2026-03-03T05:00:18-0500 / CBS新闻
2025年最后几天,全美州长们高调宣布各州从新设立的500亿美元农村医疗基金中获得了数亿美元联邦资金。
但使用这些九位数资金的计划并非都受到热烈欢迎。
至少有一群共和党州议员似乎否决了一项已获联邦官员预先批准的倡议。至少有一个医院协会说服其州卫生部门负责人改变了资金审批权限。其他批评者则采取更为谨慎的态度。
这是因为管理五年期农村医疗转型计划的医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心(CMS)表示,如果各州对申请中获批的计划进行重大修改,可能会失去资金。这些修改还可能延迟各州项目启动的时间,无法及时向该机构展示其满足进度截止日期的情况。
CMS发言人凯瑟琳·豪登(Catherine Howden)表示:”在申请期间,各州被建议只提出该州认为可行的举措和州政策行动。”她还指出,该机构将逐案与各州合作。
代表农村医院和诊所的最大组织——美国农村健康协会(National Rural Health Association)首席政策官卡里·科克伦-麦克克莱恩(Carrie Cochran-McClain)表示,最近的反对意见反映了各州计划(已获联邦政府批准)面临的”紧张局势”,州议员和卫生部门负责人希望在紧迫的截止日期前获得更多话语权。
科克伦-麦克克莱恩说,许多州必须通过一项法案来允许使用联邦资金,并补充说,由于该项目推出速度太快,”在一些州的立法机构和州长之间仍有重要工作需要完成”。
她说,州议员希望对”资金如何分配——实施将如何进行”拥有发言权。
国会共和党人在去年夏天签署的《大美好法案》(One Big Beautiful Bill Act)中临时加入了该项目,作为最后的甜头。这笔资金旨在抵消该法案可能给农村社区带来的巨大负面影响——该法案预计将在十年内削减近1万亿美元的医疗补助支出。
CMS官员在12月29日公布了第一年的资金分配情况,从新泽西州的1.47亿美元到得克萨斯州的2.81亿美元不等。联邦官员将于夏末开始评估进展情况,并在10月底宣布2027年的资金分配。
众多批评者表示,该项目无法弥补医疗补助削减造成的损害。
俄勒冈州民主党参议员罗恩·怀登(Ron Wyden)在2月份的一次农村政策会议上称该项目”完全是一场骗局”。
医疗补助是联邦与州共同管理的项目,为低收入和残疾美国人提供服务,服务近四分之一的农村居民,许多农村医院依靠它维持运营。
但该农村医疗项目侧重于培育创新项目和技术,而非支持农村医院的财务状况。各州最多只能将15%的资金用于支付医疗服务提供者的患者护理费用。
尽管如此,一些联邦官员和议员仍将该项目描述为农村医院的救星。
例如,白宫网站称:”特朗普总统为农村医院争取到了500亿美元资金。”
如今申请已获批准,一些州的共和党议员(更可能代表农村选民,而非民主党人)和医院协会感到不满,认为政治宣传与实际情况不符。
他们还对各州计划的具体方面提出批评,包括拟议项目、未包含的内容以及资金审批流程。
在怀俄明州,议员们不仅批评了本州申请中的一项倡议,还试图将其否决。
共和党州议员约翰·贝尔(John Bear)表示,他和其他议员拒绝为”贝尔护理计划”(BearCare)提供资金,这是一项拟议的州立医疗保险计划,患者只有在医疗紧急情况时才能使用。但他们批准了农村医疗项目的其他方面。
怀俄明州卫生部门发言人林赛·米尔斯(Lindsay Mills)表示:”没有明确的立法授权,怀俄明州卫生部门不会推进’贝尔护理计划’。”
尽管怀俄明州议员从本州农村医疗计划中删除了一项倡议,但俄亥俄州的一个团体希望添加一项内容。
俄亥俄州议员凯莉·迪特(Kellie Deeter)和其他共和党议员要求州长使用允许的最高资金比例(15%)来支持13家独立农村医院。
迪特表示:”我们明白农村转型基金并非旨在直接用于扶持医院,但我们希望利用该基金的机制来实现这一目的。”
她补充说,这些医院”运营利润非常微薄,坦率地说,这种状况难以持续”。
州长办公室和州卫生部门的新闻秘书肯·戈登(Ken Gordon)回应称:”这一过程仍处于早期阶段,许多细节正在敲定中。”
全国各州的议员们还在努力确保联邦项目资金惠及农村地区。
在北达科他州,居住在约2000人口小镇的共和党议员比尔·特维特(Bill Tveit)提出了一项法案,要求该州将资金保留用于距离城市和小城市35英里以上的项目。
在听证会上,议员们似乎同情特维特的担忧,但很快否决了他的想法。
北达科他州参议员布拉德·贝肯达尔(Brad Bekkedahl)表示,北达科他州卫生部门已经承诺优先资助最紧迫的农村健康需求。他还表示,担心任何重大修改都可能导致该州失去资金,因为CMS已经审查并批准了该计划。
与此同时,密歇根州和北卡罗来纳州的共和党议员批评了本州对”部分农村”或”农村”的定义,称包含城市人口中心的县可能会从人口密度较低的县中抽取资金(据《密歇根进步报》和《北卡罗来纳健康新闻》报道)。
并非只有议员在发声。
科罗拉多州医院协会致信州议员,谴责该州制定计划的方式以及两项拟议举措。
协会主席兼首席执行官杰夫·蒂曼(Jeff Tieman)写道:”科罗拉多州农村医院的建议不仅被忽视,而且该计划包含了他们积极反对并认为会损害其服务社区的想法。”
该部门通过在资金审批委员会中加入农村健康领导者来回应协会的一项担忧。
与此同时,在密歇根州和内布拉斯加州,一些健康团体对本州计划中缺乏针对农村医院的具体资金渠道感到不满。
密歇根州健康与医院协会负责农村健康政策的劳伦·拉派恩-雷(Lauren LaPine-Ray)预测,该州的农村医院将与学术中心和健康诊所等其他组织竞争资金。她说,该协会约65%的农村成员以前从未申请过州政府资助。
拉派恩-雷表示:”最需要资金的农村医院将不具备申请和获取这些资金的能力。”
内布拉斯加州农村健康协会执行董事杰德·汉森(Jed Hansen)表示,联邦资金不会”以有意义的方式流向农村医院、诊所和农村服务提供者”。
他说:”农村医疗转型计划不会拯救我们州的任何一家医院,我认为它也不会拯救全国的任何一家医院。”
KFF健康新闻是一个全国性新闻机构,专注于健康问题的深度报道,是KFF(健康政策研究、民意调查和新闻的独立信息来源)的核心运营项目之一。
States face pushback on their rural health transformation plans
2026-03-03T05:00:18-0500 / CBS News
In the final days of 2025, governors around the country trumpeted the hundreds of millions of federal dollars they won from a new, $50 billion rural health fund.
But plans to spend those nine-digit awards aren’t all warmly received.
At least one group of Republican state lawmakers appears to have scuttled an initiative preapproved by federal officials. And at least one hospital association persuaded its state health leaders to alter who greenlights spending. Other critics are taking a more cautious approach.
That’s because the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, which manages the five-year Rural Health Transformation Program, says states could lose money if they make major changes to the plans approved in their applications. Changes could also delay states’ ability to get projects rolling in time to show the agency that they’re meeting progress deadlines.
“During the application period, states were advised to only propose initiatives and state policy actions that the state deemed feasible,” said CMS spokesperson Catherine Howden, who noted that the agency will work with states case by case.
The recent pushback reflects “tension” over state plans — which were approved by the federal government — from state lawmakers and health leaders who want more input amid tight deadlines, said Carrie Cochran-McClain, chief policy officer of the National Rural Health Association, the largest organization representing rural hospitals and clinics.
Cochran-McClain said many states must pass a bill to allow federal dollars to be spent and added that because the program rolled out so quickly “there’s important work that still needs to be done in some states between the legislatures and the governors.”
State lawmakers want to have a say, she said, in “how the funding is being allocated — how the implementation will go.”
Congressional Republicans created the program as a last-minute sweetener to include in their One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed into law last summer. The funding was intended to offset concerns about the outsize fallout anticipated in rural communities from the law, which is expected to slash Medicaid spending by nearly $1 trillion over a decade.
CMS officials announced first-year funding — ranging from $147 million for New Jersey to $281 million for Texas — on Dec. 29, after scoring applications. Federal officials will begin evaluating progress in late summer and announce 2027 allocations at the end of October.
A chorus of critics say the program won’t make up for harm caused by Medicaid cuts.
The program is “a complete sham,” Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) said at a rural policy conference in February.
Medicaid, a joint federal-state program for low-income and disabled Americans, serves nearly 1 in 4 rural residents, and many rural hospitals depend on it to stay afloat.
But the rural health program tilts toward seeding innovative projects and technologies, not shoring up rural hospital finances. States can use only up to 15% of their funding to pay providers for patient care.
That hasn’t stopped some federal officials and lawmakers from framing the program as a rural hospital rescue.
For example, the White House website says, “President Trump secured $50 billion in funding for rural hospitals.”
Now that applications have been approved, some state Republican lawmakers — who are more likely to represent rural voters than Democrats are — and hospital associations are upset that the political rhetoric doesn’t match what they see.
They’re also lobbing criticisms at specific aspects of their states’ plans, including the proposed projects, what’s not included, and the spending approval process.
In Wyoming, lawmakers didn’t just criticize an initiative from their state’s application. They moved to kill it.
State Rep. John Bear, a Republican, said he and other lawmakers declined to fund “BearCare,” a proposed state-sponsored health insurance plan that patients could use only after medical emergencies. But they did approve other aspects of the rural health program.
The Wyoming Department of Health won’t “proceed with BearCare without express legislative authority to do so,” said spokesperson Lindsay Mills.
While Wyoming lawmakers removed an initiative from their state’s rural health plan, a group in Ohio wants to add something.
Ohio Rep. Kellie Deeter and other Republican lawmakers asked their governor to use the maximum allowed funding for provider payments — 15% — to support 13 independent, rural hospitals.
“We understand that the rural transformation fund is not designed to be given directly to prop up hospitals,” Deeter said. “We just want to capitalize on the mechanism of the fund that can be utilized for that purpose.”
Those hospitals “operate with very, very narrow margins, and it’s just difficult and, frankly, unsustainable,” she added.
Ken Gordon, a press secretary responding for the governor’s office and the state health department, said, “It’s still very early in this process, and many details are being worked out.”
State lawmakers around the country are also trying to ensure the federal program’s dollars benefit rural areas.
In North Dakota, Rep. Bill Tveit, a Republican who lives in a town with about 2,000 residents, introduced a bill that would have required the state to reserve its funding for programs located more than 35 miles from urban areas and small cities.
During a hearing, lawmakers appeared sympathetic to Tveit’s concerns but quickly shot down his idea.
State Sen. Brad Bekkedahl said the North Dakota health department already committed to prioritizing funding for the most pressing rural health needs. He also said he’s concerned any significant changes could cause the state to lose funding because CMS already reviewed and approved the plan.
Meanwhile, Republican lawmakers in Michigan and North Carolina have criticized their state’s definitions of “partially rural” or “rural,” saying that counties that include urban population centers could take money from lower-density counties, according to Michigan Advance and North Carolina Health News.
Lawmakers aren’t the only ones speaking out.
The Colorado Hospital Association wrote a letter to state lawmakers denouncing how the state created its plan and two of its proposed initiatives.
“Not only were Colorado’s rural hospitals’ recommendations disregarded,” president and CEO Jeff Tieman wrote, but the plan includes ideas “they actively oppose and believe will harm the communities they serve.”
The department responded to one of the association’s concerns by adding rural health leaders to the funding approval committee.
Meanwhile, in Michigan and Nebraska, some health groups are upset that their states’ plans lack specific funding streams for rural hospitals.
Lauren LaPine-Ray, who oversees rural health policy at the Michigan Health & Hospital Association, predicted the state’s rural hospitals will compete with other organizations, such as academic centers and health clinics, for funding. She said about 65% of the group’s rural members have never applied for a state grant before.
“The rural hospitals, the ones that really need the funding the most, will not be well equipped to apply for and pull down these dollars,” LaPine-Ray said.
Jed Hansen, executive director of the Nebraska Rural Health Association, said the federal funding won’t go to “rural hospitals, rural clinics, and rural providers in a meaningful way.”
“Rural Health Transformation will not save a single hospital in our state,” he said. “I don’t think it will save a hospital nationally.”
KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF — the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism.
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