It’s an achievement that ought to be recognized: the state of Kansas has been awarded more than $200 million to chart a path to try to stabilize and remake rural health care. And if that goal can be accomplished, the initial success will pale by comparison. At a recent discussion at the Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics at the University of Kansas called “The Effects of Federal Health Policy on Kansas,”  panelists discussed what’s happened to get the state to the threshold of change and where the transformation process can go from here.  A large portion of that discussion focused on the Rural Health Transformation Program, a $50 billion, five-year plan that was enacted last year after Congress passed and the president signed H.R. 1, aka The Big Beautiful Bill, which made enormous changes in fiscal policy including a sharp turn on health care expenditures. Cuts to Medicaid are estimated at $1 trillion over 10 years. 
Read more: KLC Journal