Virginia has been awarded $189,544,888 in federal funding through the Rural Health Transformation Fund, part of a broader $10 billion annual allocation aimed at strengthening rural health care nationwide. The grant is a major step forward for the state’s “VA Rural Vitality” plan, which seeks to tackle longstanding challenges in access, provider shortages, and health disparities across Virginia’s predominantly rural localities. The funding will be spread across four integrated initiatives designed to modernize care, expand health workforce capacity, improve technology, and support preventive and chronic disease management.
One of the initiatives, CareIQ, will focus on modernizing electronic health records, expanding telehealth services, and supporting early-stage health technology startups. Homegrown Health Heroes will fund medical residencies at rural hospitals, increase healthcare apprenticeships, and expand high school and community college pathways into medical careers. Connected Care, Closer to Home, aims to broaden access to mobile clinics and telehealth services, while the Live Well, Together initiative will invest in wearable health technologies, children’s physical activity programs, and “food-as-medicine” initiatives. Approximately $49 million will support a centralized program management office to track and evaluate the grant’s implementation.
The award reflects input gathered from rural residents and stakeholders through public listening sessions, emails, and consultations, highlighting region-specific priorities such as equipping EMS trucks with satellite broadband in Southwest Virginia and establishing mobile maternal health clinics in areas with limited access. The funding comes from a $50 billion Rural Health Transformation Fund created through federal reconciliation legislation, designed to provide multi-year support for states’ rural health systems.
While the fund has been praised as a significant investment, some critics have characterized it as a temporary solution, pointing to broader challenges in Medicaid eligibility and hospital funding that could strain rural providers. Virginia’s rural health network, including hospitals and free clinics, will rely on this funding to address access barriers, long travel times for care, and specialist shortages, particularly in maternal and preventive health services.
Virginia’s award also highlights bipartisan support, with both Democratic and Republican lawmakers backing the proposal to help transform the state’s rural health system. The funding is expected to be deployed in 2026, complementing ongoing state-led initiatives to improve healthcare infrastructure, workforce training, and innovative care delivery for rural communities.






