- Social Factors Help Explain Worse Cardiovascular Health among Adults in Rural Vs. Urban Communities
- Reducing Barriers to Participation in Population-Based Total Cost of Care (PB-TCOC) Models and Supporting Primary and Specialty Care Transformation: Request for Input
- Secretary Kennedy Renews Public Health Emergency Declaration to Address National Opioid Crisis
- Secretary Kennedy Renews Public Health Emergency Declaration to Address National Opioid Crisis
- 2025 Marketplace Integrity and Affordability Proposed Rule
- Rural America Faces Growing Shortage of Eye Surgeons
- NRHA Continues Partnership to Advance Rural Oral Health
- Comments Requested on Mobile Crisis Team Services: An Implementation Toolkit Draft
- Q&A: What Are the Challenges and Opportunities of Small-Town Philanthropy?
- HRSA Administrator Carole Johnson, Joined by Co-Chair of the Congressional Black Maternal Health Caucus Congresswoman Lauren Underwood, Announces New Funding, Policy Action, and Report to Mark Landmark Year of HRSA's Enhancing Maternal Health Initiative
- Biden-Harris Administration Announces $60 Million Investment for Adding Early Morning, Night, and Weekend Hours at Community Health Centers
- Volunteer Opportunity for HUD's Office of Housing Counseling Tribe and TDHE Certification Exam
- Who Needs Dry January More: Rural or Urban Drinkers?
- Rural Families Have 'Critical' Need for More Hospice, Respite Care
- States Help Child Care Centers Expand in Bid To Create More Slots, Lower Prices
Findings Released on Rural-Urban Differences in Housing Cost Burden Across the U.S.
The University of Minnesota Rural Health Research Center examines rural-urban differences in housing affordability across Census regions, divisions, states, and counties, using data from the 2017-2021 American Community Survey.
Prevent or Treat: Availability of Diabetes Self-Management Education and Dialysis in High Need Rural Counties
Researchers from the Rural and Minority Health Research Center assess the availability of in-county diabetes self-management education and dialysis across rural and urban counties. Among the findings: at least one site for kidney dialysis services is available in 59.2 percent of all counties across the U.S., but present in only 31.1 percent of noncore rural counties.
Partnership to Address Social Needs Across Metropolitan and Non-Metropolitan Prospective Payment System Hospitals and Critical Access Hospitals
This policy brief from the RUPRI Center for Rural Health Policy Analysis used survey data from the American Hospital Association to examine partnerships between hospitals and external organizations to address social needs.
CMS Seeks Input on a New Beneficiary Disenrollment Survey
Comments Due May 13
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is developing a survey to collect beneficiaries’ reasons for disenrolling from a Medicare Advantage (MA) plan or Prescription Drug Plan (PDP), and they seek public input on the necessity of the survey, ways to enhance the quality and clarity of the questions, the estimated time burden on beneficiaries, and the methods for administering the survey. CMS will use the Disenrollment Survey to monitor the quality of service that Medicare beneficiaries get from plans and their providers and to understand beneficiaries’ expectations about their MA and PDP benefits and services. Rural enrollment in Medicare Advantage plans has been growing over the last decade, and researchers expect that a majority of rural beneficiaries will be enrolled in MA by 2025.
Meeting of the HRSA Advisory Committee on Infant and Maternal Mortality Scheduled
HRSA will hold a virtual public meeting of the Advisory Committee on Infant and Maternal Mortality (ACIMM) over three days beginning April 4. Topics discussed may include the federal Healthy Start program and rural healthcare access, social drivers of health, and women’s health before/between pregnancies. Individuals with lived experience and community members will provide remarks on how to achieve optimal maternal health and overall birth outcomes for underserved populations. Register at the ACIMM website and submit comments via email to SACIM@hrsa.gov.
HRSA National Health Service Corps: Three Options for Loan Repayment Programs – Apply by May 9
The application window for HRSA’s National Health Service Corp (NHSC) loan repayment programs just opened with a 50 percent increase in funding available for primary care clinicians who commit to working for at least two years in underserved and rural areas. This year, HRSA also seeks to address language barriers for patients and will provide a $5,000 award enhancement to providers who demonstrate Spanish proficiency. The award is available to eligible applicants in all three loan repayment programs and is in addition to the maximum award amounts up to $105,000. The open NHSC Rural Community Loan Repayment Program, along with other NHSC programs, helps health centers recruit and retain providers to rural communities. In 2023, NHSC rural provider numbers represent 38 percent of the overall health workforce supported by the programs.
New Bill Focuses on Elevating Community Health Workers
Senator Bob Casey (D-Pa.) introduced the Community Health Worker Access Act, a new bill proposing crucial investments in the community health worker (CHW) workforce to improve health care access. The CHW Access Act seeks to improve Medicare reimbursement for CHWs and support integration into Medicaid by providing reimbursement and creating an optional Medicaid benefit, incentivized by an enhanced Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP), to cover preventative services and address social needs of patients being assisted by CHWs. CHWs are critical in their role and impact on the healthcare delivery system. Inadequate and unstable funding looks to jeopardize the strides made by these essential workers. The National Association of Community Health Workers and Partners in Health – US have put together a Social Media Toolkit with unbranded, shareable social media messages, and graphics to uplift the bill.
Pennsylvania’s Senators Accepting Constituent Funding Requests
Both Sen. Casey and Sen. Fetterman have announced that appropriations request forms for Fiscal Year (FY) 2025 are now live. The request forms allow constituents to state their requests for federal discretionary funding. Filling out these forms is the principal method for constituents to request the Senators’ support for funding federal discretionary programs and associated Senate Appropriations Committee report language. PACHC sent a separate email on the opportunity with the necessary forms and additional information to all health center CEOs earlier this week. Questions may be directed to Eric Kiehl Director of Policy and Partnership, PACHC, or by reaching out to the Senator’s office.
Pennsylvania Announces $1.7 Million to Tackle Maternal Mortality
The Pennsylvania Department of Health is reserving $1.7 million in grant money to address maternal mortality, acting Secretary of Health Debra Bogen announced last Friday. The money adds to the $2.6 million that Gov. Josh Shapiro recommended in his recent 2024–2025 budget address to go toward maternal health, as well as $2.3 million from the previous year’s budget to expand maternal health programming. The pregnancy-associated mortality rate in Pennsylvania is 82 for every 100,000 live births, according to the state Department of Health’s 2021 Maternal Mortality Report, compared to a national average of 39.2 per 100,000 live births. The report also says the maternal mortality rate for Black women in the state is twice as high than that of their white counterparts. Learn more.
engAGED Social Engagement Innovations Hub Created
he National Resource Center for Engaging Older Adults created this collection of social engagement programs including description of program, outcomes, resources needed, program contact, and more. The profiles can be filtered by intervention type, population served, organization type, and geographic population including rural, urban, suburban, and frontier.