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A Once in a Generation Opportunity to Reimagine Rural Health

Leaders must resist the urge to replicate urban models that do not translate well to rural contexts. Instead, they should design solutions that are built for rural communities, grounded in local insight and enabled by scalable capabilities.

Stethoscope with leather work gloves and corn. Rural healthcare, farmer mental health and farm worker health and safety concept rural health

Rural America sits at an inflection point. Longstanding challenges from geographic isolation and workforce shortages to fragile care delivery infrastructure and uneven health outcomes have tested rural health systems for decades. Today, those same systems have a chance to reinvent care delivery across rural America through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS)’s Rural Health Transformation Program (RHTP), a multi-year, nationwide initiative designed to strengthen and modernize care delivery in rural communities. While the funding itself is significant, its true importance lies in what it enables: the opportunity to redefine what “good” looks like in rural health and build models that work at scale. 

This moment is not about incremental change. It is about taking action now to move beyond survival mode and toward a future where rural residents experience improved access, better outcomes and more sustainable systems of care.

Redefining population health for rural communities

Population health in rural America has often been discussed through the lens of constraints, such as limited providers, long travel distances, smaller patient volumes and financial instability. While those realities remain, they should not define the ambition of rural health transformation.

Instead, this is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to reimagine population health as a coordinated, community-centered ecosystem. In rural settings, health outcomes are deeply interconnected with social factors such as transportation, food access, broadband availability and economic vitality. Effective population health strategies must go beyond the walls of clinics and hospitals and align clinical care with community-based services and support. In practice, this means taking accountability for defined populations over time, not just coordinating individual services. Successful rural population health models clearly identify who is being served, segment populations by risk and need and deploy longitudinal strategies that proactively manage health rather than responding only when care is sought.

Rural health organizations, including local pharmacies, are uniquely positioned to do this well. They often have closer relationships with patients, stronger community trust and a clearer view of local needs than larger, more fragmented systems. By intentionally designing care models that reflect how rural residents actually live and seek care, organizations can deliver more personalized, proactive and preventative services rather than relying on episodic, reactive care.

Building the framework

Reimagining rural population health requires more than vision. It demands a practical framework that builds the enabling capabilities needed to operate at scale while remaining locally relevant. At its core, this approach connects five interdependent elements: 

  • engaging patients and communities in ways that build trust and participation
  • aligning governance, funding and operational decision-making across state, regional and local partners
  • rethinking workforce models to extend capacity through new roles and team-based care
  • establishing a reliable and interoperable digital and data backbone that links care settings and outcomes
  • embedding clinical excellence through consistent measurement of quality, equity and experience.

When developed together, this framework can shift rural health efforts from isolated programs to coordinated ecosystems that enable organizations to scale what works, adapt to local needs and sustain improvements over time rather than relying on short term interventions.

At the foundation is data. Many rural providers struggle with fragmented or incomplete data across care settings. Building a shared, longitudinal view of the patient across primary care, specialty care, behavioral health, post-acute services and community organizations is essential. Realizing the power of interoperability across these rural health stakeholders is table stakes for outcomes to be achieved. When data is accessible and actionable, care teams can identify rising risk earlier, coordinate interventions more effectively and measure impact with greater confidence. This capability is also foundational to success under value-based care models, where organizations must be able to identify rising risk early, manage attributed populations and track performance against cost, quality and access measures. Without a shared, longitudinal view of the patient, rural providers are left managing clinical and financial risk with incomplete information.

Population health in rural settings must be team-based and flexible. Technology can increase access through telehealth, remote monitoring and virtual consults, but it must be deployed thoughtfully, in ways that complement in-person care and account for digital literacy and connectivity realities. Instead of relying solely on traditional staffing models, rural organizations can rethink how work is distributed across care teams, supported by AI and other technologies. This not only improves access for patients but also helps address clinician burnout and retention challenges. Designing care teams to operate at the top of license and shifting appropriate work to lower-cost, highly trusted roles such as community health workers and care coordinators is also critical to sustainability. In value-based environments, these workforce models help extend capacity, improve access and manage total cost of care without requiring proportional increases in staffing.

Advancing value-based care 

Value-based care (VBC) can be a powerful enabler of rural population health when implemented with intention. At its core, VBC aligns financial incentives with outcomes that matter: access, quality and experience. For rural organizations, these models can provide both flexibility and stability, as long as they are designed to reflect local realities. Importantly, value-based care adoption in rural settings is not one-size-fits-all. Many organizations will need a deliberate glidepath, beginning with upside-only or hybrid models while building core capabilities in data, care management and partnerships, and progressing toward greater accountability over time.

Successful VBC deployment in rural America starts with focusing on achievable, meaningful measures. Rather than overwhelming care teams with complex reporting requirements, organizations can prioritize metrics that reflect improved access, better chronic disease management, reduced avoidable utilization and enhanced patient experience. VBC also encourages a shift from volume to prevention. In rural communities, where hospital closures and workforce shortages have heightened the stakes, preventing unnecessary admissions and emergency visits is critical to preserving local access to care. Proactive outreach, care management and coordination across settings become central strategies rather than optional add-ons.

Importantly, VBC models must support collaboration. Rural providers often operate in smaller markets where partnerships are necessary to achieve scale. Shared accountability across providers, payers and community organizations can help spread risk, align incentives and enable investments that no single entity could make alone. VBC models rely on the ability to see, coordinate and act across the full continuum of care. This makes interoperability a foundational requirement rather than a technical nice-to-have. Without interoperable data, organizations are forced to manage VBC risk with partial visibility, limiting their ability to proactively manage populations or demonstrate value. Interoperability enables shared accountability by connecting clinical data, care plans and outcomes across settings, allowing care teams to identify gaps, reduce duplication and intervene earlier. 

When thoughtfully deployed, VBC becomes more than a payment model. It becomes a catalyst for redesigning care delivery around the needs of rural populations and rewarding organizations for measurable, sustained improvement.

From opportunity to impact

The opportunity before rural health organizations is significant but achieving it will require intentional choices. Leaders must resist the urge to replicate urban models that do not translate well to rural contexts. Instead, they should design solutions that are built for rural communities, grounded in local insight and enabled by scalable capabilities. This also means using RHTP investments to build durable population health and value-based care capabilities that persist beyond the funding period. The goal is not a collection of time-limited programs, but operating models that can sustain improved access, outcomes and affordability over the long term.

This moment calls for optimism paired with discipline. With the right framework, enabling capabilities and value-based incentives, rural health systems can move beyond managing scarcity and toward building resilient, high-performing models of care.

For the millions of people who call rural America home, the impact of getting this right is profound. The decisions organizations make today can shape access, experience and outcomes for decades to come and redefine what is possible for rural health across the country.

Photo: JJ Gouin, Getty Images

Kristin Ficery leads Accenture’s Health and Public Sector Strategy practice globally. In this role, she establishes and executes Accenture’s priorities and operating model to bring innovation and top-tier talent to address the strategic aspirations of clients. Kristin is an innovator and enjoys challenging conventional wisdom in healthcare. She is the Executive Sponsor for Accenture’s Rural Health Transformation work, advising States on using technology and clinical innovation such as AI to reinvent how healthcare better serves rural communities. Kristin earned an MBA in Finance and Healthcare Management from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. She received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Vanderbilt University where she was a four-year starter on the varsity tennis team. Kristin is based in Atlanta with her husband and is the proud parent of two adult daughters. Her favorite pastimes include tennis, running, hiking, and traveling with her active family.

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