Return To Full Article
You can republish this story for free. Click the "Copy HTML" button below. Questions? Get more details.

Feds Promised Radical Transparency but Are Withholding Rural Health Fund Applications

Medication-delivering drones and telehealth at local libraries are among the ideas state leaders revealed in November for spending their share of a $50 billion federal rural health program.

The Trump administration, which has promised radical transparency, that it plans to publish the project summary for states that win awards. Following the lead of federal regulators, many states are withholding their complete applications, and some have refused to release any details.

Lets be clear, said Alan Morgan, chief executive of the National Rural Health Association. The hospital CEOs, the clinic administrators, the community leaders: Theyre going to want to know what their states are doing. The NRHAs members include struggling rural hospitals and clinics, which would benefit from the Trump administrations Rural Health Transformation Program.

Morgan said his members are interested in what states propose, which of their ideas are approved or rejected, and their budget narratives, which detail how the money could be spent.

Improving rural health care is an insanely complicated and difficult task, Morgan said.

The five-year Rural Health Transformation Program was approved by Congress in a law the One Big Beautiful Bill Act that also drastically cuts Medicaid spending, on which rural providers heavily depend. Its being watched closely because its a much-needed influx of funds with a caveat from the Trump administration that the money be spent on transformational ideas, not just to prop up ailing rural hospitals.

The law says half of the $50 billion will be divided equally among all states with an approved application. The rest will be distributed through a points-based system. Of , $12.5 billion will be allotted based on each states rurality. The remaining $12.5 billion will go to states that on initiatives and policies that, in part, mirror the Trump administrations objectives.

Tracking State Rural Health Transformation Applications (Choropleth map)

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has repeatedly promised to open the government to the American people. His agency has devoted to radical transparency.

Were working to make this the most transparent HHS in its 70-year history, in written testimony to lawmakers in September.

Lawrence Gostin, a professor of public health law at Georgetown University, said HHS is acting in a way that utterly lacks transparency and that the public has the right to demand greater openness and clarity. Without transparency, the public cannot hold HHS accountable, he said.

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services spokesperson Catherine Howden said the agency will follow the federal regulations when releasing information about the rural health program.

Grant applications are not released to the public during the merit review process, Howden said, adding, The purpose of this policy is to protect the integrity of evaluations, applicant confidentiality, and the competitive nature of the process.

Democrats and many health care advocates are concerned politics will affect how much money states get.

I am very concerned about retaliation, said Rep. Nikki Budzinski (D-Ill.). Because Democrats control her states politics, our application might not be as seriously considered as other states that have Republican leadership, she added.

Illinois Democratic members of the U.S. House to CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz in November asking for full and fair consideration of their state application. Illinois officials have not yet released their states proposal to 窪蹋勛圖厙 News, which has a pending public records request.

Heather Howard, a professor of the practice at Princeton University, said she is pleasantly surprised at how transparent the states have been.

Howard directs the universitys State Health and Value Strategies program, which the rural health fund, and praised most states for publicly posting their project summaries.

To me, it speaks to the intense interest in this program, Howard said. Her team, reviewing about two dozen state summaries, found themes including expansion of home-based and mobile services, increased use of technology, and workforce development initiatives like scholarships, signing bonuses, and child care assistance for high-demand positions.

I think its exciting, Howard said. Whats great here is the experimentation were going to learn from.

Telerobotics appeared in Georgias and Alabamas applications, she said, including a proposal to use robotic equipment for remote ultrasounds.

Another theme that warms my heart, Howard said, was the effort among states to create advisory groups or committees, including in Idaho, where work groups are expected to focus on technology, workforce development, tribal collaboration, and behavioral health.

All 50 states submitted applications to federal regulators by the Nov. 5 deadline and awards will be announced by the end of the year, according to CMS.

As of late November, nearly 40 states had released their project narrative, the main part of the application, which describes proposed initiatives, according to 窪蹋勛圖厙 News tracking. More than a dozen states have also released their budget narratives.

Also as of late November, only a handful of states Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, New Mexico, North Dakota, South Carolina, and Wyoming had released all parts of the application.

窪蹋勛圖厙 News filed public records requests for states complete applications. Some states have refused to release any of their application materials.

Nebraska, for example, rejected a public records request, saying its application materials are proprietary or commercial information that would give advantage to business competitors.

Kentucky shared its application summary but said the remainder of the application is a preliminary draft not subject to release under state laws.

Erika Engle, a spokesperson for Hawaii Gov. Josh Green, said the governor is committed to transparency but declined to share any of the states proposal.

Hawaii and other states are still processing formal public records requests.

The rural health program is part of the July law projected to reduce federal Medicaid spending in rural areas by 10 years.

Those cuts are expected to affect rural health facilities bottom lines, threatening their ability to stay open. A recent Commonwealth Fund report found that rural areas continue to to primary care. But the guidelines for the rural health program say states can use only 15% of their new funding to pay providers for patient care.

Between the Medicaid cuts and funding boost from the new program, theres real opportunity for national policy to impact rural, both in the negative and the positive potentially, said Celli Horstman, a senior research associate at the New York-based policy think tank who co-authored the report.

Among the publicly available rural health transformation proposals, Democratic-leaning states show support, or are willing to adopt, some of the administrations goals but will lose out on points from eschewing others.

For example, New Mexico said it would introduce legislation requiring students to take the Presidential Fitness Test and physicians to complete continuing education courses on nutrition. But it wont prevent people from using their Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits to buy non-nutritious foods such as soda and candy.

Many states want to invest in technology, including telehealth, cybersecurity, and remote patient monitoring equipment. Other themes include increasing access to healthy food, improving emergency services, preventing and managing chronic illnesses, and enlisting community health workers and paramedics for home visits.

Specific proposals include:

  • Arkansas wants to spend $5 million through its FAITH program Faith-based Access, Interventions, Transportation, & Health to enlist rural religious institutions to host education and preventive screening events. Congregations could also install walking circuits and fitness equipment.
  • Alaska, which historically relied on dogsled teams to bring medication to remote areas, is looking to test the use of "unmanned aerial systems" to speed up pharmacy deliveries to such communities.
  • Tennessee wants to increase access to healthy activities by spending money on parks, trails, and farmers markets.
  • Maryland wants to start mobile markets and install refrigerators and freezers to improve access to fresh, healthy food that often spoils in rural areas with few grocery stores.

State Sen. Stephen Meredith, a Republican who represents part of western Kentucky, said he still expects rural hospitals to close despite his states rural health transformation program.

I think were treating symptoms without curing the disease, he said after listening to a presentation on Kentuckys proposal at .

Morgan, whose organization represents rural hospitals likely to close, said the states ideas may sound good.

You can craft a narrative that sounds wonderful, he said. But then translating the aspirational goals to a functioning program? Thats difficult.

窪蹋勛圖厙 News staffers Phil Galewitz, Katheryn Houghton, Tony Leys, Jazmin Orozco Rodriguez, Maia Rosenfeld, Bram Sable-Smith, and Lauren Sausser contributed to this report.

窪蹋勛圖厙 News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFFan independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about .

Help 窪蹋勛圖厙 News track this article

By including these elements when you republish, you help us:
  • Understand which communities and people were reaching.
  • Measure the impact of our health journalism.
  • Continue providing free, high-quality health news to the public.
Canonical Tag

Include this in your page's <head> section to properly attribute this content.

Tracking Snippet

Add this snippet at the end of your republished article to help us track its reach.