Federal Office of Rural Health Policy Announcements

Date: April 21, 2022

Apply for New Community Health Worker Training Program – Deadline June 11. On Friday, the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services announced availability of $226.5 million for a new program building the pipeline of public health workers at the community level. The multiyear effort will support training and apprenticeship programs for the critical role of trusted messenger connecting people to care and support. Administered through the Health Resources and Services Administration’s (HRSA) Bureau of Health Workforce, the program will train as many as 13,000 community health workers who will address needs in rural and underserved communities. These roles, providing culturally competent and individualized services, are critical in rural areas where health services are limited

USDA Launches Effort to Fund Economic Development in Rural Communities. On Wednesday, the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced a new collaboration between federal agencies and local leaders and residents. The Rural Partners Network is a whole-of-government approach that includes 16 federal agencies and regional commissions to help rural communities access government resources and funding. At launch, selected communities in Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, New Mexico, and certain Tribes within Arizona will participate to share local concerns and ensure rural communities have a voice in policymaking. 

HRSA to Host First National Telehealth Conference. Over the course of two days (May 16-17), public and private sector leaders will discuss best practices and lessons learned during the COVID-19 pandemic. Topics include the role of telehealth in underserved communities, achieving health equity through improved broadband connectivity, and telehealth as a model for integrating behavioral health care during the pandemic and beyond. 

HHS Renews Public Health Emergency. On April 12, the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (HHS) extended the current Public Health Emergency (PHE) declaration for another 90 days. The most recent continuation of the PHE was set to expire on April 16, 2022. The extension of the PHE means the continuation of flexibilities for health care providers, such as the Coronavirus Waivers issued by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

HHS Distributing $1.75 Billion in Provider Relief Fund Payments. Last week, the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services announced payments, distributed through the Health Resources and Services Administration’s (HRSA), to 3,680 providers across the country. Since November 2021, HRSA has distributed approximately $13.5 billion from the fund to offset costs related to COVID-19. 

Funds Awarded to Strengthen the Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood Home Visiting Program. Also last week, the Health Resources and Services Administration’s (HRSA) announced $16 million in awards administered by its Maternal and Child Health Bureau to support pregnant people and parents with young children.

Study on Video-Enabled Tablets for Rural Veterans’ Mental Health Care. In an open-access article on the JAMA Network, researchers describe their findings when 471,791 rural U.S. veterans with a history of mental health care use received video-enabled tablets to access services. The study included rural veterans identified by the U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs (VA) as a high-risk for suicide, and compared monthly mental health service utilization for patients who received VA tablets during COVID-19 with patients who were not issued tablets over 10 months before and after tablet shipment.

Ongoing: HRSA Payment Program for RHC Buprenorphine-Trained Providers. In June 2021, the Health Resources and Services Administration’s (HRSA) launched an effort to improve access to substance use disorder treatment by paying for providers who are waivered to prescribe buprenorphine, a medication used to treat opioid use disorder. Rural Health Clinics (RHCs) still have the opportunity to apply for a $3,000 payment on behalf of each provider who trained to obtain the waiver necessary to prescribe buprenorphine after January 1, 2019.  Approximately $1.2 million in program funding remains available for RHCs and will be paid on a first-come, first-served basis until funds are exhausted. Send questions to DATA2000WaiverPayments@hrsa.gov. There is ongoing availability of a free online course for waiver eligibility training from the American Osteopathic Academy of Addiction Medicine and the Providers Clinical Support System.

Resource Available: Health Sector Cybersecurity Coordination Center (HC3)

Date: April 21, 2022

Resource Available: Health Sector Cybersecurity Coordination Center (HC3)

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is grateful for the opportunity to introduce the Health Sector Cybersecurity Coordination Center (HC3) and its initiative to improve operational resiliency in rural health throughout America.

HC3 aids in the protection, coordination, and sharing of actionable cybersecurity information to the Healthcare and Public Health (HPH) sector.  HC3 was established in response to the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act of 2015, a federal law mandated to “improve the cybersecurity in the U.S. through enhanced sharing of information about cybersecurity threats, and for other purposes.”  HC3 develops vulnerability and cyber-attack mitigation resources and fosters HPH sector collaboration and partnerships.

Role

HC3 is an important element of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ focus on cybersecurity collaboration with the HPH sector.  HC3 helps to identify, correlate, and communicate cybersecurity information across the HPH sector and connected communities.  HC3 actively collaborates with a variety of public and private HPH organizations and connected critical infrastructure stakeholders to understand threats, learn adversaries’ patterns and trends, provide the sector with actionable information and intelligence, and recommended approaches to improve defense and operational resiliency.  HC3 facilitates access to knowledge-based resources necessary to support robust cybersecurity programs, mitigate damage in security breach situations, and, via the HHS Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG), contact victims and owners of vulnerable systems.

Products

HC3 develops and presents unclassified, knowledge-based resources (i.e. alerts, briefings, and whitepapers) with agency/sector-wide participation, geared towards addressing active cybersecurity threats and promoting and increasing HPH sector cyber knowledge.  These products are presented in regular webinars and distributed via the HC3 website and via public and private partners.

Collaborative Initiatives

HC3 collaborates with public and private partners, including individual HPH organizations, critical infrastructure or healthcare specific cooperatives and communities, law enforcement fusion centers, and federal partners (e.g. Department of Energy, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), Federal Emergency Management Agency, Federal Bureau of Investigation, and more).  Recent initiatives include:

  1. Collaborating with CISA and individual HPH organizations on tabletop exercises, which endeavor to improve reactions to cyber/physical threats and highlight opportunities for risk mitigation.
  2. Collaborating with rural health organizations to better understand and address novel risks and threats.

And, on that topic, as you’re aware, rural healthcare is a critical element serving rural communities throughout the nation.  The risk and threat of cyber-attack on rural healthcare may impact communities more than would similar attacks in urban areas, where there are more alternatives to support a loss of services.  HC3 is here to help, to collaborate and cooperate, to share intelligence, resources, and connections. 

Please reach out to connect, collaborate, and engage.

Register Now! Ending the HIV Epidemic In Missouri Quarterly Community Forum

Date: April 20, 2022

Register Now! Ending the HIV Epidemic In Missouri Quarterly Community Forum

The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services (DHSS) invites you to attend the June Community Engagement Forum focused on Ending the HIV Epidemic (EHE) in Missouri. DHSS and the EHE partners want to hear the barriers encountered to prevent, diagnose and treat HIV; and understand how to improve services. The topic for June is Older Adults Living with HIV.

Access registration by clicking the links for each date here:

Be an active voice in the creation of the Missouri State Plan on Aging. Please take this short survey to share your needs and opinions. All information is confidential. Start the survey here: https://health.mo.gov/stateplan.

HHS Releases New Data and Report on Hospital and Nursing Home Ownership

Date: April 20, 2022

HHS Releases New Data and Report on Hospital and Nursing Home Ownership

New data supports President Biden’s plan to protect seniors by improving safety and quality of care 

On April 20, 2022, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is taking actions to promote competition and transparency in our nation’s health care system that can improve the safety and quality of nursing homes and hospitals. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is releasing data publicly — for the first time — on mergers, acquisitions, consolidations, and changes of ownership from 2016-2022 for hospitals and nursing homes enrolled in Medicare. This data is a powerful new tool for researchers, state and federal enforcement agencies, and the public to better understand the impacts of consolidation on health care prices and quality of care.

HHS’s Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) is also releasing a related report — an analysis of the new CMS data examining trends in changes of ownership over the past six years.

These new data and analysis support President Joe Biden’s Executive Order on Promoting Competition, and advance the Biden-Harris Administration’s goal of improving transparency around nursing facility ownership and enhancing nursing home safety and quality, as outlined in President Biden’s State of the Union Action Plan for Protecting Seniors by Improving Safety and Quality of Care in the Nation’s Nursing Homes.  

“Today, for the first time, we are releasing data on the impact of hospital and nursing home consolidation for people across our nation. By improving the quality of reporting by hospitals and nursing homes on ownership and consolidation, we also advance President Biden’s agenda to promote competition, lower health care costs for American families, and protect patients,” said HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra.

“Hospital and nursing facility consolidation leaves many underserved areas with inadequate or more expensive health care options,” said CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure. “This new data gives researchers, state and federal enforcement agencies, and the public new opportunities to examine how mergers, acquisitions, consolidations, and changes of ownership impact access to care, care quality, and prices as a way to enable greater transparency and insight into the hospital and nursing home industries.”

CMS’s data on the changes of ownership — which includes details on mergers, acquisitions, and consolidations — is now available on data.cms.gov. The data can help researchers, enforcers, and the public analyze trends and issues in health care markets, and more specifically, provide insight into how the ownership of health care providers impacts costs and outcomes of consumers. For example, ASPE’s report identifies several findings from the new dataset:

  • Changes of ownership have been much more common in nursing homes than hospitals over the past six years.
  • There is also wide ownership variation by state. For instance, 19% of hospitals (14 out of 73) in South Carolina were sold during this period, while most states had fewer than 4% of hospitals change ownership.
  • A majority (62.3%) of Skilled Nursing Facilities (SNFs) that were purchased have a single organizational owner, 6.9% have multiple organizations owners, while 18.2% have only individual owners and 12.7% have both types of owners.

CMS expects to release updated change of ownership data on a quarterly basis. The CMS data will enhance transparency for hospitals and nursing homes patients, potential patients and their loved ones, as well as for policymakers and the communities where these facilities are located.

This new data release is just one of many steps HHS is taking to increase transparency and accountability, and to boost competition in the health care industry.

For more information on the HHS data release, including publicly available data files, please visit: Hospital Change of Ownership: https://data.cms.gov/provider-characteristics/hospitals-and-other-facilities/hospital-change-of-ownership; and Skilled Nursing Facility Change of Ownership: https://data.cms.gov/provider-characteristics/hospitals-and-other-facilities/skilled-nursing-facility-change-of-ownership.

For the ASPE report analyzing the new change in ownership data, please visit: https://aspe.hhs.gov/reports/changes-ownership-hospital-skilled-nursing-facilities.

Federal Office of Rural Health Policy Announcements

Date: April 18, 2022

Community Health Worker Training Program

This announcement is a prime opportunity for organizations that considered applying for the Federal Office of Rural Health Policy’s (FORHP) Rural Public Health Workforce Training Program, which closed for applications on March 18, 2022.

The Community Health Worker Training Program is a new multiyear program from the Health Resources and Services Administration’s (HRSA) Bureau of Health Workforce focused on education and on-the-job training to build the pipeline of public health workers. This effort will support training and apprenticeship programs to help more people enter the health workforce and serve the critical role of trusted messengers to connect people to care and support, help ensure patients follow-up on their provider’s recommendations, and focus on preventive and protective factors that can improve health and well-being.

Through this program, HRSA plans to train 13,000 community health workers, increasing access to care, improving public health emergency response, and addressing the public health needs of underserved communities. The Community Health Worker Training Program builds on several other funding opportunities related to the public health workforce.

Community health workers are critically important in rural areas where services are limited. They increase access to care by providing culturally appropriate public health and prevention education, assistance in care coordination, and advocating for individuals and communities within the health and social services system. For more information on how rural communities can develop Community Health Worker programs that meet their specific needs, please visit the Rural Health Information Hub’s Rural Community Health Worker Toolkit.

Click here to apply for the Community Health Worker Training Program via grants.gov.

Applications are due June 14, 2022.

REGISTRATION OPEN: Community Health Workers (CHWs) Navigating the New Normal Summit

Date: April 19, 2022

REGISTRATION OPEN: Community Health Workers (CHWs) Navigating the New Normal Summit

The Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) Office of Intergovernmental and External Affairs (IEA) Region 7 invites you to join the Community Health Workers (CHWs) Navigating the New Normal Summit on May 17, 2022. This free, 1-day summit for Community Health Workers will provide training and resources on a variety of topics about navigating work with individuals, families, and communities amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

Date: May 17, 2022

Time:  9:00 AM – 4:00 PM CT

Who Should Attend

  • Community Health Workers 

Topics at a Glance

  • Medicaid expansion
  • Innovations — Promising approaches for utilizing CHWs in the community
  • Navigating public benefits
  • Ethics — Communication & social media; documentation; from friend to friendly
  • Self-care & resiliency
  • Networking and more!   

Attendance Options

  • In-person at the Kauffman Foundation Conference Center in Kansas City, Missouri or;
  • Virtual through Zoom 

The Summit will be held in-person with limited spots available on a first come basis. Priority for the in-person option will be given to Community Health Workers. A virtual option will also be available for selected sessions. 

Register for the Summit Here.

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the Summit on May 17.

For more information, contact Rae Hutchison at CHutchison@hrsa.gov.

CMS Proposes Policies to Advance Health Equity & Maternal Health, Support Hospitals

Date: April 19, 2022

CMS Proposes Policies to Advance Health Equity & Maternal Health, Support Hospitals

April 19, 2022, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) issued a proposed rule for inpatient and long-term hospitals that builds on the Biden-Harris Administration’s key priorities to advance health equity and improve maternal health outcomes. In addition to annual policies that promote Medicare payment accuracy and hospital stability, the FY 2023 Inpatient Prospective Payment System (IPPS) and Long-Term Care Hospital (LTCH) Prospective Payment System (PPS) rule includes measures that will encourage hospitals to build health equity into their core functions, thereby improving care for people and communities who are disadvantaged and/or underserved by the healthcare system. The rule includes three health equity-focused measures in hospital quality programs, seeks stakeholder input related to documenting social determinants of health in inpatient claims data, and proposes a “Birthing-Friendly” hospital designation.

For acute care hospitals paid under the IPPS that successfully participate in the Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting Program and are meaningful electronic health record users, the proposed increase in operating payment rates is projected to be 3.2%. This reflects a FY 2023 projected hospital market basket update of 3.1% reduced by a projected 0.4 percentage point productivity adjustment and increased by a 0.5 percentage point adjustment required by statute. Under the LTCH PPS, CMS expects payments to increase by approximately 0.8% or $25 million.

“Building a healthier America starts with ensuring everyone in our nation has access to high-quality, affordable health care,” said Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Xavier Becerra. “The new Medicare policies we are proposing today will help advance health equity in our health systems and dramatically improve maternal care for new parents and their newborns.”

“This rule, which funds a substantial portion of Medicare programs, is crucial to the foundation of CMS’ vision, ensuring access for all people with Medicare and maintaining incentives for our hospital partners to operate efficiently,” said CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure. “This year—through a health equity lens—we are also re-envisioning the next chapter of health care quality and patient safety.”

Advancing Health Equity

Health equity means the attainment of the highest level of health for all people, where everyone has a fair and just opportunity to attain their optimal health regardless of race, ethnicity, disability, sexual orientation, gender identity, socioeconomic status, geography, preferred language, or other factors that affect access to care and health outcomes. CMS is working to advance health equity by designing, implementing, and operationalizing policies and programs that support health for all the people served by CMS programs, eliminating avoidable differences in health outcomes experienced by people who are disadvantaged or underserved, and providing the care and support that our enrollees need to thrive.

To address health care disparities in hospital inpatient care and beyond, CMS is proposing three health equity-focused measures for adoption in the Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting (IQR) Program. The first measure assesses a hospital’s commitment to establishing a culture of equity and delivering more equitable health care by capturing concrete activities across five key domains, including strategic planning, data collection, data analysis, quality improvement, and leadership engagement. The second and third measures capture screening and identification of patient-level, health-related social needs—such as food insecurity, housing instability, transportation needs, utility difficulties, and interpersonal safety. By screening for and identifying such unmet needs, hospitals will be in a better position to serve patients holistically by addressing and monitoring what are often key contributors to poor physical and mental health outcomes.

Additionally, CMS seeks public input on how to optimally measure health care quality disparities, including what to prioritize in data collection and reporting as well as approaches to consider in driving provider accountability across hospital quality programs. 

CMS is also proposing to discontinue the use of proxy data for uncompensated care costs in determining uncompensated care payments for Indian Health Service and Tribal hospitals and hospitals in Puerto Rico, and to establish a new supplemental payment to prevent undue long-term financial disruption for these hospitals.

Improving Care for People Experiencing Homelessness and Documenting Social Determinants of Health

CMS is seeking stakeholder input through a Request for Information (RFI) on social determinants of health, particularly related to homelessness, reported by hospitals on Medicare claims. Consistently documenting these factors could better support people experiencing homelessness and more fully consider resources expended by hospitals. With this RFI, CMS seeks to better understand the perspectives of people who are experiencing or have experienced homelessness, advocates representing people experiencing homelessness, hospitals and other key stakeholders for consideration in future payment policies.

Improving Maternal Health Outcomes

CMS is proposing the creation of a new hospital designation to identify “birthing friendly hospitals” and additional quality measure reporting to drive improvements in maternal health outcomes and maternal health equity.

The Biden-Harris Administration has championed policies to improve maternal health and equity since President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris first took office. This week, Vice President Harris convened a first-ever White House meeting with Cabinet Secretaries and agency leaders, including Secretary Becerra, CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, and Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) Administrator Carole Johnson, to discuss the Administration’s whole-of-government approach to reducing maternal mortality and morbidity. In December 2021, Vice President Harris announced a historic Call to Action to improve health outcomes for parents and their young children in the United States. Today’s announcement is part of the Biden-Harris Administration’s continued response to that Call to Action.

“Improving maternal health outcomes—particularly among underserved communities and groups that we know experience adverse birth outcomes at a higher rate—is a top priority for the Biden-Harris Administration, CMS, and for me personally,” said Administrator Brooks-LaSure.

The “Birthing-Friendly” hospital designation would assist consumers in choosing hospitals that have demonstrated a commitment to maternal health through implementation of best practices that advance health care quality, safety, and equity for pregnant and postpartum patients. Initially, the designation would be awarded to hospitals based on their attestation to the Hospital IQR Program’s Maternal Morbidity Structural Measure.

The Maternal Morbidity Structural Measure reflects hospitals’ commitment to the quality and safety of maternity care they furnish. Data will be submitted by hospitals for the first time in May 2022, and CMS will post data for October to December 2021 in fall 2022. The hospital designation would begin in fall 2023. Criteria for the designation could be expanded in the future.

The proposed rule also introduces two additional quality measures for the Hospital IQR Program intended to drive improvements in maternal health, including a measure of low-risk Cesarean deliveries and a measure of severe obstetric complications.

Promoting Payment Accuracy and Stability

At its core, the rule drives high-quality, person-centered care and promotes fiscal stewardship of the Medicare program by proposing updates to Medicare fee-for-service payment rates and policies for acute care inpatient hospitals and long-term care hospitals for FY 2023. Annually, IPPS and LTCH spending accounts for more than 25% of fee-for-service Medicare spending for approximately 3,900 inpatient and long-term care hospitals.

Additional items in the proposed rule related to payment stability for hospitals, include a policy that smooths out significant year-to-year changes in hospitals’ wage indexes and a solicitation for comments on payment adjustments for purchasing domestically made surgical N95 respirators. Specifically, CMS is proposing to apply a 5% cap on any decrease to a hospital’s wage index from its wage index in the prior fiscal year; and is considering the appropriateness of payment adjustments accounting for additional costs of purchasing surgical N95 respirators made in the U.S.

For a fact sheet on the proposed payment rule visit: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/fy-2023-hospital-inpatient-prospective-payment-system-ipps-and-long-term-care-hospitals-ltch-pps

For a fact sheet specific to the maternal health and health equity measures included in the proposed payment rule visit:  https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/fy-2023-hospital-inpatient-prospective-payment-system-ipps-and-long-term-care-hospitals-ltch-pps-0

The White House statement on Reducing Maternal Mortality and Morbidity, as part of the first-ever federal maternal health day of action, can be viewed at: https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2021/12/07/fact-sheet-vice-president-kamala-harris-announces-call-to-action-to-reduce-maternal-mortality-and-morbidity/

For a fact sheet on additional steps to address maternal health announced as part of the first-ever meeting with cabinet officials on maternal health hosted by Vice President Harris visit: https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2022/04/13/fact-sheet-biden-harris-administration-announces-additional-actions-in-response-to-vice-president-harriss-call-to-action-on-maternal-health/

The FY 2023 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule has a 60-day comment period.  The proposed rule can be downloaded from the Federal Register at: https://www.federalregister.gov/public-inspection/current

CMS Innovation Center Listening Session: Strengthening Equitable Access to Advanced Primary Care

Date: April 18, 2022

CMS Innovation Center Listening Session: Strengthening Equitable Access to Advanced Primary Care

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Innovation Center invites you to join a listening session featuring representatives from patient advocacy groups and provider groups, as well as foundation and research experts, who will share insights on advanced primary care. Specifically, this event will be an opportunity to hear perspectives from thought leaders on the following questions:

  • What are the current challenges facing primary care in the United States? What role should the CMS Innovation Center play in testing innovations to address those challenges?
  • Advancing equity is a core goal for the CMS Innovation Center. What is needed to increase the reach of advanced primary care to underserved populations (e.g., recruitment of safety net providers, learnings supports and tools, financial incentives)?
  • CMS is evaluating how to help all practices move from FFS to value-based payment. If provided with needed financial and other supports, how and when can smaller, independent practices begin assuming initial financial accountability for quality?
  • What are the most significant barriers to improving coordination between primary and specialty care? What strategies can the CMS Innovation Center consider to facilitate coordination for beneficiaries?
  • Within primary care, how can social determinants of health (SDOH) needs be captured appropriately? What are the greatest obstacles to assessing SDOH needs? How can primary care and community-based resources best work together to assist with SDOH needs?

The insights from this session will help inform the Center’s strategy across its portfolio and over the life cycle of models.

Webinar Date: April 26, 2022

Time: 1:00 PM – 2:30 PM ET

Register Here

IMPORTANT NOTE: Attendees may submit written comments or questions during the session in the Q&A window or via email to CMMIStrategy@cms.hhs.gov using the subject line “ADVANCED PRIMARY CARE LISTENING SESSION.” Please indicate if you would prefer not to have your comments read or wish to remain anonymous.

Thank you in advance for joining the CMS Innovation Center Listening Session: Strengthening Equitable Access to Advanced Primary Care.

For more information about the CMS Innovation Center’s new strategy and the future of value-based care:

And, look for details on future listening sessions, model updates, and more via the CMMI listserv.

Webinar – Crossing the Threshold: Seeking Organizational Resilience

Date: April 17, 2022

Crossing the Threshold: Seeking Organizational Resilience

Webinar Date: May 4, 2022

Time: 1:00 PM – 2:00 PM CT

Register Here

This session will set the stage by describing what is meant by organizational resilience, and how efforts to improve quality and safety impact organizational resilience at the individual, team, leadership, and resource levels. Building from this overview, this presentation delves into two fundamental components of organization resilience – trust and mattering. Interpersonal cooperation is dependent on trust and trust is necessary for the ability to act in uncertain circumstances. The sense of mattering is an indicator of organizational health and employee success. Trust and mattering are interconnected and are important keys to flexing and adapting – being resilient to disruptions. 

Speaker: Jane Pederson and Betsy Jeppesen, Stratis Health

By attending this webinar, participants will be able to: 

  • Define the term resilience as it applies to health care
  • Identify trust in the context of health care workplace relationships
  • List three components of mattering
  • Describe three actions that either build a sense of trust or mattering 

This event qualifies for one ACHE qualified education credit.

Content is tailored to guide Small Rural Hospitals (SRH) and certified Rural Health Clinics (RHCs) not currently participating in Value Based Care to prepare for and position their organizations to be effective participants in a health system focused on value. Live HELP Webinars events are intended for qualifying SRH and certified RHCs; eligibility requirements apply to attend the event live.

Federal Office of Rural Health Policy Announcements

Date: April 14, 2022

Preview New Opportunity for Delta Workforce Training Program. Next Thursday, April 21, join the Federal Office of Rural Health Policy for a preview of a Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) that will be released soon. The Delta Region Rural Health Workforce Training Program will train future and current health professionals in critical administrative support professions, preparing them for high-quality jobs in the rural counties and parishes of the federal Delta Regional Authority. Jobs supported by this funding include medical coding and billing, insurance claims processing, health information management, clinical documentation, business operations for healthcare organizations, and supply chain and materials management. The hour-long call will take place on Zoom at 2:00 pm ET. The program coordinator will highlight key changes to the NOFO that make it easier for interested applicants to apply.

Rural Playbook for the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. The new legislation promises billions of dollars for high-speed internet, improvements to roads and bridges, clean drinking water, and modernized wastewater systems. The playbook is intended to help communities understand the available funding set aside for rural areas and how to apply for these federal dollars.

Successful Federal Efforts to Address SDOH. Social determinants of health (SDOH) include factors such as housing, food and nutrition, transportation, social mobility, and environmental conditions as having significant impact on health outcomes. In this series of policy briefs, the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services describes the Department’s strategic approach to SDOH and provides successful examples of current federal programs. 

The Persistence of Poverty in Rural America. The Housing Assistance Council (HAC) is a national nonprofit focused on improving conditions in the poorest rural places. In this policy brief, HAC identifies 377 persistent poverty counties in the United States – those classified by the Census Bureau as having poverty rates of 20 percent or more for three consecutive decades.  Approximately 81 percent of these counties are outside of metropolitan areas.

Earth Day Brings Federal Focus to Climate Change. Over three days next week, the newly formed federal Office of Climate Change and Health Equity will host experts speaking about the impact that climate change has on health and well-being. Each hour-long event will take place at noon on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, April 19-21. See the link to learn details about speakers and the topics that will be covered, and contact GoGreen@hhs.gov with questions.

Ongoing: HRSA Payment Program for RHC Buprenorphine-Trained Providers. In June 2021, the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) launched an effort to improve access to substance use disorder treatment by paying for providers who are waivered to prescribe buprenorphine, a medication used to treat opioid use disorder. Rural Health Clinics (RHCs) still have the opportunity to apply for a $3,000 payment on behalf of each provider who trained to obtain the waiver necessary to prescribe buprenorphine after January 1, 2019.  Approximately $1.2 million in program funding remains available for RHCs and will be paid on a first-come, first-served basis until funds are exhausted. Send questions to DATA2000WaiverPayments@hrsa.gov. There is ongoing availability of a free online course for waiver eligibility training from the American Osteopathic Academy of Addiction Medicine and the Providers Clinical Support System.