States Deploy Rural Health Transformation Funding for Maternity Care Deserts
States are using federal Rural Health Transformation Program (RHTP) grants to address maternal health access gaps in rural counties, with a mandatory October 30, 2026 deadline to obligate first-year awards. Initiatives include financial supports to sustain low-volume labor and delivery units, emergency OB equipment for rural hospitals, and workforce expansion through doulas, community health workers, and certified nurse midwives. Over 130 rural labor and delivery units have closed since 2020, leaving one in three U.S. counties without hospital-based obstetric care. States including Alabama, Alaska, New Mexico, California, and Iowa are prioritizing maternal health infrastructure, telehealth-enabled prenatal care, and incentive payments for rural providers serving high-need populations.
Medicaid MCOs with rural networks must align with state RHTP maternal health strategies, particularly around alternative provider credentialing (doulas, CHWs, midwives), telehealth infrastructure for prenatal/postpartum care, and value-based payment models for sustaining low-volume rural OB services before the October 2026 funding deadline.
Maternal · Managed Care
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