Rural Health Information Hub Latest News

Pennsylvania Health Department Recognizes Expansion of Innovative Food Program Supporting 50 Hospitals

Acting Secretary of Health and Pennsylvania Physician General Dr. Denise Johnson recognized fifty hospitals in 26 counties for creating a culture of health by offering nutritious foods and beverages to patients, employees and visitors, and promoting locally-sourced and sustainably-produced products.

Dr. Johnson joined leaders from Philadelphia and the Hospital and Healthsystem Association of Pennsylvania (HAP) to recognize the 50 hospitals participating in the Good Food, Healthy Hospitals programOpens In A New Window.  Click here to access the list of hospitals, by scrolling to the SEE what’s happening at our pledge sites” section of the page.

“The Department of Health is proud to partner with the Philadelphia Department of Public Health and the Hospital and Healthsystem Association of Pennsylvania to implement food service guidelines to help ensure better nutrition is available daily for thousands of patients, employees and visitors at hospitals throughout the state,” said Dr. Johnson. “We commend those who have committed to adopting and further innovating this program that gives access to healthy, local food to so many people. Healthy food is an important tool in both healing and preventing illness.”

Healthcare facilities participating in Good Food, Healthy Hospitals pledge to voluntarily adopt food, beverage and procurement standards in all areas where food is purchased, served or sold. These standards include, among others:

  • indicating vegetarian, heart healthy, and whole grain options on patient menus
  • placing healthier beverages and snacks at eye level for consumers
  • prominently displaying nutrition information of foods and beverages
  • replacing regular fried chips with baked varieties
  • promoting water as a healthy and necessary beverage choice throughout the hospital
  • purchasing locally-sourced and sustainably-raised foods where possible
  • purchasing rBGH-free dairy products

The hospitals work closely with the Good Food, Healthy Hospitals team, including the Philadelphia Department of Public Health (PDPH), the Pennsylvania Department of Health and HAP, for technical assistance and collaboration with participating hospitals.

“We strive to promote healthy, livable communities,” said PDPH Health Commissioner Dr. Cheryl Bettigole. “The hospitals participating in the Good Food, Healthy Hospitals Initiative have demonstrated that you can make it easier for patients, staff and visitors to eat a nutritious diet. It’s this type of leadership and investment that is making our hospitals safer, healthier places.”

Started in 2014, the Good Food, Healthy Hospitals initiative continues to expand. WellSpan Health, Endless Mountain Health Systems, Magee Rehabilitation Hospital (Jefferson Health), Geisinger Medical Center Muncy, and St. Luke’s Carbon and Easton Campuses have signed the pledge for a total of 50 participating hospitals located in 26 counties across the commonwealth. In Philadelphia, 15 hospitals continue implementing the program’s food service guidelines.

“Hospitals do more than treat illnesses and injuries — they partner with patients and their communities for better health,” said Andy Carter, president and CEO of the Hospital and Healthsystem Association of Pennsylvania. “HAP is proud to support Pennsylvania hospitals’ efforts toward better access to nutritious food, more educated food choices, and healthier patients and communities through the Good Food, Healthy Hospitals program.”

The expansion across Pennsylvania is made possible by the State Physical Activity and Nutrition (SPAN) Program grant and Preventive Health and Health Services Block Grant. Pennsylvania was one of 16 states awarded the SPAN grant from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 2018.

More information on healthy eating can be found on the Department of Health’s website at www.health.pa.gov

For more information about Good Food, Healthy Hospitals, visit www.foodfitphilly.org/gfhh/Opens In A New Window

White House Selects a Christmas Tree from a Pennsylvania Farm as its Official Christmas Tree to Stand in the Blue Room

The White House will select its official 2022 Christmas tree to stand in the iconic Blue Room from Evergreen Acres Tree Farm.

On October 10, 2022 at 10:00am EST, Robert Downing, the White House Executive Usher, will lead a delegation to officially select the 2022 White House Christmas Tree.  The tree will be chosen from the many beautiful firs and pines growing on Paul and Sharon Shealer’s Christmas tree farm, Evergreen Acres.

The Shealers earned the honor of providing the official White House Christmas tree when their Douglas Fir entry was selected as Grand Champion at the National Christmas Tree Association’s National Tree and Wreath Contest. To qualify for the national contest, Shearles first had to win the 2021 Pennsylvania Farm Show’s competition earning the opportunity to represent Pennsylvania in the national contest.  Paul Shealer shared, “We were thrilled to win Grand Champion and are even more excited and privliged that our farm will provide the White House’s official Christmas tree. Evergreen Acres takes great pride in its trees every year, and it seems this year we can stand even taller!”

The tree selection event will include statements from Tim O’Connor, Executive Director of the National Christmas Tree Association, a representative from the Pennsylavania Department of Agriculture, and Randy Cypher, President of the Pennsylvania Christmas Tree Growers Association.

“Pennsylvania growers produce one million of the nation’s most impressive Christmas trees every year,” Pennsylvania Agriculture Secretary Russell Redding said. “We’re proud to showcase our finest growers at the PA Farm Show each January. We’re even prouder that the Shealer family qualified to win the National Christmas Tree competition by winning at Farm Show and will grace the White House, representing our commonwealth proudly and focusing the eyes of the nation on world-class PA-grown product.”

The event will take place at 10:00am at Evergreen Acres Tree Farm located at 135 Fort Lebanon Road, Auburn, PA 17922.

For more information about the official White House Christmas tree selection at the Shealer’s Evergreen Acres, please contact Aaron Grau at 717-229-9227 or aaron@christmastrees.org.

Children Living Near Pennsylvania Fracking Sites At Increased Risk of Leukemia, Study Finds

From State Impact PA

Correction: Nicole Deziel of the Yale School of Public Health says Pennsylvania’s wellhead setback from schools and homes should be 1,000 meters. That distance was incorrect in the original version of this story.  

Children who live close to fracking sites in Pennsylvania have a higher risk for the most common form of childhood cancer, a new study found.

Researchers at the Yale School of Public Health used the Pennsylvania Cancer Registry, along with state data on unconventional oil and gas drill sites, to determine that children born within two kilometers, or 1.24 miles, of an active well site were two to three times more likely to be diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia between the ages of 2 and 7.

The study was published in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives. It looked at 405 children diagnosed with that type of leukemia between 2009 and 2017, and included 2,080 controls matched by birth year.

“The magnitude of the elevated risk that we observed was fairly striking,” said Dr. Cassandra Clark, a post-doctoral fellow at the Yale School of Public Health and co-author of the report. “After accounting for a variety of socioeconomic, demographic and biological factors that could potentially be underlying this association, it was consistent.”

Acute lymphoblastic leukemia is one of the most common childhood cancers, which is why the researchers chose to look at it. Additionally, a known cause is benzene, a chemical released by oil and gas drilling activities into both air and water. The five-year survival rate in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia is high, at 90 percent.

Unconventional gas development is also referred to as fracking, which is a part of the overall process that injects water with chemicals at high pressure into shale rock formations deep underground to release oil and gas. Water that returns to the surface often includes those chemical additives, along with long-buried naturally occurring toxins and radiological material.

More than 10,000 unconventional natural gas wells were drilled and fracked in Pennsylvania between 2002 and 2017. The Department of Environmental Protection has reported more than 1,000 spills in that period, along with fielding about 4,000 residential well water complaints between 2005 and 2014. Many who live in rural areas rely on water from private wells, about one-third of which are within two kilometers of a wellhead.

The natural gas industry maintains it operates under regulations meant to protect public health. The Marcellus Shale Coalition has said the industry’s “top priority” is protecting health and safety of workers, the environment, and people who live near fracking operations.

One unique aspect of the Yale research includes tracing potential drinking water exposure.

“It really is a superb study,” said Dr. Bernard Goldstein, former dean of the University of Pittsburgh School of Public Health and an expert in environmental causes of childhood leukemia.

Goldstein is not associated with this study. He has conducted prior research into exposures due to oil and gas wastewater in Pennsylvania.

“It looks at a potential problem in ways that include new exposure metrics, which are really needed,” he said.

Goldstein says that though the factors that contribute to childhood leukemia are complex and still unclear, benzene is the one known link.

The interdisciplinary team of researchers included experts on leukemia and environmental science, as well as hydrogeologists. In addition to the location of well sites, researchers mapped individual watersheds and determined the flow of water from well heads to the children’s homes. They did not survey the families to determine individual sources of drinking water.

Still, they say the research shows that a child living within 1.2 miles of a well site, which is within their watershed, could be at a higher risk of exposure through drinking water.

Previous research has shown an association between fracking activities and health impacts, but determining the path to exposure is more difficult.

“I think we have about 50 epidemiological health studies demonstrating increased adverse health outcomes in communities that live near unconventional oil and gas sites,” said Dr. Nicole Deziel, a co-author of the study and associate professor at the Yale School of Public Health in the Department of Environmental Health Sciences. “I think it would be very important to understand which exposures or hazards might be driving these associations.”

Deziel says she wants the study to impact public policy, including regulations on residential setbacks from wellheads and density of drilling sites. Pennsylvania requires a 500-foot setback from schools and homes. Deziel says it should be 1,000 meters, especially since her findings show greater impacts for children exposed in utero.

Those results, she said, suggested “that that may be a sensitive time window, which is also consistent with some other studies of other environmental exposures.”

Biden Administration Releases National Strategy on Hunger, Nutrition and Health

From the National Rural Health Association

Alongside the White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health this past Wednesday, the Biden Administration released its National Strategy on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health. Please see below for a summary highlighting the most rural-relevant proposals.

The National Strategy is made up of five pillars, each with corresponding goals and action items to achieve the listed goals:

Pillar 1: Improve Food Access and Affordability

Help more individuals experiencing food insecurity benefit from federal assistance programs.

  • The Administration will work with Congress increase funding for Older Americans Act nutrition programs. This will help address rural seniors’ unique health, social, and nutritional challenges associated with shopping and cooking.
  • The Administration will make it easier for eligible individuals to access federal food and health services. The Department of Agriculture (USDA) will partner with other agencies to increase outreach and awareness for SNAP to older adults and other populations.
  • USDA, through American Rescue Plan funds, will expand online shopping for the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC). NRHA is hopeful that this will expand access for rural residents that travel longer distances to grocery stores.
  • The Administration will support Congress in removing unnecessary barriers for SNAP recipients, like the inability to purchase hot and prepared foods with SNAP dollars.

Invest in community and economic development to increase access to food. Almost 40 million Americans live in areas where no grocery stores are nearby, including rural areas.

  • The Federal Trade Commission will publish a report summarizing how supply chain distributions have affected grocery stores, including independent grocery stores that often serve rural communities.
  • The Federal Emergency Management Agency and USDA will partner to integrate food security as a priority area when conducting outreach with state, local, and Tribal leaders for disaster planning and messaging. This is especially important for rural areas when there are natural disasters and other emergencies.

Pillar 2: Integrate Nutrition and Health

Provide greater access to nutrition services to better prevent, manage, and treat diet-related diseases.

  • Expand Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries’ access to food as medicine by supporting legislation to create a pilot program for Medicare coverage of medically tailored meals for beneficiaries with diet-related health conditions.
  • The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) will use its 1115 demonstration authority to pilot innovative coverage options for diet-related interventions. For example, CMS just announced that it approved Oregon and Massachusetts’ Medicaid state plans for nutritional assistance and medically tailored meals.
  • The Administration will support legislation to expand nutrition and obesity counseling to more Medicaid beneficiaries, specifically in states that have not expanded Medicaid and have large rural populations. The Administration also supports expanding nutrition and obesity counseling to Medicare beneficiaries who currently may only seek counseling in a primary care setting with a primary care practitioner. CMS will examine its authority to increase access to such counseling.
  • Indian Health Services (IHS) will implement a National Produce Prescription Pilot Program. Produce prescriptions provide fresh fruits and vegetables as a medical treatment or preventative service for patients who are eligible due to diet-related health risk or condition or food insecurity.
  • The Department of Veterans’ Affairs (VA) will implement produce prescription programs and mobile food pantries that will aid our rural veteran population.
  • CMS will develop a strategy to increase access to diabetes prevention and treatment for Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries. NRHA looks forward to this work as rural residents are at a greater risk for diabetes.
  • CMS will support efforts to develop the data infrastructure needed for food insecurity and other social determinants of health (SDOH) elements to be captured in electronic health records. NRHA is hopeful that CMS will support rural providers in this endeavor.

Pillar 3: Empower All Consumers to Make and Have Access to Healthy Choices

Create healthier food environments and a healthier food supply.

  • The Administration will work with Congress to expand incentives for purchasing fruits and vegetables with SNAP.
  • USDA will make investments to support local and regional food and farm businesses.
  • USDA will establish Regional Food Business Centers to support local food business growth, particularly in rural and underserved areas like Appalachia, Colonias, the Mississippi Delta, and in Tribal communities.

Pillar 4: Support Physical Activity for All

 Build environments that promote physical activity.

  • Expand the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) State Physical Activity and Nutrition Programs to all states and territories. The Administration will work with Congress to expand the Program from 16 states to nationwide.

Pillar 5: Enhance Nutrition and Food Security Research

  • HHS and USDA will create a 2025 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee with a diverse membership, including geographic diversity. The committee will review dietary guidelines with a health equity lens.
  • USDA will conduct research to better understand nutritional needs of Native Americans and Native Alaskans.
  • USDA will leverage its partnership with the University of North Dakota to better understand Native diets and Indigenous foods.
  • CMS will measure SDOHs, including food insecurity, for at-risk Medicare Advantage beneficiaries.

Medicare Open Enrollment Resources Posted

Medicare Open Enrollment is approaching, October 15.  In preparation, materials are being released to be shared with consumers, colleagues and others who may assist Medicare consumers.

  • The attached Press Releases announce the Medicare Advantage landscape.
  • The Medicare Health & Drug Plan Finder  will be updated with the 2023 Medicare health and prescription drug plan information on October 1, 2022. 1-800-MEDICARE is also available 24 hours a day, seven days a week to provide help in English and Spanish as well as language support in over 200 languages. People who want to keep their current Medicare coverage do not need to re-enroll.
  • To help with their Medicare costs, low-income seniors and adults with disabilities may qualify to receive financial assistance from the Medicare Savings Programs (MSPs). The MSPs help pay Medicare premiums and may also pay Medicare deductibles, coinsurance and copayments if people meet the conditions of eligibility. Enrolling in an MSP offers relief from these Medicare costs, allowing people to spend that money on other necessities like food, housing or transportation. Individuals interested in learning more can visit here. 
  • To view the premiums and costs of 2023 Medicare Advantage and Part D plans, please visit: https://www.cms.gov/medicare/prescription-drug-coverage/prescriptiondrugcovgenin

Select the various 2023 landscape source files in the downloads section of the webpage.

Shareable Social Media, Videos, TV & Radio Ads will be placed in the CMS Medicare Open Enrollment website located  HERE. 

ARC Chartbook Provides Updated Look at Appalachia

ARC has released its 12th annual update of The Appalachian Region: A Data Overview from the 2016-2020 American Community Survey. Written in partnership with Population Reference Bureau, “The Chartbook” features over 300,000 data points on Appalachia’s economy, income, employment, education, and more prior to–and during–the first 10 months of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The 2022 report indicates that Appalachia was improving in educational attainment, labor force participation, income levels, and reduced poverty prior to the onset of COVID-19 in March 2020. However, unique vulnerabilities among the region’s oldest, youngest, and most rural residents were likely exacerbated by the pandemic.

“Each year, The Chartbook provides critical data about the Appalachian Region, enabling policymakers and ARC partners to make data-driven economic development decisions. This particular report, however, may be one of the most critical to date,” said ARC Federal Co-Chair Gayle Manchin.

Lack of Naloxone Led to Increased Overdose Deaths in Rural Pennsylvania, Study Finds

Naloxone, originally approved by the FDA under the brand name Narcan, is an anti-overdose, therapeutic medication

Pennsylvania has one of the highest rates of opioid overdose in the nation, and, according to Penn State researchers, one’s chances of surviving that overdose can depend on where the person lives.

Using data from the Pennsylvania Overdose Information Network from the years 2018-20 and American Community Survey data from 2015-19, Penn State geography researchers looked at the prevalence of overdoses in the state and found the availability of the anti-overdose therapeutic Naloxone to be a key factor in overdose survival. The findings were reported in the Journal of Drug and Alcohol Dependence.

Data showed individuals who received at least one dose of Naloxone were nine times as likely to survive an overdose. Naloxone was administered in about 75% of the survival cases and just 29% of fatal overdose cases.

Yet, the availability of the drug at the time of overdose ranged between 41%-47% in the lowest counties such as nearby Clinton and Huntingdon Counties to 92% in Philadelphia County, the highest. In broad strokes, lesser populated counties had less access to the life-saving treatment, with exceptions for Centre and Mercer Counties, which fared better than similarly populated counties.

“One of the main goals of this research is to inform public health practitioners and policymakers who have the capacity to do something about the distribution of Naloxone, which is clearly effective,” said Louisa Holmes, assistant professor of geography at Penn State, member of Penn State Social Science Research Institute’s Consortium on Substance Use and Addiction (CSUA) and lead author of the study. “It gives leaders a target for combating the opioid epidemic by saving lives.”

Data showed 82% of Pennsylvania adults survived opioid overdoses. In 2020, there were 4,314 opioid related deaths in the state, a 16% increase over 2019, according to the Pennsylvania Department of Health.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, opioid overdose deaths have increased steadily from 1999 to 2018, before ballooning in 2020 after a dip in 2019, resulting in the first multi-year decrease in life expectancy in more than 50 years.

The increase in overdose deaths coupled with the effectiveness of Naloxone prompted the Office of the Surgeon General in 2018 to call for its increased distribution. Similarly, Pennsylvania issued standing orders in 2015 and updated in 2022 authorizing anyone to obtain Naloxone, although it leaves decisions to stock the drug up to pharmacists. A recent survey of Pennsylvania pharmacies found 55% did not stock Naloxone, and the majority of pharmacists were unclear on policies related to the standing order. The survey also found out-of-pocket Naloxone prices in 2017 to range from $50 to $400.

Using data for 16,673 unique overdose incidents occurring in Pennsylvania, researchers found 13,724 people survived, while 2,949 did not. About 70% of the deaths were male, 53.5% were ages 25-39 and 90% were white. About 33% of the victims lived in the most rural portions of the state, versus 28% who lived in the most populated areas.

Researchers say the data point to a need for more comprehensive and consistent access to Naloxone for emergency responders, agencies, opioid use disorder patients and their families, citing the effectiveness of programs such as community distribution of Naloxone kits, which cut overdose deaths by 42%. Measures such as expanding take-home Naloxone programs, overdose response training and pharmacist education could also save lives, researchers said.

Although Pennsylvania law allows first responders such as EMTs and police officers to administer Naloxone, researchers said such training is scarcer in rural areas.

This research is related to more broad efforts by the CSUA, which is a large collective of substance-based addiction researchers, practitioners and educators across all of Penn State’s campuses that work on everything from opioids to e-cigarettes to alcohol. Holmes was hired in 2019 among a team of researchers tasked with addressing addiction research.

“The expanding research being done by the CSUA on these topics further positions Penn State as a leader both regionally and nationally,” said Brian King, head of the Department of Geography and co-author of the research. “It is a testament to how research at this institution directly impacts residents in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.”

HHS Approves Groundbreaking Medicaid Initiatives in Massachusetts and Oregon

 Initiatives will ensure children in Oregon have continuous Medicaid coverage until the age of six, and expand access to coverage and address nutrition and housing needs in Massachusetts and Oregon

 Approvals of the initiatives come during the White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health, taking direct action on the Biden-Harris Administration’s National Strategy to end hunger, reduce diet-related diseases, and eliminate health inequities

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), approved groundbreaking Medicaid section 1115 demonstration initiatives in Massachusetts and Oregon. Both demonstrations aim to test improvements in coverage, access, and quality with innovative approaches to ensure more eligible people retain their Medicaid coverage, including by approving Oregon’s demonstration to keep children enrolled in Medicaid up to age six — preventing gaps in coverage that can cause children to lose access to needed care in their formative early years.

The initiatives also take steps to address unmet health-related social needs, such as by giving Massachusetts and Oregon new authority to test coverage for evidenced-based nutritional assistance and medically tailored meals, clinically-tailored housing supports, and other interventions for certain beneficiaries where there is a clinical need. These efforts coincide with the White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health, where the Biden-Harris Administration released its national strategy to end hunger, improve nutrition and physical activity, and reduce diet-related diseases and disparities – all goals supported by the initiatives approved today.

“This is an historic moment in our nation’s fight to end hunger and improve health equity, particularly in states like Oregon and Massachusetts,” said HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra. “Groundbreaking action in each state will ensure children and youth remain connected to health care, and that we double down on tackling social needs impacting health, such as nutrition. Everyone should get the access to care they need to live safe and healthy lives.”

“I’m proud to partner with Oregon and Massachusetts to improve quality and access, reduce health disparities, and improve health equity, for those who need it most. For the first time ever, children with Medicaid coverage in Oregon will be able to keep their coverage until the age of 6 — ensuring they can get the care they need during their formative years. This is just one aspect of the groundbreaking demonstration initiatives that I’m approving today,” said CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure. “These states are also partnering with community-based providers to address the root social causes of health concerns, like lack of access to nutritious food and housing insecurity. We applaud Massachusetts and Oregon for helping us use every tool available to protect and expand access to high-quality, comprehensive, affordable health care coverage.”

Under the Biden-Harris Administration, thanks to the American Rescue Plan and other Administration efforts, more Americans than ever before have health insurance coverage. Today’s approvals will build on these efforts and support President Biden’s executive orders in April 2022 and January 2021 directing federal agencies to take action to expand affordable, quality health coverage, including by strengthening Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act.

Both demonstrations approved today will work to improve enrollment and continuity of coverage. In Oregon, children determined eligible for Medicaid will be able to stay continuously enrolled until they turn six years old, without their families needing to renew their coverage. This will minimize red tape for both families and the state, and help to ensure access to care throughout this critical period of early childhood. Individuals older than six will be able to keep their coverage for up to two years, even if their household income fluctuates. Massachusetts will provide up to 12 months of continuous coverage for Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) beneficiaries upon release from correctional settings and 24-months of continuous eligibility for beneficiaries with a confirmed status of chronic homelessness, eliminating gaps in coverage for these vulnerable populations.

Evidence indicates that health-related social needs, such as food insecurity and housing instability, are critical drivers of an individual’s health outcomes. With this demonstration, Massachusetts will receive expanded authority to provide certain time-limited housing supports, clinical nutrition education, and medically-tailored food assistance services when medically appropriate. These services will be available to a range of at-risk populations, including postpartum individuals for up to 12 months. Massachusetts will also provide additional meal support for certain households when an eligible beneficiary is a child or pregnant woman with special clinical needs. Oregon will expand health-related social needs coverage for certain food assistance, housing supports, and other interventions that are medically appropriate for individuals experiencing certain life transitions, including individuals who are homeless or at risk of homelessness. In both states, the time-limited housing and nutritional support services provided in the demonstration can be expected to stabilize the housing and nutritional circumstances of these Medicaid enrollees and thus ensure that they will keep receiving and benefiting from the Medicaid-covered services to which they are entitled.

Massachusetts will also be implementing an innovative Hospital Quality and Equity Initiative for private acute hospitals and the Commonwealth’s only non-state-owned public hospital, Cambridge Health Alliance. The initiative is expected to reduce health inequities by improving outcomes in populations that are likely to face barriers to quality health care. As such, the demonstration is likely to help improve the quality of care and is also likely to reduce health disparities through this value-based care approach.

CMS will require both states to systematically monitor the demonstrations and conduct rigorous independent evaluations to determine the outcomes and impacts.

For additional information about the Massachusetts’ MassHealth Section 1115 Demonstration, please visit: https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/section-1115-demo/demonstration-and-waiver-list/82006.

CMS Releases 2023 Premiums, Deductibles and Coinsurance Amounts for Medicare 

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) released the 2023 premiums, deductibles, and coinsurance amounts for the Medicare Part A and Part B programs, and the 2023 Medicare Part D income-related monthly adjustment amounts.

Please review the Fact Sheet at https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/2023-medicare-parts-b-premiums-and-deductibles-2023-medicare-part-d-income-related-monthly.  For more information on the 2023 Medicare Parts A and B premiums and deductibles (CMS-8077-N, CMS-8078-N, CMS-8079-N), please visit https://www.federalregister.gov/public-inspection/current.

HHS Invests over $104 Million to Expand Substance Use Treatment and Prevention in Rural Communities to Combat the Overdose Epidemic

In support of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ (HHS) Overdose Prevention Strategy, the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) announced investments of over $104 million to expand treatment and prevention services for substance use in rural communities nationwide as part of the Rural Communities Opioid Response Program (RCORP), a multi-year initiative aimed at reducing the morbidity and mortality of rural Americans from substance use. Today’s funding also supports the President’s National Drug Control Strategy and delivers on his Unity Agenda priority of beating the overdose epidemic.

“The overdose epidemic continues to take too many lives and leave too many loved ones heartbroken – including in our rural communities,” said HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra. “The Biden-Harris Administration has made addressing the nation’s addiction and overdose epidemic a top priority, and at HHS we are taking every opportunity to ensure everyone – no matter who they are or where they live – has access to the critical care and support they need. This funding will help communities save lives by expanding treatment opportunities and prevention for substance use.”

This funding will help rural communities address difficulties they face in providing and accessing substance use treatment, as nearly 37 percent of rural counties

lack at least one clinician who can prescribe the opioid treatment buprenorphine. Rural communities in particular have experienced a consistent rise in drug overdose deaths, with a nearly five-fold increase from 1999 to 2019. Opioid-involved overdose deaths, especially those involving fentanyl, have increased significantly across the United States since 2019.

“Today we are taking action to support the critical needs of rural communities by expanding access to opioid use disorder treatment,” said HRSA Administrator Carole Johnson. “Too often, the needs and challenges of rural communities are not well understood, but at HRSA, we are focused on reaching the rural communities that need our support the most and helping them tackle the overdose crisis.”

Today’s announcement highlights funding through the following three programs:

To learn more about HRSA’s Rural Communities Opioid Response Program, visit https://www.hrsa.gov/rural-health/opioid-response.