The Health Resources and Services Administration’s Rural Health Care Coordination Program promotes rural health care services outreach by improving and expanding delivery of health care services through comprehensive care coordination strategies in rural areas.
Donor Name: Health Resources and Services Administration
State: All States
County: All Counties
Type of Grant: Grant
Deadline: 05/15/2023
Size of the Grant: $300,000
Duration: 4 years
Details:
This award is intended to serve as initial seed funding to implement creative community-based health solutions in rural communities to expand access to and coordination of care with the expectation that awardees will then be able to sustain the program after the federal funding ends.
The goals for the Rural Health Care Coordination Program are to:
- Expand access to and quality of equitable health care services through care coordination strategies exclusively in rural areas;
- Utilize an innovative evidence-based, promising practice, and/or value-based care model(s) that is known to, or demonstrates strong evidence to, improve patient health outcomes and the planning and delivery of patient-centered health care services;
- Increase collaboration among multi-sector and multidisciplinary network partnerships to address the underlying factors related to social determinants of health; and
- Develop and implement deliberate and sustainable strategies of care coordination into policies, procedures, staffing, services, and communication systems.
The Rural Health Care Coordination Program is a four-year program with year one (September 1, 2023 – August 31, 2024) being a planning year and years two – four (September 1, 2024 – August 31, 2027) focused on program implementation. Applicants are required to select one primary focus area from the following: 1) heart disease; 2) cancer; 3) chronic lower respiratory disease; 4) stroke; or 5) maternal health. Applicants are to propose innovative approaches to achieve the program goals, address local health challenges including the underlying risk factors that contribute to the selected primary focus area, and improve population health outcomes through coordinated, community-wide programs that link health and human services within an established or formal network (for the purposes of this program the terms “consortium” and “network” are used interchangeably). Although it is required to select one primary focus area, applicants may include underlying risk factors that contribute to the selected primary focus area understanding care coordination includes the provision of care for individuals with chronic and/or medically complex diseases.
At the end of the four years, applicants should be able to contribute to the following outcomes:
- Expanded access to and affordability of quality comprehensive care coordination leading to cost savings and overall health improvement status;
- Improved patient health outcomes through the utilization of chronic care management, and/or preventive and wellness services;
- Institutionalized care coordination strategies within their policies, procedures, staffing, services, and communication systems;
- Implemented a multidisciplinary and multi-sector referral system; and
- Identified a variety of funding and financing mechanisms to continue comprehensive care coordination strategies beyond the initial FORHP grant funding.
Funding Information
- HRSA estimates approximately $3,000,000 to be available annually to fund 10 recipients. You may apply for a ceiling amount of up to $300,000 annually (reflecting direct and indirect costs) per year.
- The period of performance is September 1, 2023, through August 31, 2027 (4 years).
Eligibility Criteria
- City or township governments
- County governments
- Private institutions of higher education
- Special district governments
- State governments
- Independent school districts
- Public and State controlled institutions of higher education
- Nonprofits having a 501(c)(3) status with the IRS, other than institutions of higher education
Eligible applicants include domestic public or private, non-profit or for-profit entities, including faith-based, community-based, tribes, and tribal organizations. The applicant organization may be located in a rural or urban area, but must have demonstrated experience serving, or the capacity to serve, rural underserved populations. The applicant organization should describe in detail their experience and/or capacity to serve rural populations in the Project Abstract section of the application.
The applicant organization must represent a network composed of members that include three or more health care providers. For the purposes of this funding opportunity, the terms “consortium” and “network” are used interchangeably. The applicant organization may not previously have received an award under 42 U.S.C. 254c(e) from the HRSA Federal Office of Rural Health Policy for the same or a similar project unless the applicant is proposing to expand the scope of the project or the area that will be served through the project.
For more information, visit Grants.gov.