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Small Health Care Provider Quality Improvement Program is sponsored by Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), Federal Office of Rural Health Policy. This program aims to improve the quality of care provided by small rural healthcare providers, which can include initiatives related to chronic disease management. Eligible projects should focus on activities that improve access to and quality of care in rural areas.
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Funding Details: Small Health Care Provider Quality Improvement Program - Rural Health Information Hub Small Health Care Provider Quality Improvement Program Assistance Listing: 93. 912 Federal Office of Rural Health Policy, Health Resources and Services Administration, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services For program and eligibility For financial and budget questions: Grants.
gov contact center: Self-service knowledge base System for award management (SAM): The Small Health Care Provider Quality Improvement Program offers grants to support the planning, development, and implementation of quality improvement activities for rural primary care providers or providers of healthcare services, such as Critical Access Hospitals, Rural Health Clinics, or a network of rural health providers, to increase access to high quality healthcare services and improve health.
Applicants are required to use an evidence-based model or promising practice to demonstrate impact by the end of Awardees must implement 3 strategies: Develop, enhance, and implement quality improvement strategies and train staff to create a sustained culture of quality improvement within the organization.
This includes identifying the measures relevant to the clinical health service focus area identified to meaningfully assess care quality, health outcomes, access to services, and performance improvement in rural Strengthen data collection by using electronic health records, health information technology, artificial intelligence, and/or other technology tools.
Implement billing and coding strategies and training to drive increased revenue from the new or expanded services provided, with the goal of financial sustainability for these services.
Applicants must be a rural domestic public or nonprofit private healthcare provider or provider of healthcare services, such as a Critical Access Hospital, Rural Health Clinic; or be another rural provider or network of small rural providers identified by the Secretary as a key source of local or regional care; and not previously have received an award under this subsection for the same or similar project.
The applicant organization must be Types of eligible organizations: State, territory, county, city, township, and special Public and state-controlled institutions of higher Native American tribal governments (Federally Native American tribal organizations (other than Federally recognized tribal governments) Nonprofit organizations with and without 501(c)(3) Additional eligibility requirements Nationwide and U.S. territories Award ceiling: $250,000 per year Estimated number of awards: 20 Estimated total program funding: Links to the full announcement, application instructions , and the online application process are available through Applicants must notify the appropriate State Office of Rural Health (SORH) of an intent to apply for this program and include the SORH's response in the If the applicant is from a U.S. territory, documentation of communication with a functional equivalent of a SORH should be provided.
If the territory does not have the functional equivalent of a SORH, this requirement does · Critical Access Hospitals · Federally Qualified Health Centers · Health information technology · Health workforce education and training · Healthcare business and finance · Healthcare needs and services · Integrated service delivery · Networking and collaboration · Service delivery models · Sustainability of programs · Technology for health and human services Grantee Directory: Small Health Care Provider Quality Improvement Program, 2016-2019, Small Healthcare Provider Quality Improvement: Sourcebook, 2016-2019, Grantee Directory: Small Health Care Provider Quality Improvement Grant Program, 2019-2022, Small Health Care Provider Quality Improvement Program Sourcebook, 2019-2022, Small Health Care Provider Quality Improvement Program, 2022–2026 Grantee Directory, Federal Office of Rural Health Policy, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Health Resources and Services Administration, For complete information about funding programs, including your application status, please contact funders directly.
Summaries are provided for your convenience only. RHIhub does not take part in application processes or monitor application status.
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Eligible applicants must be a rural domestic public or nonprofit private health care provider or provider of health care services, such as a critical access hospital, a rural health clinic; or be another rural provider …. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
Applications for Small Health Care Provider Quality Improvement Program are due August 6, 2026. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, and final submission checks.
Small Health Care Provider Quality Improvement Program is funded by Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), Federal Office of Rural Health Policy. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
Yes — this listing is flagged as national in scope, so applicants across the U.S. may apply, subject to the sponsor's other eligibility criteria.
Applications go through the funder's official portal — the Apply Now link on this page goes there directly.
Rural Residency Planning and Development (RRPD) Program is sponsored by Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), Federal Office of Rural Health Policy. This program provides funding to create new rural residency programs, including Rural Track Programs (RTPs), to expand access to healthcare in rural areas. The awards support start-up costs for new accredited rural residency programs in qualifying medical specialties, including accreditation costs, faculty development, and resident recruitment.
Rural Communities Opioid Response Program – Impact (RCORP – Impact) is sponsored by Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), Federal Office of Rural Health Policy. This grant aims to improve access to integrated, coordinated, and sustainable substance use disorder (SUD) services, including for opioid use disorder (OUD), in rural areas.
This Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) invites Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) grant applications from small business concerns (SBCs) for funding to perform research leading to the development of innovative technologies that may advance progress for early detection and assessment of individuals at risk and for early diagnosis, prognosis and follow-up of type 1 diabetes (T1D). Funding Opportunity Number: RFA-DK-15-024. Assistance Listing: 93.847. Funding Instrument: G. Category: FN,HL. Award Amount: $2M total program funding.
This initiative will stimulate and support innovative research by small business concerns that may lead to the development of novel technologies for the early diagnosis, monitoring and treatment of micro and macro vascular complications of diabetes which are associated with significant morbidity and mortality of the disease and high costs to the health care system. Funding Opportunity Number: PA-14-058. Assistance Listing: 93.847. Funding Instrument: G. Category: FN,HL.
HRSA's brand-new Rural Hospital Provider Assistance Program splits $24.75M among eligible rural hospitals with 50 or fewer beds and a Medicare wage index under 0.90. It's not scored competitively — every eligible hospital that applies by July 27 gets a roughly equal share. Here's how the three eligibility numbers work and why registration, not narrative, is the real risk.
Read articlePMHCA (HRSA-26-058) makes $9.79 million available for up to 22 awards of up to $445,000 to build tele-consultation networks that help pediatric primary care providers manage children's behavioral health. The catch buried in the eligibility section: applicants must NOT already hold a PMHCA award — which effectively reserves the new-state lane for the eight unfunded states and territories, plus tribes everywhere. Here's how to read it and what wins.
Read articleHRSA-26-078 splits $9.1 million among roughly 10 Public Health Training Centers, with awards up to $910,000 and applications due July 17, 2026. Eligibility runs to accredited schools of public health and other nonprofit training institutions. Here's why the winning applications are the ones that can prove an existing, mapped relationship with state and local health departments — not the ones promising the slickest coursework.
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