The Biden-Harris Administration is taking actions to improve the health of rural communities and help rural health care providers stay open
Build on the Affordable Care Act and Inflation Reduction Act to increase access to affordable health coverage and care for those living in rural communities
Keep more rural hospitals open in the long run to provide critical services in their communities
Bolster the rural health workforce, including for primary care and behavioral health providers
Support access to needed care such as behavioral health and through telehealth services.
INCREASING HEALTH COVERAGE FOR RURAL AMERICANS. Rural communities rely on the Marketplace, Medicaid, and Medicare; 1 in 3 rural adults are enrolled in Medicare, 1 in 6 are enrolled in state Medicaid programs, and 1 in 10 are covered by Marketplace coverage. This is particularly true for children - 47% of children living in small towns and rural areas are enrolled in Medicaid, compared to 40% of children in urban areas. Medicaid expansion has played a key role in expanding health coverage in rural communities. In 2019, rural uninsured rates were nearly twice as high in non-expansion states as expansion states. These actions will help improve access to health coverage that greatly benefit rural communities.
More outreach to rural Americans on
Increasing access to the Low-Income Subsidy under the Medicare Part D prescription drug program. With a disproportionate number of seniors living in rural America, rural Americans stand to benefit from the Inflation Reduction Act's policies to lower prescription drug costs in Medicare. Thanks to the new law, starting on
Closing the Medicaid Coverage gap. Since the enactment of the Affordable Care Act, the rate of uninsured, low-income rural individuals in Medicaid expansion states fell by more than 50% (from 35% to 16%). However, the rate of uninsured low-income rural Americans living in non-expansion states declined by only 6 percentage points (from 38% to 32%) during that same timeframe. A state expanding Medicaid also decreases the likelihood of a rural hospital closing by more than half. Four states have expanded Medicaid since
KEEPING MORE RURAL HOSPITALS OPEN SO THEY CAN PROVIDE CRITICAL SERVICES IN THEIR COMMUNITIES. The Administration has made billions of dollars available to rural communities, including funding to small rural hospitals and
Public consultation on Medicare policies rural providers and beneficiaries. Rural hospitals are more likely to serve patients on Medicare and Medicaid, and therefore are more heavily reliant on those payments. To help address financial conditions of rural hospitals and ensure access to care in rural areas, Medicare currently provides some increased payments for facilities in rural areas. In order to determine other ways to assist rural hospitals, HHS expects to engage in public consultation to inform potential ways to support the needs of rural hospitals and the communities they serve through Medicare payment and coverage policies.
Supporting rural hospitals by helping them avoid closing their doors and instead converting to Rural Emergency Hospitals. Eligible hospitals (critical access hospitals (CAHs) and small hospitals in rural areas) have a new option to convert to a
Funding to rural providers to join value-based care initiatives. Medicare's largest value-based care program, the Medicare Shared Savings Program, encourages providers to collaborate to provide coordinated, high-quality care to people with Medicare by forming or joining Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs). However, upfront capital to form an ACO and start to make the necessary investments to provide accountable care is often a barrier for rural providers to join value-based care programs. Starting
Grants to rural hospitals and communities to provide health care services. HHS has several grant opportunities to support rural communities, including
Completing vital sanitation construction projects across Indian Country. The IHS recently announced allocation decisions for over
Understanding rural health providers' cybersecurity needs. Health care cyber incidents are among the fastest growing type of cyber-crime, jeopardizing patient care and financial security of health care providers. Rural health providers are particularly challenged in protecting their information technology systems. Despite growing understanding of sector-wide risks, the precise cybersecurity landscape and resource needs for rural health providers are poorly understood. HHS worked directly with a broad range of health care providers - including rural health care providers - to develop the Hospital Cyber Resiliency Initiative Landscape Analysis in order to better understand the current state of cybersecurity practices and inform future efforts to support and protect providers and their patients. HHS will build upon this analysis to inform future cybersecurity protocols and policies to benefit health care providers in rural areas targeted by cyber-crime.
The President's FY 2024 budget put forth several policies to support rural providers, including
BOLSTER RURAL WORKFORCE CAPACITY. With fewer health care providers in rural areas, the
Increase resident training opportunities in rural hospitals. Medicare is allocating 1,000 new training slots for medical residents and is prioritizing rural and underserved areas. CMS is also working to implement another 200 slots, which includes at least 100 slots specifically for psychiatry residencies in 2026, as enacted in the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023. HHS expects to do additional outreach and technical assistance to rural hospitals to encourage them to apply for these new residency positions. HHS also awarded over
Expanding the workforce and recognizing the role of community health workers Community health workers have been shown to be successful at addressing disparities in health care and connecting patients with local resources to address social needs, which can be particularly challenging in rural and tribal areas. Building on the Administration's
Developing and investing in the nursing workforce.Nurses play a critical role in primary care, mental health care and maternal health care, particularly in rural areas. HHS announced more than
Virtual Physician Supervision. CMS finalized policies continuing to allow physicians caring for Medicare patients to supervise patient care for some types of facilities virtually through the end of 2024. Virtual supervision has been a COVID-19 public health emergency flexibility recognized to promote access to care in rural and underserved areas.
Prioritizing rural communities in funding of community economic grant competition. HHS, through the Administration for Children and Families (ACF), runs the
Addressing the Water and Wastewater Infrastructure Needs of
SUPPORTING ACCESS TO CARE.
Expanding access to services provided via telehealth. During the first year of the COVID-19 public health emergency (PHE), Medicare telehealth visits increased 63-fold, especially benefiting patients in rural communities. CMS is extending many of the Medicare telehealth flexibilities provided during the COVID-19 PHE through
Improving access to high-speed internet. Internet access is important to accessing telehealth and the
Increasing access to and payment for behavioral health services. Rural communities face higher rates of behavioral health conditions and shortages of behavioral health providers that make it harder for people to access treatment. HHS has taken a series of actions to help expand access to behavioral health providers within rural communities. This also includes efforts to leverage telehealth flexibilities and mobile units to reach underserved populations. CMS is also working to implement provisions of the CAA, 2023, which expands Medicare coverage and payment to new behavioral health providers such as marriage and family therapists and mental health counselors. CMS finalized policies to allow rural health clinics to provide intensive outpatient services for behavioral health and to increase payment for certain types of mental health services. The President's FY 2024 Budget Request also calls for an increase in the funding going to rural communities to respond to the behavioral health crisis. This includes
Improving access to treatment for opioid use disorders. Access to opioid use treatment services in rural areas is vital. To address the need for these services in rural areas, HRSA's National Health Service Corps Rural Community Loan Repayment Program issues loan repayment awards in coordination with the RCORP from the
Advancing network adequacy for behavioral health providers. Ensuring rural Americans have health insurance provider networks that support their behavioral health needs is vital to improving access to these services. Under Medicare Advantage, CMS finalized a new rule with policies that strengthen network adequacy requirements, beginning with plan year 2024, and reaffirm Medicare Advantage organizations' responsibilities to provide behavioral health services networks. These new requirements include establishing appointment wait time standards for behavioral health and primary care providers and adding network standards for licensed clinical social workers and clinical psychologists. This rule supports rural Americans enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans by ensuring they receive timely access to behavioral health services. CMS also remains interested in network adequacy standards for other types of behavioral health providers. With respect to the Marketplace, CMS finalized revisions to the network adequacy and essential community provider (ECP) requirements for plan year 2024 to include two new ECP categories that are critical to delivering needed behavioral health care: Substance Use Disorder Treatment Centers and Mental Health Facilities. CMS also added rural emergency hospitals as an ECP category to better ensure consumer access to a sufficient choice of providers and increase provider types that rural consumers can choose from. CMS also revised network adequacy requirements in the Marketplace to evaluate qualified health plans for compliance with quantitative network adequacy standards based on time and distance standards, and will begin to evaluate qualified health plans for compliance with appointment wait time standards in plan year 2025. Additionally, for plan year 2024 and beyond, CMS retains the overall 35% provider participation threshold and also extends the 35% threshold to two major ECP categories: Federally Qualified Health Centers and Family Planning Providers, further benefiting rural beneficiaries.
Improving access to providers for Medicaid beneficiaries in rural areas. In
Access to care in Medicare Advantage in rural areas. People in rural communities are increasingly enrolling in Medicare Advantage. In addition to the telehealth and network adequacy policies described above, CMS has created new policies requiring that prior authorization procedures in Medicare Advantage don't inappropriately inhibit access to necessary services. New CMS regulations, applicable beginning 2024, limit the use of prior authorization to confirming the presence of diagnoses or other medical criteria that are the basis for coverage determinations for the specific item or service, and medical necessity of covered services for an enrollee (or clinical appropriateness for certain supplemental benefits).
School-Based Services in
Supporting Access to Rural Maternal Care. As described in the
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Original text here: https://www.hhs.gov//about/news/2023/11/03/department-health-human-services-actions-support-rural-america-rural-health-care-providers.html
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