare beneficiaries.
- Almost $500,000 to the Rural Training Track Technical Assistance Demonstration Program, which will analyze the challenges and barriers facing Rural Training Track residency program sites and provide technical assistance to increase the number of family medicine physicians who choose to take part in these rural residencies.
A full, detailed list of grantees can be found here.