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Oklahoma Rural Health Transformation Program

Rural Health Transformation Program (RHTP)

Oklahoma has officially secured $223,476,948.62 for the first budget period of a five-year grant through the Rural Health Transformation Program (RHTP), part of a historic $50 billion federal investment authorized by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

The five-year program focuses on helping people get the care they need where they live, leading to a healthier, thriving state.

What happens next?

Timely distribution of funding, in accordance with state procurement laws, is our top priority. Once the activities and the appropriate procurement path for programs are defined, funding opportunities will be posted on the RHTP Funding Webpage.

Read below to learn what the program means for our state as Oklahoma begins this work.

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Oklahoma RHT Program Engagement Opportunities

Events will include updates on the program’s progress and information about how community members, local providers and organizations can participate in the funding process as program implementation continues. Local roadshows will also include a listening session and time for community members to ask questions about the program.

April 15, 2026 - 1-2 p.m.

RHTP Roadshow

Woodward, OK
High Plains Technology Center - Auditorium

April 16, 2026 - 1-2 p.m.

RHTP Roadshow

Chickasha, OK
Grady County Fairgrounds - Community Room

April 21, 2026 - Noon - 1 p.m.

RHTP Touchpoint Webinar (Virtual Meeting)

 

More dates and locations coming soon for June and August. Open to the public.

Engagement Opportunities

Events will include updates on the program’s progress and information about how community members, local providers and organizations can participate in the funding process as program implementation continues. Local roadshows will also include a listening session and time for community members to ask questions about the program.

April 15, 2026 - 1:00-2:00 PM

RHTP Roadshow

Woodward, OK
High Plains Technology Center - Auditorium

April 16, 2026 - 1:00-2:00 PM

RHTP Roadshow

Chickasha, OK
Grady County Fairgrounds - Community Room

April 21, 2026 - 1:00-2:00 PM

RHTP Touchpoint Webinar (Virtual Meeting)

 

Date Time Description Location
June 10, 2026 3-4 p.m. RHTP Roadshow

Muskogee, OK
Martin Luther King Center

June 17, 2026 Noon RHTP Touchpoint Webinar

Zoom (Virtual Meeting)

June 18, 2026 2-3 p.m. RHTP Roadshow

Perry, OK
The Heritage Center

More dates and locations coming soon for August. Open to the public.

Oklahoma RHTP Touchpoint Webinar

Date Description Notes
April 21, 2026 RHTP Touchpoint Webinar
February 12, 2026 RHTP Touchpoint Webinar

What does RHTP mean for Oklahoma?

This funding brings new resources to rural communities statewide. It supports easier access to care, stronger community partnerships, more local health workers and modern technology that helps providers connect and coordinate. 

If you live in rural Oklahoma, this initiative shows up in real, everyday ways:

  • Care is available closer to home
  • Access to care is easier with ride assistance, mobile clinics, and virtual visits
  • Emergencies are treated faster
  • Pregnant moms and babies get extra support closer to home
  • Behavioral health services are easier to access
  • Local hospitals and clinics are more likely to stay open and will operate with new technology

Make rural America healthy again

Support rural health innovations and new access points to promote preventative health and address root causes of diseases. Projects will use evidence-based, outcomes-driven interventions to improve disease prevention, chronic disease management, behavioral health, and prenatal care.

Sustainable access

Help rural providers become long-term access points for care by improving efficiency and sustainability. With RHTP support, rural facilities work together—or with high-quality regional systems—to share or coordinate operations, technology, primary and specialty care, and emergency services.

Workforce development

Attract and retain a high-skilled health care workforce by strengthening recruitment and retention of healthcare providers in rural communities. Help rural providers practice at the top of their license and develop a broader set of providers to serve a rural community’s needs, such as community health workers, pharmacists, and individuals trained to help patients navigate the healthcare system.

Who benefits?

Oklahoma envisions a future where every community—no matter how small or remote—has access to high-quality, locally grounded care that is connected through technology, supported by regional collaboration, and sustained by a strong rural workforce. Rural healthcare will remain financially stable, driven by innovation, and resilient for future generations.

Innovative care

Spark the growth of innovative care models to improve health outcomes, coordinate care, and promote flexible care arrangements. Develop and implement payment mechanisms incentivizing providers or Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) to reduce health care costs, improve quality of care, and shift care to lower cost settings.

Tech innovation

Foster use of innovative technologies that promote efficient care delivery, data security, and access to digital health tools by rural facilities, providers, and patients. Projects support access to remote care, improve data sharing, strengthen cybersecurity, and invest in emerging technologies

Oklahoma’s Six RHTP Initiatives

These areas reflect required federal programming and are the foundation of the state’s transformation plan. Details about each initiative and programs receiving funding can be viewed in the RHTP Initiatives Summary Packet.

Innovating the Care Model

Bringing care closer to home. This includes telehealth, transportation support, expanded care teams and investments in local health infrastructure.

Moving Upstream

Strengthening community-led prevention and wellness. This includes chronic disease prevention and management programs and supports that help people stay healthy. 

Growing the Next Generation of Rural Talent

Building a stronger workforce pipeline. This includes “grow your own” initiatives, training placements and recruitment efforts that bring more providers to rural communities. 

Facilitating Regional Collaboration

Helping local partners share resources and work together on operations, technology and coordinated care. 

Shifting to Value

Supporting the transition to value-based care through technical assistance, infrastructure development and quality incentive programs. 

Building Health Data Utility

Investing in technology that improves data sharing and care coordination, including EHR upgrades, interoperability and advanced analytics tools.

How Oklahoma Shaped the Plan

The RHTP plan reflects extensive outreach across the state to better understand needs, priorities and opportunities. 

Engagement included: 

  • More than 400 responses to a statewide Request for Information 
  • Four listening sessions in regional communities 
  • Input from provider and professional associations 
  • Tribal consultation with more than 60 representatives 
  • Over 40 interviews with rural providers, educators, community groups and experts 
  • A cross-agency State Steering Committee that guided strategy and alignment 

Local voices highlighted clear challenges: limited workforce, technology gaps, transportation barriers, chronic disease pressures and the need for more coordinated care. These insights shaped every part of Oklahoma’s application and final plan. 

Committed to Long-Term Sustainability 

RHTP is a five-year federal investment, but Oklahoma has designed every initiative with long-term impact in mind. 

Sustainability strategies include: 

  • Billable services 
  • Provider-assumed costs 
  • Ongoing government funding 
  • Private funding 
  • One-time payments that support durable improvements 

The goal is for communities to benefit long after this federal grant period ends, achieving a true rural health transformation. 

Resources

Contact Information

This publication is supported by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) as part of a financial assistance award totaling $223,476,948.62 with 100 percent funded by CMS/HHS. The contents are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the official views of, nor an endorsement, by CMS/HHS, or the U.S. Government.

Last Modified on Jun 03, 2026