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More than dollars: Rural health transformation starts with data

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Rural health has received a $50 billion lifeline. Through the Rural Health Transformation Program (RHTP), all 50 states have now been granted funding to strengthen and modernize care delivery in rural communities.

This level of federal investment is unprecedented, and critically, it is not being administered through a traditional grant program. The RHTP is a performance‑based partnership that ties funding directly to measurable improvement, with re-scoring taking place each year based on metrics reported to CMS. Inadequate progress will carry real financial consequences.

The design of the RHTP reflects an important shift in federal policy: transformation is no longer defined by effort or intent, but by verifiable impact. For rural healthcare, the approach creates a rare opportunity to move beyond stabilization and instead drive sustained, evidence‑based change. It also exposes a foundational risk that at least some of the grant recipients will have to address: the inability of current data infrastructure to support the level of accountability the program demands.

Fragmented systems, partial stories, missed opportunities

The core challenge faced by many rural healthcare providers is not whether data exists. In most cases, it does. The challenge is whether that data is connected, trusted and usable.

Today, huge volumes of critical information are fragmented across disparate electronic health record systems, billing platforms, health information exchanges, payer systems, social records, registries and national networks. Each holds a piece of the story but none delivers a complete, longitudinal view that decision makers can rely on with confidence.

When data is incomplete, inconsistent, or its provenance unclear, states will not be able to determine which current or RHTP-funded initiatives are producing results – and which are not. Reporting to CMS could then become reactive and manual, with performance signals arriving too late to course‑correct. In the worst-case scenario, funding would then be put at risk—not because care teams failed, but because progress could not be clearly demonstrated.

The data gap must be addressed

Addressing this gap requires far more than aggregating information into dashboards.

To meet the intent of the RHTP, various types of data from disparate sources must be unified, normalized, governed, and continuously refreshed in order to support the required rigorous reporting, performance monitoring and decision‑making at scale.

How seeing clearly leads to improved care

Across early RHTP efforts, a common lesson is already emerging: Data infrastructure is not a technical upgrade. Data is the bridge between policy intent and patient‑level impact. Without that bridge, the promise of the RHTP will remain only partially fulfilled.

The fact is that interoperability enables collaboration across care settings. Analytics enable accountability. Performance monitoring enables reimbursement and refunding. Together, these capabilities form the evidence framework CMS has required of RHTP participants, all with an eye on justifying the government’s continued investment beyond the initial funding cycle.

Turning fragmented data into action

CareIntelligence is a unified data activation platform built for this moment.

Grounded in more than 20 years of interoperability innovation, CareIntelligence transforms fragmented healthcare data into a strategic, actionable asset. It ingests clinical, claims, social, operational and financial data in near real-time, harmonizing the information to allow decision makers to take their next actions with confidence.

When data is activated, not just collected, rural health leaders gain the visibility needed to deliver measurable improvement—and the proof required to sustain it.

Learn more about CareIntelligence

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