WASHINGTON – Nearly $5.3 million in grants will help to expand the rural Health Information Technology (HIT) workforce and the use of telehealth to improve mental health services for veterans in rural areas, according to HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.
Close to $4.4 million will go to rural organizations in 15 states to recruit and train current health care staff, local unemployed workers, rural veterans, and other potential students to meet the technology needs of rural hospitals and clinics. Community colleges will work with local rural health care providers to develop rural-focused HIT training programs. Students selected for these programs will gain EHR technology certification, apprenticeship training and the opportunity for employment in rural hospitals and clinics.
“Health IT is growing in rural communities, and its use is even more critical now as we’re expanding access to patients living in those areas,” said Sebelius. “This investment is designed to attract, train and retain HIT specialists who might otherwise seek education and job opportunities away from their own rural communities where their skills are greatly needed.”
In addition, a total of $900,000 will be awarded to Maine, Montana and Alaska to improve the quality of mental health and other critical healthcare services for veterans living in rural areas. Each state will receive $300,000 to enhance crisis intervention services through telehealth technologies. These services will enable health providers to coordinate care wirelessly and electronically across long distances to detect and treat post-traumatic stress disorders (PTSD), traumatic brain injury, and other injuries for rural veterans.
The grants, funded by HHS’ Health Resources and Services Administration, are part of an ongoing collaboration between HHS and the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to implement a 21st century information infrastructure for rural health. The programs are designed to build on existing networks of care among health care entities such as critical access hospitals, home health agencies, community mental health clinics and other providers of mental health services.
“Our veterans deserve the best care possible,” said HRSA Administrator Mary K. Wakefield, R.N., Ph.D. “Improving Health IT coordination between HHS, the VA and local rural care providers will help ensure that veterans receive high-quality mental health care that is delivered as efficiently as possible.”
These grants also align with the goals of the White House Rural Council, initiated by President Barack Obama in 2011 to better meet the needs of rural communities through collaboration between federal agencies.